Langham v. Gray

227 S.W. 741, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1250
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 1, 1920
DocketNo. 597.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 227 S.W. 741 (Langham v. Gray) 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
Langham v. Gray, 227 S.W. 741, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1250 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinions

On the 23d day of June, 1911, Sam Lee Gray executed to his brother, H. L. Gray, an instrument in the form of a general warranty deed, purporting to convey a certain piece of property. On the trial of this case below, H. L. Gray was the plaintiff, and it was the contention of the defendants that this instrument was a mortgage. The evidence was abundantly sufficient to raise this issue. On the 26th day of June, 1911, three days later, Sam Lee Gray, by warranty deed, conveyed the same property to McFaddin-Wiess-Kyle Land Company. Under this deed they went into immediate possession, and were not disturbed in this possession by H. L. Gray until this suit was instituted against them and their receiver, Thos. H. Langham, on the 27th day of September, 1917, in the usual form of trespass to try title, more than six years after the execution by Sam Lee Gray of the instrument under which plaintiff claimed. The case was submitted to the jury on special issues, and in answer to the same they found that plaintiff was holding under a deed, and on this finding judgment was rendered for the plaintiff. The defendants have duly perfected their appeal, and have presented this case to us on the following assignments:

(1) Error in excluding testimony.

(2) The court erred in not instructing a verdict for them on their plea of five years' limitation.

(3) The finding by the jury that the transaction between Sam Lee Gray and H. L. Gray was a deed rather than a mortgage was against the great weight and preponderance of the evidence.

Other questions are raised in the brief, but the disposition we are making of the appeal makes many of them immaterial, and the other assignments only present these issues from different angles.

We will discuss these issues in the order given.

1. Mr. Oliver J. Todd was of counsel for the defendants in the trial of this case in the court below and presented this case for them on submission in this court. While testifying in his behalf on his original examinaton, in answer to questions propounded to him by his counsel, H. L. Gray said:

"Sam just kept getting worse all the time and getting into different things. Sam was sick all the time. In about four or five days or a week or such a matter I was up in Mr. Todd's office, and the conversation led up to this transaction between Sam Lee Gray and Mr. McFaddin, and he had noticed or heard something, noticed the two deeds on record I believe, and told me I didn't see that — he said he didn't think I ought to lose the place, and I told him I wasn't going to lose the place, and I asked him what he thought about and he told me to wait, and he would talk with me some more, but would not say when, and I said, `All right,' and we started a conversation about different things, and one thing led up to another, and he said, `Right at this time I haven't got time to devote my time to it, but when I go through the records I will get myself familiar with the transaction and you come back here.' Well, probably off and on for four or five months, that went on until finally I went up there, and he told me, `Now I can't tell from the records and there may be something, a deed to that piece of land with reference to it that the records don't show, and I don't know where to get it, and you go off and get me an abstract or have an abstract made,' and so I came on down to the Jefferson County Abstract Company and ordered them to make an abstract, and he told me if he went right to work and devoted his time to it it would cost me a whole lot, but if he went along and took his own time he would charge me in the neighborhood of $100 or $150 for the abstract.

"I got the abstract and took it up and turned it over to Mr. Todd, and he had it there for a year and a half or a year or so, and he was always busy and he would say, `Come back,' and finally I found a lawyer that would file the suit for me. And that was Mr. Herbert Reed, a young lawyer here in town, and he told me to get him an abstract and let him examine it, and I went to Mr. Todd's office and got it and delivered it to him and he filed this suit. That was in 1911, and for some days, maybe a half a day at a time, Sam would stay in bed, but one doctor, you see, would say, `You will have to go to a lower or higher climate,' and we kept him going from one place to another until along in June, 1915, he died. Mr. Todd started this suit with me a few days after the deal was made, but I can't tell you when Mr. Herbert Reed started into it."

It was not denied by Mr. Todd that Mr. Gray did talk with him about this case; that Mr. Gray brought him an abstract of title to the property; that this abstract remained in his office a long time; that finally Mr. Gray called for the abstract, and gave it to another lawyer; and that at once suit was filed in the name of the plaintiff for the land. While he was a witness on the stand, the following questions were asked Mr. Todd, which he was not permitted to answer, on the ground that the answer called for a disclosure of privileged communications:

"State whether or not the plaintiff ever sought to employ you or consult with you as to whether or not you would accept employment to bring suit in his behalf or in behalf of Sam Lee Gray for the land in controversy."

If permitted, he "would have testified that plaintiff told him he had no cause of action, but his brother, Sam Lee Gray, had one." "State whether or not you were ever employed by plaintiff at any time to bring suit for the land in controversy." If permitted, he "would have testified that plaintiff sought to employ him to sue for said land in behalf of his brother, who still owned the land, but McFaddin had procured a deed from him while he was drunk and said deed should be canceled." *Page 743

"State whether or not you ever agreed with the plaintiff to represent him in filing a suit for him for the land in controversy."

If permitted, he "would have testified that plaintiff at the time did not claim said land, but claimed same still belonged to his brother, Sam Lee Gray, and McFaddin had procured a deed from him while he was drunk, and wanted it canceled by suit."

"State whether or not the plaintiff, H. L. Gray, ever had any conversation with you with reference to employing you to represent Sam Lee Gray in an effort to recover the land."

On this question the bill of exceptions made this statement:

"Which evidence was offered for the purpose of showing that the suit proposed to be filed by H. L. Gray at the time was a suit on behalf of Sam Lee Gray to cancel the deed to McFaddin and others, and Sam Lee Gray still owned said land, and for the purpose of showing that plaintiff's attitude at that time was inconsistent with his present attitude, and said witness if permitted to would have so testified."

"State whether or not at the time H. L. Gray brought you the abstract and before that time there was any conversation between him and you with reference to your representing Sam Lee Gray."

With reference to this question, the bill of exception makes this statement:

"Which evidence was offered for the purpose of showing that the plaintiff sought to bring a suit on behalf of Sam Lee Gray to set aside a deed obtained from Sam Lee Gray while intoxicated, and same was offered because plaintiff had waived the privilege claimed by reason of the testimony of the nature inquired about, and because it was competent to contradict plaintiff as to said matter on which he had already testified, and to show at that time while Sam Lee Gray was still alive, plaintiff recognized his ownership of said land, and admitted his deed was only a mortgage, which evidence was objected to by defendants," etc.

Mr. Todd's answers, as given above, are taken from the bills of exception. The trial court examined Mr. Todd as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
227 S.W. 741, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langham-v-gray-texapp-1920.