Lasater v. Jamison

203 S.W. 1151, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 542
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 8, 1918
DocketNo. 6014.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 203 S.W. 1151 (Lasater v. Jamison) 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
Lasater v. Jamison, 203 S.W. 1151, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 542 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

MOURSUND, J.

Appellee sued Ed. C. Lasater, J. W. Garrison, Geo. Paden, A. Stade, Geo. Balzer, Jas. Ramey, and Joe M. Kilgore to recover state school survey No. 3S6, C. E. & M. C. R. R. Co., situated in Duval and Brooks counties. The venue of the suit was changed, by agreement, from Duval to Jim Wells county. Lasater dis *1152 claimed as to an undivided one half of the survey, and as to the other half answered by plea of not guilty and pleas of the statutes of limitation of three, five, and ten years. The other defendants disclaimed except as to small portions of the land, and as to such portions pleaded not guilty, and the statutes of limitation of three, live,, and ten years. The survey in controversy was purchased from the state by R. W. Peel during his marriage to Mrs. L. J. Peel, and they made their home on said land. Plaintiff, Jamison, claims under a deed duly executed by Peel and wife on February 8, 1909. Lasa-ter claims under a deed to him by Mrs. Peel alone, for all of her right, title, and interest in said survey, executed on December 11, 1908, in consideration of $500. Mrs. Peel left their home on the land in controversy in September, 1908, and refused to live with her husband. They were not divorced until long after the conveyances above ■ mentioned wore made. The defendants other than Las-ater claimed under him. The evidence failed to raise any issue of title by limitation. The case was submitted on special issues, which, with the answers thereto, are as follows:

“Q. 1. Did Mrs. L. J. Teel, at the time of her separation from her husband, R. W. Peel, have just cause for leaving him? A. We, the jury, answer No.
“Q. 2. Was the financial circumstances of Mrs. L. J. Peel, at the time she made the deed to Ed. O. Lasater, such that was necessary that she make said sale of such property for the purpose of supporting herself? A. We, the jury, answer No.
“Q. 3. Was Mrs. L. J. Peel induced to execute and acknowledge the deed in evidence to S. S. Jamison through threats or fear of her husband, R. W. Peel? A. AVe, the jury, answer No.”
“Q. 5. What is the reasonable rental value of the lands in controversy in this suit for grazing purposes per acre per annum? A. AVe, the jury, answer: 20 cents per annum.”

Judgment was entered in favor of plaintiff for all of said survey 386, and against Lasater for S338.10 as rents from January 1, 1910, to July 1, 1917. The defendants appealed.

By the first three assignments the following contentions are made: (1) That the evidence is undisputed that Mrs. Peel, through her agents, represented to Lasater that she had been forced to leave her husband by reason of his conduct toward her of such a nature as to constitute just cause for leaving him, and , that she was in destitute circumstances, and that it was necessary for her to sell her interest in the land in controversy for her support and maintenance; (2) that Lasater believed such representations to be true; (3) that he relied thereon, and was induced thereby to accept a quitclaim deed from her to her interest in the land and pay her $500 for such conveyance; (4) that plaintiff had actual and constructive knowledge of the execution and delivery of said deed, and of the representations made to Lasater, and that Lasater was induced thereby to accept the conveyance from Mrs. Peel, and claims under a deed by Peel and wife executed subsequent to the execution by her of the deed to Lasater. xAssuming the proof to be as above stated, appellants’ theory is that he acquired title by estoppel as against Mrs. Peel, and that such estoppel operates against Jamison, and therefore the latter cannot recover the half interest in the land claimed by Lasater.

The appellants did not request the submission to the jury of the issues covered by the foregoing statement, but, after the jury had returned its verdict, filed a motion, requesting the court to render judgment in their favor by reason of the matters above stated, which was overruled.

The trade between Mrs. Peel and Lasater was negotiated by Mr. Maupin, Lasater’s foreman, in whose employ Mrs. Peel was at the time. Maupin testified that he conducted the negotiations at the instance of both parties. Mrs. Peel testified she asked a Mr. James to try to dispose of her interest; that after two or three months Maupin told her Lasater would buy the property. Mrs. Peel did not recollect anything particular that was said, other than that it would be a good thing to sell the property so that she could get necessaries. Maupin testified:

“She said the reason she wanted to sell was that she had lived with Peel and had had the property, and that Peel had run her off, and she was afraid he was going to beat her entirely out of it. and she would like to sell her interest, whatever she might have, to get something out of it.”

1-Ie also testified:

“She said something about wanting to go back where her children were; she said she wanted to go back to North Dakota, or one of the Dakotas.”

The foregoing constitutes all of his testimony as to what Mrs. Peel told him. He then testified that Mrs. Peel at that time had no other means that he knew of than “this property” other than the wages he paid her; that he told Mr. Lasater about all this.

Lasater testified that Maupin stated that Mr. Peel had run Mrs. Peel off the place, and that she was middle-aged and destitute, and wanted to get some money to go to some relatives in the North. He testified that the condition that Maupin stated Mrs. Peel was in is what induced him to make the purchase. Lasater owned land all around the land in controversy, and knew that Peel was living on said land with his children at the time he accepted the deed from Mrs. Peel. One of Peel’s daughters and Mrs. Erith, the widowed daughter of Mrs. Peel, who had four or five children, also lived on the land, in a different house from the one used by Peel and some of his children.

Jamison testified that in behalf of Peel he offered to pay Lasater the $500 he had paid Mrs. Peel if he would reconvey, but *1153 Lasater demanded $750. This was shortly after Mrs. Peel conveyed to Lasater.

[1-3] In order to be entitled to a judgment notwithstanding the verdict, a party must be able to show that undisputed facts, other than those involved in the findings of the jury, entitle him to a judgment, even though the facts found by the jury are taken as true. It is a well-known rule of law that the unsupported testimony of an interested party may be disregarded by a court or jury, and this is especially true when there are any circumstances which tend to discredit the same. The question whether Lasater relied on and was induced by the representations made to him to purchase from Mrs. Peel was one for the jury. In this connection it will be noticed that he did not claim that any representations with respect to the cause of her leaving her home induced him to buy, but that the condition Maupin stated she was in was what induced him to make the trade. There was no evidence that Maupin represented that it was necessary for Mrs. Peel to sell her interest in the land for her support and maintenance. The assignment is based on the theory that Lasater was told that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
203 S.W. 1151, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lasater-v-jamison-texapp-1918.