Lowry v. Carter

102 S.W. 930, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 488, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 130
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 22, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 102 S.W. 930 (Lowry v. Carter) 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
Lowry v. Carter, 102 S.W. 930, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 488, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 130 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by W. A. Langham and A. E. Broussard, against G. L. Carter and his wife Fannie L. in the ordinary form of an action of trespass to try title to lot 279, block 46, in the city of Beaumont, Texas. Pending the suit the defendants Carter and wife sold the property to M. W. Lowry, who came into the suit as an intervener. Our conclusions of fact and law will sufficiently indicate the issues made by the pleadings and evidence. The case was tried without a jury and, upon the findings of fact and law by the trial court, judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiffs against defendants and intervener.

Conclusions of Fact.—There is evidence to support the findings of the trial court, which are substantially as follows:

On June 2, 1900, R. C. Devant and wife, by their deed of that date, conveyed the property in controversy to defendant G. L. Carter. The consideration was $1,200, $200 of which was cash and the balance, twenty promissory notes for $50 each, one payable each month until all were paid, a vendor’s lien being expressly retained to secure their payment. When the deed and notes were made, defendants were husband and wife. Twenty of the notes were assigned on November 24, 1900, by R. C. Devant to the Standard Savings and Loan Association of Dallas, Texas. On December 14, 1900, G. L. Carter and wife executed to F. W. McGuire, trustee, a deed of trust on said lot to secure said Standard Savings & Loan Association in the payment of a note for $700, which was then given in renewal of fourteen of the vendor’s lien notes assigned the company by Devant. This note was payable eighty-four months after date, and provided that default of payment of interest for six months, should mature the principal at the option of the holder. The deed of trust contained the usual power of sale, given in such instruments to the trustee, and of appointing a substitute trustee, in event of the death of the original one, or his failure or refusal to execute the trust. On March 30, 1903, the defendants, G. L. Carter and wife, by their deed of that date conveyed the property in controversy to the plaintiffs W. A. Langham and A. E. Broussard. This deed recites a consideration of $2,000 and is in form an absolute deed conveying the property with covenants of general warranty of title. At the time of its execution it was intended by all the parties to the deed that it should be an absolute conveyance of title to the property. The consideration actually paid by the grantees to the grantors for the lot was $3,100, which was its full value at the time. It was not the intention of the parties at the time the instrument was executed that it should operate as a *491 mortgage, but that it should operate as an absolute and unconditional conveyance of the property. On April 4, 1905, B. E. Moore, as substitute trustee in the deed of trust above described, after duly advertising the property as required by law, sold the same at public sale, at the court house door of Jefferson County, Texas, to the Standard Savings and Loan Association of Detroit, Michigan, for the recited consideration of $150 cash. On April 15, 1905, said Standard and Loan Association executed a deed, of that date, to Mrs. Fannie L. Carter to the lot in controversy, the consideration being $25 cash and the execution by G. L. Carter to the Association of a promissory note for $600, pa)rable in installments of $20 at the end of each month, a vendor’s lien being expressly retained to secure its payment. This note was assigned on September 9, 1905, by the payee to I. B. Bordages. On November 14, 1905, the property was conveyed by G. L. Carter and his wife to M. W. Lowry. The deed expresses as the consideration the assumption by the grantee of the payment of the six hundred dollar note made by the grantors to the Standard Savings and Loan Association of Detroit, Michigan, and the payment of one dollar cash. But the full consideration was $1,350, including the assumption of payment of the note. The property in controversy was actually occupied by Carter and wife as their homestead from the time they purchased it from Devant until the date of their deed to Langham and Broussard, and was so occupied by them when said deed was executed and delivered. During the time it was occupied as their homestead they owned no other property. When Carter and wife purchased the property from the Standard Savings and Loan Association of Detroit, Michigan, they had no homestead, but they were occupying the property as the tenants of Langham and Broussard and repurchased it from said Association with the intention of making it their home.

Conclusions of Law.—1. The first assignment of error complains that the court erred in finding as a fact “that the deed from G. L. Carter and wife, Fannie L. Carter, of date March 30, 1903, to plaintiffs was intended by all parties to said deed at the time of its execution and delivery as an absolute conveyance, and that it was not the intention of said parties that said deed should operate as a mortgage.” The instrument being in the form of an absolute deed of conveyance, the burden was upon the appellant to prove that it was intended by the parties as a mortgage (Goodbar & Co. v. Bloom, 96 S. W. Rep., 657), and unless the evidence offered by him was so cogent as to leave no room for doubt in the mind of anyone that it was intended as a mortgage, the finding of the trial court is conclusive on us of the fact it was intended by the parties as an absolute deed to the property. Hence, we have held with the trial court on this issue. But, aside from the burden being upon the appellant to show the instrument was a mortgage, the evidence, when tested by the rule given by the law for determining such an issue, is amply sufficient to sustain the finding of the trial court.

2. It is claimed by the fourth assignment of error (which is the only other insisted on in appellant’s brief) that the trial court erred in the conclusion that the title which passed by the deed of *492 B. E. Moore, substitute trustee, to the Standard Savings So Loan Association, and thence by its deed to Fannie L. Carter, passed, eo instanti> by estoppel to plaintiffs. It will be noted from the facts found that the property at the time Carter and wife made the deed to the plaintiffs was their community property; that upon the execution of the deed it ceased to be their homestead; that the deed from the Loan Association to Mrs. Carter emanated from a deed of trust she and her husband had made to secure the unpaid purchase money dué from them on the premises; that such deed did not operate to make the lot Mrs. Carter’s separate property, but its effect was to vest title in the community. So, in determining the question, the matter should be viewed as though the name of G. L. Carter alone appeared in the deed as grantee. “If, for a valuable consideration, A makes a deed to B, wherein he assumes to convey a specific parcel of land, he thereby asserts that he is the owner of it, and that a title to the same thereby passes to B. And yet if he has no title, nothing in fact passes by the deed.. But if he shall, soon after this, become the owner of the land, and the purchaser insists upon claiming it, it would not be open to him to deny such claim, after having thus taken the grantee’s money, and having solemnly declared that he was and should be the owner of the land.” 3 Washburn on Real Property (3d ed.), 85.

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Bluebook (online)
102 S.W. 930, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 488, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowry-v-carter-texapp-1907.