Lester v. Hutson

184 S.W. 268, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 223
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 9, 1916
DocketNo. 902. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 184 S.W. 268 (Lester v. Hutson) 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
Lester v. Hutson, 184 S.W. 268, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 223 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

HENDRICKS, J.

The plaintiff, Hutson, as administratrix, alleged the execution and delivery by Lester to her deceased husband, John Hutson, of the following instrument:

“Canyon, Texas, January 8, 1907.
“State of Texas, County of Randall.
“I, L. T. Lester, agree to sell to John Hutson, or order, sections 11, Blk. K 14, B. S. & F. Cert. No. 127; 15, block K 14, J. Gibson Cert. No. 129; 17, Blk. K 14, B. S. & F. Cert. No. 1/51 — all these sections are located in Deaf Smith Co., Texas.
“Also section 11, Blk. 1, T. T. R. R. Co. Cert. No. 54; also section 12, Blk. 1, T. T. R. R. Co. Cert. SíG^both situated in Randall county, Texas.
“Upon the said John Hutson paying me the sum of $8,106.67, and balance due on said sections with accrued interest and other expenses, with S% interest from date.
“This agreement to hold good until September the 12th, 1907.
“Witness my hand this the 8th day of January, 1907. [Signed] L. T. Lester.”

Plaintiff also averred a supplementary agreement of extension and modification of the above contract; also charging Lester with the sale by him as the possessor of the legal title of a considerable portion of the land embraced in said contract; that he was trustee for Hutson; alleging, further, the assertion of claim of title by the defendant, Lester, constituting a cloud upon the title; praying for an accounting, and that the cloud be removed.

Plaintiff’s petition, in its essentials, is thoroughly reproduced in the former opinion of Chief Justice Huff, on a former appeal to this court, and reported as Lester v. Hutson, 167 S. W. 324.

The questions involving Lester’s plea of privilege to be sued in the county of his residence, his general demurrer, asserting the proposition that the plaintiff’s pleading fails to show such an equitable title as that an action to remove cloud could be maintained, also advancing the subsidiary proposition that the above contract was merely an option, and supplementing this with the contention that the petition is, or should be, one of specific performance, further claiming that the alleged supplementary contract is within the statute of frauds, all of which were thoroughly discussed in the former opinion.

Before discussing any of the remaining assignments we set out the following evidence, and submit the following conclusions: It is undisputed that the contract of January 8, 1907, was executed and delivered by Lester to John Hutson; that as late as July, 1910, and at different times prior thereto, and to different persons, Hutson made claim to- a portion of the property embraced in ■ said contract; that subsequent to said contract *270 and tlie date, on its face, of its expiration, Hutson assumed actual possession of a portion of said land, cultivated tlie same, and placed thereupon certain improvements ; that there is no formal contract of relinquishment to Lester by Hutson of the land.

Referable to the question of an actual extension of this contract, the following testimony, by one J. M. Edelen, engaged-in the commission and loan business at Kansas City, Mo., is reproduced:

“I knew John Hutson intimately for 10 years prior to his death. 1-Ie sought to secure a loan from me on two occasions, in the year 1910 on a tract of 1% sections, of land known as Mr. Hutson’s Palo Duro ránch, situated partly in Deaf Smith and partly in Randall county, Tex. This occurred some time in April or May, 1910. and again in July of the same year. He stated to me that he owned both the Palo Duro and the Tierra Blanca ranches, and wished to borrow money for himself. I had a conversation with Mr. Lester, the defendant in this case, relative to his interest in these lands. This occurred after the death of Mr. Hutsón and some time in the fall of 1911, in the Amarillo Hotel, at Amarillo, Tex. He asked me whether or not I had been shown the lands by Mr. Hutson, for the purpose of making a loan on the land. * * * He asked me the amount of the loan and the purpose for which Mi'. Hutson stated he wanted the loan. I stated to him that Mr. Hutson wanted 89,500, of which he wished $8,-500 to pay him, Mr. Lester, for the balance of the purchase price of the land, and the balance for some personal use, which he did not tell about. [This last statement was admitted by the court ‘for the limited purpose of showing what the witness stated to Lester, and not for the purpose of praying the statement of Hutson to be true.’] * * * Mr. Lester stated to me that he had previously sold the land, offered me as security for a loan by Mr. Hutson, to Mr. Hutson, under a written contract of sale; that the time for the final payment for the' lands under the terms of the contract had expired at the time Mr. Hutson had shown the lands to me. * * * That he had agreed that Mr. Hut-son might keep the land after the time had expired, on condition that he pay the balance of the purchase money due, as provided in the contract, * * * and that he had urged Mr. Hutson to make the payment.”

Bronx the testimony of D. A. Parks, cashier of the bank of which Lester is president, it is undisputed that subsequent to the date of the alleged maturity of the contract on its face, Lester and Hutson had under consideration a matter of settlement with reference to said lands, and in the fall of 1909 a statement, purporting to show how the matter stood, was made up by Mr. Parks and handed to Hutson, with details of the purchase price, interest, taxes, the amounts which certain portions of the land had brought, on account of certain sales made by Lester, and mentioning real estate commissions. It is really undisputed,. perforce of succeeding circumstances, after the date of the contract as exhibited in this record, that Hutson accepted the contract of January, 1907.

[1] The testimony of Edelen, in regard to the statements of Lester, are undenied by the latter. It is clearly inferable from, the admissions of Lester that at least to July, 1910, he. had extended the time, and had permitted Hutson to remain in.possession of a part of the land under the contract. There was no legal obstacle to a denial by Lester, if the above statements could have been truthfully denied. Wells v. Hobbs, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 380, 122 S. W. 451.

[2] Jones in his late work on Evidence, in commenting upon the weight of admissions as testimony, says:

“It presents itself to us as evidence of high value, when thoroughly established, for it is of that nature which may successfully challenge contradiction when effectively proved. What the party himself has said or done, at a time when the litigation perhaps was not thought of, if the certainty of it is established, having regard to the circumstances of time, place, and person, should, and often does, furnish a substantial reason for his defeat, when a trial discloses his case founded on facts inconsistent with those which he has himself adopted, and to which he has given publication.” Volume 2, § 236, bottom page 358 and top page 359.

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Bluebook (online)
184 S.W. 268, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lester-v-hutson-texapp-1916.