Lynn v. McCoy

200 S.W. 885, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1224
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 3, 1917
DocketNo. 8723.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 200 S.W. 885 (Lynn v. McCoy) 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
Lynn v. McCoy, 200 S.W. 885, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1224 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

Hugh L. Lynn instituted this suit against Jasper McCoy and Fred Slater to recover a section of land consisting of 640 acres. McCoy filed a disclaimer, upon which judgment was awarded in plaintiff’s favor against him, but judgment was also rendered, denying the plaintiff a recovery as against Slater, and from that portion of the judgment plaintiff has appealed.

Plaintiff and his wife executed and acknowledged in statutory form two instruments in writing, one a deed to the land in controversy and the other a contract authorizing a delivery of the deed. The deed purported to be a conveyance of the land with general warranty of title to defendant McCoy for a cash consideration in the sum of $100, containing the stipulation that McCoy took the land subject to liens to secure two promissory notes then owing by Lynn, one for the principal sum of $1,000, dated May 17, 1910, bearing interest from date at the rate of 5 per cent, per annum until maturity, payable November 1, 1915, and 10 per cent, per annum thereafter; and the other note for the principal sum of $163.75, payable in installments as follows: $13.75 November 1, 1910, and five installments of $30 each, payable, respectively, on November 1st of each year, beginning with 1911 and ending 1915. The deed further stipulated that the grantee took said land subject to all back taxes due .thereon. Both of those notes were payable to the Middlesex Banking Company of Middleton, Conn.

The written contract recited that plaintiff and his wife were the owners of the land; that they were indebted to the Middlesex Banking Company in approximately the sum of $1,700, which was secured by deed of trust on the land; that the taxes upon the land had not been paid for the preceding two years, and that the same aggregated approximately $200, which also constituted an in-cumbrance upon the land. The contract further recited that McCoy had agreed to purchase the land from plaintiff and wife and to pay them the sum of $100, and take the land subject to the liens mentioned, provided they owned a> good and merchantable title. The contract further recited that Lynn and wife had agreed to accept $100 for their interest in the land, and had executed their warranty deed to McCoy, conveying the same to him. It further contained the following stipulation:

“It is therefore agreed by and between the said Hugh L. Lynn and Lizzie Lynn, parties of the first part, and the said Jasper McCoy, party of the second part, that said warranty deed above mentioned is to be placed in escrow in the First National Bant of Hamlin, Texas, to be held by said bank and delivered to said Jasper McCoy after he has had a reasonable time to have the title to said land examined not to exceed thirty days from this date, upon the payment to said bank for the said Hugh L. Lynn and Lizzie Lynn of the sum of $100.00. Px-ovidcd that should the said Jasper McCoy not deposit in said bank within said thirty day3 for the said Hugh L. Lynn and Lizzie Lynn the said sum of $100.00 then said deed is to be delivered to the said Hugh L. Lynn.
“It is further provided that should the title to said land be good and merchantable in said Hugh L. Lynn and Lizzie Lynn, subject only to the above-mentioned indebtedness, then the said Jasper McCoy obligates and binds himself to pay said sum of money above mentioned to said bank above mentioned for the said Hugh L. Lynn and Lizzie Lynn. But if said title shows to be further incumbered than above set out then the said McCoy is under no obligations to accept said deed and pay said sum of money.”

Those instruments were both dated February 3, 1916, were acknowledged on the same date, and as soon as they were executed they were deposited in the First National Bank of Hamlin, where they remained until they were delivered to McCoy 'by the bank, which delivery was within the 30 days from the date of their execution. At the time they were delivered to McCoy he paid to the bank for the use and benefit of plaintiff and wife $100, as stipulated in the contract and deed. Very soon after McCoy received the deed it was duly filed for record, and shortly thereafter he sold the land to Slater; the deed to Slater being dated March 4, 1916, on which date that deed was also duly filed for record. The deed from McCoy to Slater recited a cash consideration paid to McCoy of $2,000.

The deed and contract executed by plaintiff and wife were filed with plaintiff’s petition as exhibits thereto, find the petition contains three counts: The first is in the statutory form of an action in trespass to try title. In the second count it was alleged, in substance, that on February 3, 1916, plaintiff owned a fee-simple title to the land, and was lawfully possessed thereof, and at that time the defendant McCoy was using the same as his tenant; that on said date McCoy came to plaintiff’s residence, having those instruments in his possession, which had been prepared under his direction and without the knowledge or advice of the plaintiff and his wife, both of said instruments being unsigned, but prepared for the signatures of the plaintiff and his wife; that McCoy proposed that plaintiff and his wife execute and acknowledge said instruments, and, as an inducement for them to do so, represented to them that the incumbrance against the land in favor of the Middlesex Banking Company then amounted to approximately $2,200, and that the land would be sold on the following day by 2 o’clock p. m., unless the debt was paid, or the payment thereof extended, but that if plaintiff and his wife would sign those instruments he, *887 McCoy, would advance money, which he then had, necessary to postpone said sale, and would allow plaintiff a period of 30 days within which to get the money necessary to discharge said indebtedness, and would aid plaintiff in procuring the same; that McCoy further represented that the deed and contract would he placed in the First National Bank of Hamlin and there kept without delivery of the deed to McCoy for the full period of 30 days, in order to give plaintiff an opportunity to pay off said debt, or to sell the land to some one else, and in the event he should do either, the deeds should not be delivered by the bank to McCoy, but if plaintiff failed to procure the money, either by borrowing it, or by selling the land, within the period of 30 days, then, and not until then, the deed should be delivered to McCoy upon the payment to plaintiffs of $100 for their equity in the land, and should also pay the outstanding indebtedness against it, which was then estimated to be the sum of $2,200.

It was further alleged that McCoy represented to the plaintiff and his wife that the proposed parol agreement between the parties recited above was embodied in the written contract, and that plaintiff and his wife executed the same and the deed relying upon such statement, in ignorance of the fact that the same was false, and would not have executed it but for such assurances.

It was further alleged that plaintiff was unable to read, and that the instruments were not read over to him; that McCoy had been acting as plaintiff’s agent in earing for the land and plaintiff’s stock, and had his full confidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
200 S.W. 885, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 1224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynn-v-mccoy-texapp-1917.