Logan v. Aiken

123 S.W.2d 401
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 30, 1938
DocketNo. 10252.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 123 S.W.2d 401 (Logan v. Aiken) 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
Logan v. Aiken, 123 S.W.2d 401 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinions

Mary A. Logan, joined pro forma by her husband, David I. Logan, brought this suit in the form of an action of trespass to try title against E. J. Frazer and others to recover land described as the north 1/2 of Survey No. 181, Section 5, Robert B. Hays assignee of Augustine Chavez Survey, situated in Bexar County, Texas. By special pleading it was sought to cancel a certain deed and liens apparently existing upon such land because of the nonjoinder of Mary A. Logan to the deed, and alleged that such land was the homestead of David I. Logan and Mary A. Logan during all the period at which time the deed and liens were executed and attempted to be placed upon the land.

Frazer and others answered that the land in suit was the separate estate of David I. Logan and that a deed from him was made and delivered while the Logans were not living upon the land, and that such deed was signed and acknowledged by Mary A. Logan; that the vendee of the Logans placed upon the land valid liens to a bank, which Frazer purchased for value, without *Page 402 notice of any homestead claim of the Logans. Frazer sought foreclosure of his lien. He also pleaded various acts of the Logans upon which he asserted estoppel against the Logans to claim invalidity of his lien because of the property being homestead.

The cause was submitted to a jury through special issues, upon which the trial court entered a judgment in favor of Frazer against James Aiken (vendee of David I. Logan) David I. Logan and others, foreclosing the deed of trust lien against the land in suit, subject to the following restrictions contained in the judgment:

"And the Court, having considered the Jury's verdict and the Court finding from said verdict and from the undisputed evidence that the 160 acres of land, the subject matter of this suit, which is hereinafter described, was on January 5, 1923, and at all pertinent times thereafter, and is now the homestead of David I. Logan and his wife, Mary A. Logan, and their children; and that such property has been in continuous use for homestead purposes by said family during all of such time, though such property was and is the separate property and estate of David I. Logan. Further that since Mary Logan did not join in the deed to James Aiken, but merely subscribed and acknowledged the same, the Court is of the opinion that said deed was and is void as a conveyance insofar as the homestead of the Logan family is concerned, and insofar as it affects the homestead character and use by Mary A. Logan and her husband, David I. Logan, with the constituent members of their family of the premises in question. However, the Court further finds that said deed with a covenant of general warranty is not wholly void, but should be held void only insofar as it affects the homestead use and occupancy of said property by David I. Logan, Mary A. Logan, or the constituent members of their family.

"It is, therefore, ordered by the Court that the estate in the above described land which may be sold under order of sale is only the remainder estate which shall remain after the termination of the homestead character and use of said land on the part of David I. Logan, Mary A. Logan and the constituent members of their family, and that as such family they shall have the peaceable and quiet enjoyment and use thereof. But if the homestead use and character of such premises shall hereafter be terminated by abandonment or otherwise, then in such case the purchaser or purchasers of such remainder estate shall be entitled to the immediate use and possession of such premises and all title to said land after such time. And it is ordered by the Court that the order of sale to be issued under this decree shall not have the force or effect of an immediate Writ of Possession of said premises. * * *"

Frazer moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, which was overruled. Mary A. Logan moved for judgment upon the verdict, which was in part granted and in part overruled. Both parties filed motions for new trial. Said motions were overruled. Mary A. Logan appeals and Frazer cross assigns error. The record is here without a statement of facts.

Mary A. Logan seeks to reform the judgment entered by the trial court, which restricts her homestead rights to the property in suit, and urges that the jury having found the property to be the homestead of the Logans at all material times involved, and she not having joined in the conveyance by her husband to James Aiken, and the jury having found no acts of the Logans which in law would justify an estoppel against them, she was entitled to a judgment in favor of her homestead in the land, free and clear of the liens and the deed from David I. Logan to James Aiken. It seems to be conceded that the title to the land in suit was the separate estate of David I. Logan. However, under the law, the claim of homestead may be successfully asserted thereto by Mary A. Logan. 22 Tex.Jur. par. 166, page 239.

While the property in suit was being used as a family homestead by the Logans and at a time while the Logans were not living upon the land David I. Logan executed a deed to the land to James Aiken for a recited consideration of Six Thousand Dollars, Mary A. Logan did not appear as grantor in the deed, but shortly thereafter signed and acknowledged the same. The jury found that on the date of the deed from David I. Logan to James Aikin the use of the land by David I. Logan was not open, visible or obvious. The jury also found that at the date of such deed and other material times the attorney representing the interested parties possessed such knowledge as would have put a reasonably prudent person upon inquiry as to the nature and extent of the ownership of the Logans to the land, and that said attorney failed to pursue such inquiries. *Page 403

Under these findings the trial court held as shown by the judgment, that the deed was inoperative as to the homestead estate of Mrs. Logan, but valid as a conveyance of the title which was in the separate estate of David I. Logan, the husband. We have shown that the homestead may be established upon property belonging to the community estate of the husband and wife, or the separate estate of the husband or wife. This being true the deed here involved is ruled by the case of Stallings v. Hullum, 89 Tex. 431, 35 S.W. 2, by the Supreme Court; the only distinction being that the property there involved was community, and the property in the present case being the separate property of the husband.

If we give effect to our Constitutional and statutory restrictions governing the alienation of the family homestead, no logical reason is suggested to support a different holding than was made in the Stallings case supra, simply because the title to the homestead lies in the separate estate of the husband.

Frazer insists that Mary A. Logan is estopped to claim her homestead to the land in suit because she signed and acknowledged the deed from Logan to Aiken, and upon the finding of the jury that the attorney at the time of making the note secured by the lien which Frazer seeks to foreclose, relied upon the signature and acknowledgment to the deed of the Logans and would not have made such loan had it not been for such deed. It is our opinion that such conduct upon the part of Mary A. Logan does not estop her from asserting title to the property, Stone, et al. v. Sledge et al., 87 Tex. 49, 26 S.W. 1068, 47 Am.St. Rep. 65, Supreme Court. It may be true that the deed from David A.

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Bluebook (online)
123 S.W.2d 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/logan-v-aiken-texapp-1938.