Langston v. Robinson

253 S.W. 654, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 401
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 13, 1923
DocketNo. 6579.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 253 S.W. 654 (Langston v. Robinson) 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
Langston v. Robinson, 253 S.W. 654, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 401 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Statement.

BLAIR, J.

This suit was instituted by appellee, R. B. Robinson, against Mrs. Sue Langston, as independent executrix of the estate of J. H. Langston, deceased, seeking to subject the estate of the said J. H. Langston, deceased, in the hands of said Mrs. Sue Lang-ston, as independent executrix, to the payment of a judgment in favor of appell.ee against the said J. H. Langston, deceased. *656 Appellee’s petition alleged that he obtained judgment against J. H. Langston, in the district court of Armstrong county, Tex., on October 1, 1912, for the sum of $5,105.76, with 8 per cent, interest from the date of the judgment, on which judgment $11.65 was paid by the sale of property December 3, 1912, and the balance due on the date of the 'trial, including interest, was $8,824.12, and that execution had issued on said judgment on the 7th day of November, 1912, and that abstracts of said judgment had thereafter been recorded in Eastland county, Tex., and in Brown ’county, Tex.; that the appellant was the surviving wife of the said J. H. Langston, who died February 17, 1917, and that they had been husband and wife since the year 1907; that at the time of his death J. H. Langston left a will by which he devised all his property, describing the tracts of land by metes and hounds, to appellant, after the payment of his debts, which will was duly probated in the county court of Brown county, Tex., on the 2d day of April, 1917, and appellant duly qualified as independent executrix by appointment of said will, by taking the oath, and having issued to herself a certificate of such appointment, and thereafter returned an inventory, ap-praisement, and list of claims, in which she listed the property in controversy as the community estate of herself and her deceased husband, J. H. Langston; that thereafter the children and heirs of J. H. Lang-ston, deceased, by a former marriage, filed a contest of said will, and removed the proceedings thereon to the district court of Brown county, Tex., where the contest remained undisposed of until May 17, 1920, when appellant, by aid of counsel employed for such purpose, succeeded in establishing said will, and its probation was confirmed, as well as the appointment of appellant as independent executrix and as sole devisee thereunder; that said judgment which appel-lee held against J. H. Langston, deceased, at the time of his death, was a legal and binding judgment, and a valid debt and charge against the estate of the said J. H. Langston, deceased, which was alleged to be in the hands of appellant as independent executrix of said estate, and was described by metes and bounds in appellee’s petition, and appel-lee prayed that said judgment be established as a valid and legal debt and claim against said described estate, and as a statutory lien and charge on said estate in the hands of said independent executrix. l • ■ i ' i ;

The defendant answered by formal demurrer and denial, and by special pleas: First, that the property in question was her separate property, by reason of a resulting trust arising in her behalf because of the fact that her separate monyes were used to purchase the property described in appellee’s petition, although the title was taken in the name of her deceased husband, J. H. Lang-ston; second, that if she were mistaken that she owned the property by reason of a resulting trust, that she obtained title thereto by virtue of being the sole devisee under the will of J. H. Langston, deceased, and that under such will she had held possession of said premises for more than three years, and had obtained title thereto by virtue of the three-year .statute of limitation; and, third, that in the event she be mistaken in both of the above pleas, then she claims same as purchaser from her husband, in satisfaction of a debt of $5,244, which she claims was due her by him for borrowed money, and that the property was not worth more than $4,000; and that her husband had the right to prefer her as to other creditors in settling his estate.

Appellee replied by supplemental pleadings that the said Mrs. Sue Langston had elected to take the property under the will, and was thereby estopped to' claim otherwise in this suit filed against her as independent executrix of the estate of J. H. Langston, deceased.

The case was tried before the trial judge, without a jury, and he found 'for appellee against appellant as independent executrix of the estate of J. H. Langston, deceased r that the judgment was a valid and subsisting debt, and subjected all of the property described in appellee’s petition to the payment of the same, save and except one house and lot described in said judgment, which he ¡held to be .exempt as her homestead in Blanket, Tex., and 160 acres of the 280 acres of land in Eastland county, Tex., 80 of which had been deeded to her many years before the death of her husband, and another 80 acres having been released by the appel-lee from said judgment to the heirs of J. H. Langston, deceased, and which said judgment described both the property subject to the lien and the property exempt, by metes and bounds.

Findings of Fact.

The record contains a statement of facts; also the trial judge, upon request, filed his specific findings of fact. We adopt the findings of fact by the trial judge as our own, with such’other facts as may be set out in our opinion in this case. The trial judge’s findings of fact are as follows:

! ; i “(1) I find that on October 1, 1912, plaintiff, R. B. Robinson, recovered judgment in the district court of Armstrong county, Tex., in cause No. 252 on the docket of said court, entitled R. B. Robinson v. J. H. Langston, for the sum of $5,105.76, with interest thereon at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum and costs, and that execution was issued on said judgment to Armstrong county within 12 months from date of said judgment and returned by the sheriff of said county as provided by law, and that said sheriff collected the sum of $11.65, besides costs, which was applied as a credit on said judgment, leaving a balance of $5,094.11 unpaid on the principal of said judgment, together *657 with all interest thereon, all of which is still wholly unpaid, and that said judgment has at all times been and still is a valid and subsisting judgment, and that the principal, together with interest thereon to the date of judgment herein, aggregates the sum of $8,824.12.
“(2) I find that defendant, Mrs. Sue Lang-ston, and said J. H. Langston were married during the year 1907, and at the date of said marriage the property owned by defendant corn sisted of about $500 in money, 14 head of Jersey cattle, a few hogs, her chickens, furniture, and a few other small items of property, and at said time said J. H. Langston owned 324 acres of land in Erath county, Tex., worth about $30 'an acre, consisting of two farms, with the improvements thereon, and also owned his farming implements and some horses and cattle and other property.
“(3) I find that said J. H. Langston, defendant in said judgment, died in Brown county, Tex., on or about February 17, 1917, leaving defendant, Mrs. Sue Langston, as his surviving wife, and leaving a will by which he made his said wife, defendant herein, independent executrix without bond and sole devisee, after payment of all debts, and that on February 21, 1917, defendant filed her application in the county court of Brown county, Tex., for the probate of said will of said J. H.

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Bluebook (online)
253 S.W. 654, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langston-v-robinson-texapp-1923.