L. W. Levy & Co. v. Mitchell

114 S.W. 172, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 189, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 332
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 1, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 114 S.W. 172 (L. W. Levy & Co. v. Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
L. W. Levy & Co. v. Mitchell, 114 S.W. 172, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 189, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 332 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

*190 RICE, Associate Justice.

— This suit was brought by Mrs. Ellen Mitchell, joined by her husband G. T. Mitchell, against appellants Levy & Co., to cancel and annul a deed of trust executed by'said G. T. Mitchell and L. H. ICnight, on April 12, 1905, wherein five certain lots, situated in the town of San Augustine, Texas, were conveyed to one C. E. Selvage in trust to secure the payment of a note for $2,622.65, which said G. T. Mitchell and said Knight had executed to L. W. Levy & Co. on the same day in payment of an existing indebtedness, which lots the said Mrs. Ellen Mitchell claimed as her separate property; and also for an injunction to restrain S. M. Davis, substitute trustee in said deed of .trust, from advertising and selling said lots thereunder to satisfy said indebtedness, as well as to restrain W. S. Roble, sheriff of San Augustine County, from advertising and selling said lots under three several executions, issued out of the County Court of Galveston County, on judgments rendered therein against G. T. Mitchell and L. H. Knight, the said Mrs. Mitchell claiming said lots as her separate property by reason of the fact, as alleged by her, that the same had been purchased with her separate money.

The defendants denied that the lots had been purchased with the separate means of the wife, alleging that they had been purchased by the husband on credit for himself, and that they never formed any part of the separate estate of Ellen Mitchell.

The case was tried by a jury upon special issues, and upon the findings of the jury upon said issues in favor of plaintiffs judgment was rendered for them, from which this appeal is prosecuted.

It appears from the evidence in this case that Mrs. Ellen Mitchell, had inherited from the estate of her father and mother some five or six thousand dollars prior to the purchase of the lot's in question. - Sometime during the year 1902 she became desirous of removing from her country home to the town of San Augustine, for the purpose, among other things, of educating her children, and determined to buy a home there. The lots in question, it seems from the evidence, were selected by her, and she furnished her husband, from her separate estate, the money with which to purchase and pay for the same, and directed him to buy said lots, which he consented to do, for the purpose named, subsequent to which the said G. T. Mitchell, whom the evidence showed had no property or separate means of his own, at the instance and direction of his wife, bought the five lots levied upon by said executions and covered by the deed of trust from one Sharp for the sum of $1,200, he testifying that, while at the time of the purchase it was regarded by him as a cash transaction, that in fact no money was then paid, and the deed from Sharp was taken by the -husband in his own name, he executing a note due in thirty daj^s for the amount of said purchase money. The fact that the deed was so taken and the note so executed, and no money paid therefor, was not known to his wife until some time thereafter, but before the note was paid, which was about twelve months after the purchase, she knew that her husband had not paid cash for the lots, and also knew that the deed which had been spread upon the records was not taken in her own name, but the lots were in fact paid for by the husband at the instance of the wife and with her separate money. After the purchase of the lots, they moved upon them, making considerable improve *191 ments thereon, and lived there for a while as a home, bnt returned to their country home some eight months thereafter on account of sickness, from which time the property in San Augustine was continubusly rented out by the wife, and at the time of the execution of the note and deed of trust in evidence the family were not living thereon, but had returned to and were living at their country home.

Several years after the consummation of. this transaction, to wit: in 1905, the said G. T. Mitchell, who it seems from the evidence had become engaged with others in the saloon business in the town of Beaumont, executed, together with such other parties, the. $2,622.65 note, payable to Levy & Co., and at the time of the execution of said note he, together with L. H. Knight, executed the deed of trust upon the lots in question, as well as upon other property then owned by Knight, to secure the payment thereof, this indebtedness having been assumed by said G. T. Mitchell and L. H. Knight. The evidence shows that Mrs. Mitchell knew nothing as to the deed of trust until after its execution, but that before its execution knd delivery by G. T. Mitchell he told the agents of Levy & Co. of the fact that these lots were not his property, but belonged to his wife, and that the samé constituted his homestead, and that they had been paid for with her separate means, and with said knowledge they accepted said notes and deed of trust.

It was shown that Levy & Co. had recovered judgments in the County Court qf Galveston County against G. T. Mitchell and L. H. Knight, and that executions had been issued thereunder which had been levied upon the lots by W. S. Moble, sheriff of San Augustine County, who had advertised said lots for sale; and it further appeared that S. M. Davis, substitute trustee in said deed of trust, had likewise advertised said lots for sale, and that an injunction had been issued restraining the sheriff and said Davis, trustee, from further proceeding thereunder.

There were two assignments of error, but, in our judgment, a discussion and determination of the points raised in the first will suffice, and it is not necessary to discuss the second.

By their first assignment appellants complain of the action of the court in refusing to give a special charge asked by them, wherein the jury were told to find a verdict for the defendants, because, they contend, the evidence was insufficient to warrant a finding for plaintiffs, in that it failed to show that Mrs. Mitchell’s separate estate was used in the purchase of said lots, or that she was in any way connected with said purchase, but since the land was bought by the husband in his own name, and his note given in payment therefor, the subsequent payment of said note by her was, in effect, a loan by her to him, and did not invest her with the equitable title to said property, but merely subrogated her to the rights of said Sharp, the vendor of said lots.

Appellants in this case, while not denying the doctrine that where the husband purchases property with the separate funds of the wife, taking title thereto in his own name, a resulting trust in her favor is thereby created, and vests her with the equitable title in the same, still insist that under the facts of this case that doctrine can not be asserted for the reason that none of the purchase money was paid at the time of the transaction, the note of the husband executed in payment thereof having been subsequently paid by him out of the -funds of the wife. *192

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Bluebook (online)
114 S.W. 172, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 189, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-w-levy-co-v-mitchell-texapp-1908.