Liberto v. Sanders

248 S.W. 120
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 13, 1922
DocketNo. 6837.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 248 S.W. 120 (Liberto v. Sanders) 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
Liberto v. Sanders, 248 S.W. 120 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

COBBS, J.

This is a suit by tbe appellants, as plaintiffs below, against all tbe ap-pellees, as defendants, in five separate counts. The first count was for rescission of an exchange of properties (real estate) that had been made between tbe appellant Liberto and the appellee Sanders; the second count was in the alternative for damages for deficiency or shortage in acreage of the lands conveyed in exchange to Liberto by Sanders, and for a lien upon tbe real estate conveyed in exchange by Liberto, to secure tbe payment of such damages, it being alleged that, the appellee F. H. Fly claimed some right, title, or interest in the real estate conveyed by Liberto, by virtue of'a deed thereto from •Samuel S. Sanders and wife, Stella Sanders, appellees, and that all of the defendants claimed some right, title, and interest therein, but alleging that the same was inferior to the lien of Liberto for the damages claimed ; and tbe statement in the brief of appellants that the second count was for damages for “failure of title” is incorrect; the third count was in the alternative for damages against immediate and remote vendors upon their respective covenants of warranty on account of a partial failure of title, and also • seeking to hold these answering appellees, W. J. Bright, F. H. Fly, J. O. Bright, and Gon *121 zales State Bank & Trust Company, upon the warranty of title to the land conveyed by Sanders and wife, covenanted_ in the deed from the appellee M. H. Davis’ to said Sanders and wife, on the alleged ground that said Davis took and conveyed title to said land for the benefit and as trustee and agent for these appellees; the fourth count was in the alternative also for damages against the appellees Samuel S. Sanders and Stella Sanders on account of said deficiency in acreage of the lands conveyed in exchange by them to Liberto; and the fifth count was for special damages in the nature of certain expenses which appellants had gone to in the way of surveying, abstracts, etc., in connection with the land which said Sanders and wife had conveyed in exchange to Liberto.

The suit against appellee Davis is based upon his alleged covenant of general warranty to Sanders, or is based upon a partial failure of consideration recited in the deed from Davis to Sanders.

The court sustained" demurrer to appellants’ suit as against Gonzales Staje Bank & Trust Company, IF. M. Ely, and W. J. Bright. F. A. Houck and Ernest Eollbaum, having filed disclaimers, were dismissed from the suit. Appellants dismissed George C. Thompson, Julian Thompson, and L. M. Knight and Mrs. L. M. Knight from the suit. This left Samuel S. Sanders and Stella Sanders the only remaining parties to the suit.

The case was tried with a, jury, and the court gave the following instruction to them:

“You are further instructed that the undisputed evidence in this case shows that the defendants Samuel S. Sanders and Stella Sanders sold and conveyed to plaintiff Frank Li-berto the tract of land known as the John N. Ely Survey in Ft. ‘Bend county, Tex., as and for 390 acres, at the agreed price and value of $30 per acre; that said land between said parties was and is of the value of $30 per acre; that said tract of land contained actually only 30S.27 acres; that, by reason thereof, said tract of land lacked 81.73 acres of containing the number of acres conveyed by said conveyance from Samuel S. Sanders and Stella Sanders to Frank Liberto. You will therefore return a verdict in favor of plaintiff Frank Li-berto, in the sum of $2,451.90.
“You are further instructed that the undisputed evidence in this case shows that the defendants Samuel S. Sanders and Stella Sanders represented to plaintiff Frank Liberto that said tract of land contained 390 acres, and sold and conveyed the same to him as and for 390 acres; that, by reason of said facts and circumstances, plaintiff Frank Liberto has reasonably and necessarily expended the total sum of $915.47, for which amount the defendants Samuel S. Sanders and Stella Sanders are liable to plaintiff. You will therefore return a verdict in favor of plaintiff Frank Liberto against the defendants Samuel S. Sanders and Stella Sanders, for the sum of $915.47.”

Whereupon the jury returned their verdict in accord therewith, and in accordance with which the court entered its judgment thereupon, and from which the said Samuel S. and Stella Sanders perfected no appeal. Appellants appealed from the judgment of the trial court, in dismissing said cause against the several named appellees in sustaining the' several demurrers.

The basis of this suit is to recover against appellees, remote vendors, the value of the difference in loss of acreage occurring in the exchange of land between Liberto and Sanders, which was recovered against them in the court below, which was 150 acres less than the alleged number of acres stipulated in the trade between what Sanders’ land was supposed to contain and what it actually contained, as being a partial failure of the consideration for the conveyance by Liberto of his property to Sanders. Appellant sought to recover damages as for unpaid purchase price and the foreclosure of an equitable vendor’s lien upon the property conveyed.

[1] In this transaction no money was passed. It was a pure and simple exchange of land, which at common law is designated a mutual grant of equal interests, not necessarily in value, but in dignity as a fee for a fee, and differs from a sale, in that no fixed money price or value is placed upon either of the exchanged properties; but in a sale there is either a money consideration or the equivalent in property at a fixed valuation. 39 Cyc. 1181. In Walker v. Renfro, 26 Tex. 142, it is said:

“Although the transaction was in effect an exchange of lands, it was not a technical exchange, and it seems to be the doctrine of the adjudged cases that the effect of such an exchange — that is, that if one party is evicted from the land conveyed to him, he may reenter upon his own land which he had given in exchange — does not attach to a case like the present. 2 Hilliard on Real Property, 380; Id. 314, 315; Harland v. Eastland, Hardin (Ky.) 590; Cass v. Thompson, 1 N. H. 65. Both deeds contained an express covenant of warranty of title. That of Mrs. Walker vested in Renfro the title to the land In controversy. The consequence is that his alienee, the plaintiff, can maintain this action, and the right of action is not defeated by the failure of title to the labor. The defendant has her remedy for such failure of title upon the warranty in her deed. She has not sought it in her defense to this action, and must therefore be left to pursue it in another, should she think proper. We need not inquire what would have been the effect of the deed, had it contained no warranty.”

The court said, in reversing the case of White v. Street et al., 67 Tex. 180, 2 S. W. 531, to determine whether the parties did agree upon the value of the 63 acres of land at the time the trade was made:

“For, if so, the value so agreed upon, with interest, furnishes a fair measure of damages. If, however, there was no such agreement, then the true value of the land ought to be ascer *122 tained, and to this, with interest, will the plaintiff be entitled.

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Bluebook (online)
248 S.W. 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liberto-v-sanders-texapp-1922.