Martin v. Martin

207 S.W. 188, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1328
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 21, 1918
DocketNo. 7627. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 207 S.W. 188 (Martin v. Martin) 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
Martin v. Martin, 207 S.W. 188, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1328 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

DANE, J.

This is a suit in trespass to try title to 998¼ acres of land in Leon county, Tex., brought by appellant, Mary A. Martin, as executrix of the last will of William Martin, deceased, against J. M. Martin, generally called “Jess Martin.”

Defendant answered by general denial, plea of not guilty, and by cross-bill, in which he alleged that in the month of August, 1913, his father, William Martin, deceased, had made a parol gift to him of the specific 160 acres of land out of the said 998½ acres of land sued for by Mrs. Martin, which is described in his cross-bill. He further alleged that, relying upon said gift, he had entered upon said 160-acre tract, and had made valuable improvements thereon in good faith, and therefore he was the equitable owner of the same, for the title to which he prayed judgment.

The cause was tried before the court without a jury, and judgment was rendered in favor of defendant for the 160 acres of land claimed by him, said judgment reciting, however, that said 160 acres was to be subject to the payment of one-sixth of an indebtedness of about $8,000 which was owing by William Martin as a part of the purchase money for said 998¼ acres.

- 'The main and controlling question presented by this appeal, and which if decided j in favor of appellant will render the discus-' sion of the one other assignment unnecessary, is, Was the evidence sufficient to support the judgment of the trial court confirming the alleged parol gift of William Martin, deceased, to appellee, Jess Martin?

Appellant’s proposition is, in effect, that one who seeks to recover title to land from another who holds the legal record title, solely upon a claim of parol gift, must establish ¡ by clear and satisfactory evidence, free from : ambiguity and doubt, first, the gift in. clear and unequivocal terms; second, that he entered into possession of the land under and by virtue of the gift; and, third, that after such entry he did, in good faith and because: of said gift, make permanent and valuable improvements on said land; }and that as ap-pellee relied for his title tó the land solely upon the alleged parol gift, and as the evidence wholly fails to establish the three essential elements of a parol gift which would vest title to said land in him, the trial court erred in divesting Mrs. Martin of the legal title thereto and vesting the same in appellee by a judgment in his favor.

The undisputed evidence shows that the 998½ acres were conveyed to William Martin, deceased, in the spring of 1913; that it was the community property of himself and his wife, Mary A. Martin, appellant herein, and that they held a fee-simple title thereto; that they moved upon said land in 1913 and resided thereon as their homestead; that as part payment of the purchase price of the land William Martin assumed the payment of an indebtedness of his vendor for the sum of $8,000, which was a lien upon the land, no part of which had been paid at the date of the trial of this cause. It also shows that William Martin and wife, Mary A. Martin, had seven children, four daughters and three sons, Jess, the appellee, being one of them. All' the daughters, Jess, and one of the other sons were married and lived separate and apart from their parents. All the sons moved upon the land with their parents. Some time after moving upon the land Jess, with his family, moved into and occupied a tenant house on the premises as a tenant of his father during the year 1913, said house so occupied by him being on the 160 acres claimed by him. William Martin, the father, did considerable amount of improving on the land, such as clearing land and putting much of it into a state of cultivation. A part of *190 the land so cleared and reduced to a state of cultivation was by help employed and paid for by William Martin, but the most of it was done upon agreement with the parties who cleared the land that such parties should have the crops grown upon the land so cleared by: them, respectively, free of rent for one year as their compensation. All three sons, as well as other renters, did some of the clearing. At the time of the purchase of the 998⅛ acres there was only about 20 acres of the 160 acres claimed by appellee cleared, and at the time of the death of William Martin, in June, 1916, there was cleared on said 160-acre tract about 100 acres. The clearing done by appellee was not all on said 160 acres, but some of it was on other parts of the 998¾ acres. (During the life of William Martin he rented the larger portion of the cleared land on said 160-acre tract to tenants other than appellee, and collected the rents therefor, and during such time appellee cultivated some of the land on said 160 acres and some on other parts of the land. Up to the time of the death of William Martin he had charge and control of the entire 998¼ acres, and made all the contracts of rental with the several tenants and collected and retained the rents due. William Martin paid all taxes due on the entire 998½ acres and the interest on the $8,000 debt. William Martin died on the 26th day of June, 1916, and left a will by the terms of which he devised and bequeathed to his wife, Mary A. Martin, all Ms estate, both real and personal, which will was duly probated in August of the same year. Shortly after the probate of the will appellee notified Ms mother, Mary A. Martin, that he claimed the 160 acres, now claimed by Mm, under a parol gift made to him by his deceased father. He never at any time before his father’s death asserted any claim to said 160 acres as far as shown by the evidence. Appellee paid rent to his mother, for such land as he cultivated upon said 160 acres, for the year 1916, after the death of his father. The rental value of the 160 acres for 1914, 1915, and 1916 was about $750 to $800.)

The material testimony offered by appellee to establish the parol gift alleged by Mm, and to prove the value of improvements made on the land claimed by him, was substantially as follows:

Mrs. J. M. Martin, wife of appellee, testified:

“I heard Mr. Martin talking with Jess, and explaining where his lines were, and that his land begins with what is known as the old. Bill Brown house, and runs 486 yards north and then .east, parallel with the south line of the farm, far enough to make 160 acres. I heard Mr. Martin tell him that in the fall after we moved there in the summer. Mrs. Martin was with her daughter, Mrs. Grace Hooper, in Archer county at the time. I heard the conversation between my husband and his father, and we were living at the place we now live. Mr. Martin and Jess made the ‘A’ stick, and went to the corner, and then went down to south line, measuring it, and then came to the house and had that conversation in which Blr. Martin told Jess that that was his land and his line as near as he could get to it with a yardstick like that.”

Bum Jones, witness for appellee, testified:

“Mr. William Martin had a conversation with me and Blr. Jess and others in which he pointed out certain land. One day me and him and Mr. Jess Martin and Sam Roberts was going down the road from the house to the water gap from Mr. William Martin’s house. We was going down there, and he had' an ax on his shoulder, and got to a tree, and he spoke and says, ‘Here is where your line comes Jess on this tree,’ and he cut on it with an ax. Jess’ land was on the right-hand side of the tree from the house; that was the south side of the turning row.

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Bluebook (online)
207 S.W. 188, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-martin-texapp-1918.