Ledbetter v. Martinez

48 S.W.2d 408
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 20, 1932
DocketNo. 10914.
StatusPublished

This text of 48 S.W.2d 408 (Ledbetter v. Martinez) 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
Ledbetter v. Martinez, 48 S.W.2d 408 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

VAUGHAN, J.

The record does not disclose when this suit was filed. Trial was had on appellants’ third amended original petition filed April 28, 1930, by Louise Ledbetter and husband, R. L. Led-better, against T. H. Britton, T. B. Madison (not parties to this appeal), and appellee, Martinez, to remove the cloud from the title to and recover the possession of 80 acres of land, part of the Harvey G. Wilson survey, located in Dallas county, fully described in said petition. The following succinct review of the history of this litigation will, we think, delineate the questions presented for review:

R. L. Ledbetter was the only child of W. O. and Mrs. Ella Ledbetter, who for many years resided on a farm about ten miles southwest of Dallas, on the Cedar Hill road. This farm consisted of two distinct tracts of land, separated by approximately 1⅜ miles. The first *409 tract, consisting of 52 acres, was inherited by Mrs. Ella Ledbetter from her family; the other tract, the one in controversy, viz. 80 acres, was inherited by W. O. Ledbetter, and was «sed and cultivated by him in connection with the 52 acres upon which he and his wife actually resided. While at one time there had been a house of some character upon the 80-acre tract, it had never been occupied by the Ledbetters, and for many years prior to the death of W. O. Ledbetter had been in ruins.

W. O. Ledbetter died intestate during the year 1917. After his death, his widow, Mrs. Ella Ledbetter,, and their son, R. L. Ledbetter, continued to reside on and use said tract of land as same had theretofore been used. R. L. Ledbetter married some months after his father’s death, and he and his wife moved in with Mrs. Ella Ledbetter on the 52-acre tract, and continued to make their home with her during the events out of which this litigation arose. They cultivated both tracts of land, and pastured upon them cattle belonging both to R. L. Ledbetter and Mrs. Ella Ledbetter.

Sometime in the summer of 1920, R. L. Led-better met a man by the name of G. B. Pierce, and became interested with Pierce in the “oil game.” In order to obtain funds for their ventures, R. L. Ledbetter at first borrowed $1,000 upon the security of a chattel mortgage on certain cattle. These funds soon being exhausted, they decided on making a fictitious sale of the SO-aere tract of land and to create a vendor’s lien note to be sold for the purpose of obtaining additional funds for their oil venture. According to the testimony of appellants’ witnesses, they feared that they might have difficulty in procuring the signature of Mrs. Louise Ledbetter to the deed of conveyance, if she knew the true facts, so they fraudulently represented to her that they were borrowing the money for the purpose of building her a home and paying certain outstanding debts. By this designing scheme, there was executed and properly acknowledged on September 16,1920, what purported to be a general warranty deed from appellants and Mrs. Ella Ledbetter to G. B. Pierce, conveying the 80 acres of land. This instrument was filed for record in the deed records of Dallas county, Tex., on September 20, 1920. It recites a consideration of $12,500 cash and the execution and delivery by the grantee of a note in the principal sum of $3,500, payable to the order of R. L. Ledbetter and due three years after date, with interest at the rate of 8½ per cent, per annum, payable annually. It was further secured by deed of trust given by Pierce to James Jackson, trustee, which was later recorded in the trust deed records of Dallas county. On September 29, 1920, R. L. Ledbetter sold and conveyed the $3,500 lien note to one J. M. Cochran, who paid to Led-better the face of the note in full and without discount. Ledbetter used the proceeds of the note to discharge the $1,000 chattel mortgage debt, and to invest further in the oil ventures with G. B. Pierce. Cochran held Pierce’s note for a little over a year, and then sold it for value to the Dallas Morris Plan Bank, and the bank in turn sold it to appellee, who paid full value therefor.

After the sale of the $3,500 lien note to Cochran, Pierce and his wife reconveyed the 80 acres to R. L. Ledbetter, by deed dated October 8, 1920, and filed for record the same day. This new conveyance recited a consideration of $18,500, of which $13,500 was in cash, the assumption of said $3,500 note, and a note for $2,500 payable to G. B. Pierce. This latter note Pierce subsequently sold to one Mrs. Orpha Turner, who in turn sold it to appellee. Martinez bought the $2,500 note prior to the time he acquired the $3,500 note from the Dallas Morris Plan Bank, under the idea that it was necessary to protect the second lien from a threatened foreclosure by the Dallas Morris Plan Bank on the $3,500 first lien.

Default having been made in the payment of principal and interest on the $3,500 lien note, after many attempts to effect collection from Ledbetter, Martinez directed the trustee, James Jackson, to exercise the powers of sale given in the deed of trust executed by Pierce; and accordingly, at foreclosure sale regularly held on May 11, 1923, the property was conveyed by the trustee to appellee for a recited consideration of $500, appellee subsequently sold the property to one T. H. Britton for a recited consideration of $16,500 in cash and notes, none of which, however, was ever paid, and on October 8, 1923, appellee reacquired the property at foreclosure sale.

This suit was instituted by appellants to set aside the deed executed by appellants and Mrs. Ella Ledbetter to Pierce, the trustee deed from Pierce to Jackson, and the trustee’s deed from Jackson, to appellee, and to recover the property upon the grounds usually alleged in such cases, viz.: That said 80 acres of land was the homestead of the appellants; that the $3,500 vendor’s lien note, under which appellee had foreclosed said deed of trust lien, was created in a fictitious sale of appellants’ homestead; and that each successive transferee of said $3,500 note, including ap-pellee, had knowledge and notice of the infirmity in said note and deed of conveyance to Pierce at the time each acquired the note. Appellee defended the suit by denying the facts alleged by appellants, and by setting up that he and each of the previous transferees of said note were innocent purchasers for value, in good faith, and were entitled to protection as such.

In answer to special issues submitted, the jury found the following material facts, viz.: That Mrs. Ella Ledbetter, mother of appellant R. L. Ledbetter, prior to the execution of the instrument in issue (in the form of a gen *410 eral warranty deed), dated September 18, 1920, relinquished to said R. I* Ledbetter her homestead rights to the involved 80 acres of land; that before and on September 16, 1920, said land was used and claimed by appellants as a part of their homestead; that it was the intention of each of said appellants at the time of the execution of said instrument dated September 16, 1920, to one G. B. Pierce as grantee, that same was to constitute a mortgage on said 8’0 acres of land to secure the payment of a loan of $3,500; that appellant R. L. Ledbetter and said Pierce, each prior to the execution of said instrument, represented to appellant Louise Ledbetter that same was only a mortgage on said 80 acres of land to secure a loan for the purpose of building a house on said land and paying debts of said R. L. Ledbetter; that said Louise Ledbetter believed and relied upon such representations in the execution of said instrpment dated September 16, 1920; that J. M.

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Bluebook (online)
48 S.W.2d 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ledbetter-v-martinez-texapp-1932.