Lange v. Brauner

118 S.W.2d 971, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 71
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 29, 1938
DocketNo. 10650.
StatusPublished

This text of 118 S.W.2d 971 (Lange v. Brauner) 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
Lange v. Brauner, 118 S.W.2d 971, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 71 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

CODY, Justice.

This suit was brought by appellee, Oscar Brauner, in trespass to try title against appellant, Otto Lange, to recover title to and possession of a tract of 126½ acres of land in Washington County. Appellant answered by general demurrer, general denial, and a plea of not guilty, and also answered specially, as more particularly hereafter indicated. Appellee then, by his first supplemental petition, levelled special exceptions to such answer, in response to which portions of the answer were by the court ordered stricken out. The case was tried without a jury, and judgment was rendered in favor of appellee — plaintiff below — for title to *972 an undivided half of the land sued for. In response to appellant’s request, the court filed his conclusions of fact and law below. The appellant urges here, as the principal grounds for reversal, the action of the court in ordering portions of the answer stricken. A brief summary of the court’s conclusions of fact, in so far as material to an understanding of objections raised by appellant, will be set forth before the objections themselves are discussed.

The land in controversy was the community property, in their lifetime, of appellant’s father and mother. They made a joint will by which their property went to the survivor for life, with remainder over as provided for in such will. Appellant’s father died some IS years before his mother, who.died on September 15, 1934. At his father’s death, this will was duly probated as his will; and was also again probated as his mother’s will, after her death. The will devised four separate tracts of land, to four, children of the deceased, respectively; requiring in connection with the devise of each tract that the devisee should pay over to the independent executor a specified sum of money for a specified tract of land. It is quite obvious that the purpose of the testator was, by this means, to raise money from the bequests made of land, with which to pay bequests of money made to their children to whom no land was devised. The tract in controversy was devised to appellant, subject to an obligation imposed on him by the will to pay the executor the sum of $1,500.00. On October 29, 1934, the day on which the joint will was probated as the will of the mother, the devisees thereunder, and the independent executor, executed to appellant a deed to the land here involved, and in this deed it was recited that it was “in consideration of the premises” (which in effect recited the facts here given), “and the fulfillment of the terms of said will.” The deed was delivered to appellant in the office of the executor’s attorney, in the presence of the devisees and of the executor and of the executor’s attorney; and appellant paid over the money to the executor’s attorney, who divided'it among the devisees in the proportions which they were entitled to. No money came into the manual possession of the executor. The estate of appellant’s mother was liable, of course, for the expenses of her last sickness and funeral, which was her only indebtedness at the time of her death. The funeral expenses seem to have been paid with money she left, but her doctor’s bill was not paid. In cause No. 3118, filed in the county court September 12, 1935, by him on such bill, wherein the executor and appellant and a number of other devisees were parties defendant, the doctor recovered judgment on December 31, 1935. An execution was issued thereunder and levied on the land' in controversy on February 12, 1936 ; and it was sold at sheriff’s sale to appellee on April 7, 1936, for $226.00, the amount of the judgment and the costs, and the sheriff’s deed was promptly recorded in the deed records of Washington County.

The learned Judge concluded that appel-lee acquired by the purchase at such sheriff’s sale the interest in the land which appellant’s mother owned at her death, which is, of course, an undivided half interest.

The first of the paragraphs which was, upon plaintiff’s (appellee’s) special exception, stricken from defendant’s answer, alleged in substance: That before the county court suit (to recover the physician’s charges for the last sickness) was ever filed, and before judgment was rendered or execution levied, or sheriff’s sale had thereon, defendant (appellant) had become the fee simple owner of the 126½ acre tract by virtue of the deed to him from the executor and heirs, and payment by defendant of $1,500.00 as the purchase price therefor, without notice of the physician’s claim, and defendant filed his said deed, before such county court suit was filed. So that defendant held such land as a purchaser, and not as a distributee of his deceased mother. Further, that the judgment in the county court case expressly provided that execution might issue against shares of the mother’s estate in the hands of her heirs and distributees, inclusive of defendant; and authority of the sheriff to make levy was recited in the judgment, and in the execution thereunder, only on so much of a distributee’s share as defendant had received from his mother’s estate; and that the sheriff’s return upon the execution, and his deed thereunder, fails to set out the share of land levied upon which defendant owned as distributee (as distinguished from his claimed character of purchaser). And therefore, in case it should be found that defendant holds any part of the land as a distributee, then, by way of cross-action, defendant prays that the court determine how much of such land he holds as purchaser, and how much he holds as legatee or distributee at the time of levy, and prays for the sheriff’s deed to plaintiff to be reformed, so as to set out specifically that the levy was against defendant’s’ distributive *973 share only, and the deed be so reformed as to convey only so much of such land as defendant received as a distributive share.

To the foregoing pleading, which is paragraph 4 of appellant’s answer, appellee excepted, as follows:

“Plaintiff also excepts to paragraph 4 of said answer, and that part thereof, which prays that the sheriff’s deed, under which defendant admits plaintiff deraigns title to said property, be set aside and reformed, for the reasons therein stated, because such constitutes a collateral attack on the said sheriff’s deed in this proceeding; and this court has no power to reform or set aside such sheriff’s deed in this proceeding, upon a collateral attack by the defendant.”

To the fourth paragraph of appellant’s answer, appellee further excepted as follows :

“Plaintiff further excepts to that portion of said 4th paragraph in said answer, directed at the sheriff’s deed, under which plaintiff claims title, * * * because the same indirectly attempts to set aside the judgment rendered against the decedent’s estate, in a collateral attack thereon, which is not proper in this suit, and cannot be entertained by this court, and the same should be stricken from said answer.”

The court, as already indicated sustained these special exceptions, and struck paragraph 4, and appellant undertook to preserve his exception by bills of exception, and not otherwise.

Paragraph 6 of appellant’s answer, which the court also ordered stricken, alleged in substance:

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.W.2d 971, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lange-v-brauner-texapp-1938.