Martin v. Martin

230 S.W.2d 547, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2137
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 26, 1950
Docket12081
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 230 S.W.2d 547 (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, 230 S.W.2d 547, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2137 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

W. O. MURRAY, Justice.

This suit was instituted by Mrs. Frank J. Martin, the surviving wife of Judge Clarence Martin, Deceased, against Lela B.. Martin, surviving wi-fe of Tom Martin who died in 1948, seeking to remove cloud from title to her homestead located in Gillespie County, -Texas, consisting of two ¡hundred acres out of Survey No. 6, originally granted to Rachael Means and -fully described in the pleadings, said cloud having been cast upon her homestead by the following provision contained in the will of her deceased son, Tom Martin: “I give and bequeath to my beloved wife, Lela B. Martin, all of my personal and real property. I also give to her 200 acres out of Rachael Means Survey in- Gillespie County, Texas, said land being in the name of my mother, which she has given to me to become my own after her death. Upon this land my wife and I have spent many thousands of dollars for improvements and much of the money so spent was the separate property of my wife.”

She also sought other relief not necessary to mention here.

Lela B. Martin answered contending, among other things, that plaintiff and her deceased husband entered into an agreement with defendant and her deceased hus--band in 1935, whereby they agreed tó will or convey to defendant the above 200 acres in consideration of a promise on her part and her then husband, to support and care for plaintiff and her husband during the remainder of plaintiff’s life. Defendant also claimed title to the 200 acres by reason of a deed executed by plaintiff in 1939 to defendant, conveying to her the said 200 acres.

The trial was to a jury upon thirty-four special issues, some of which the jury answered favorably to plaintiff and some favqrably to defendant (cross-plaintiff). The trial court rendered judgment awarding to defendant (cross-plaintiff) the equitable title to the 200 acres here involved, and also awarded to defendant (cross-plaintiff) the possession, management, leasing and control of said land and premises and all of the produce, rentals, revenues.and income therefrom, and provided further that Mrs. Frank J. Martin and Mrs. Lela B. Martin should have the equal right “to reside in, use and occupy the home or dwelling house on said premises.” The judgment further orders and decrees “that Mrs. Lela B. Martin is obligated and bound and shall continue to care for, support and maintain Mrs. Frank J. Martin .so long as the said Mrs, Frank J. Martin shall live; provided that should the said Mrs. Frank J. Martin elect to live elsewhere than upon said 200 acre tract, then, that while she shall so live elsewhere, said Mrs. Lela B. Martin shall pay to her the sum of $50 per month for -her support and maintenance, and such sum shall be in full payment of her obligation therefor, except as to hospitalization, medical expense, or other expense connected with her care in event of sickness or disability requiring medical attention, for which said Mrs. Lela B. Martin shall be bound and obligated to pay the reasonable and necessary cost thereof over and above such sum provided for support and maintenance,” There are other provisions of the judgment which were rust appealed from and are not necessary to mention. From that judgment Mrs. Frank J. Martin has prosecuted this appeal.

Appellant’s first contention is that this judgment, in effect, grants specific performance of the contract made in 1935, whereby appellee agreed to support and care for appellant during her lifetime and in consideration therefor, at her death, appellant would convey or devise the 200 acres to appellee, and that a contract of this nature is not one that may be ordered specifically performed by a court of equity during the lifetime of the promisor. We sustain this contention. Where, as in this case, the parents agreed to convey or devise their homestead to their son and his wife upon their death, in consideration of the son and wife agreeing to support and care for them during their lifetime, a court of equity cannot grant specific performance because of the want of mutuality of con *549 sideration and remedy. If the situation were reversed and the promisor were suing the promisee for specific performance of this contract, it can readily be seen that a ■court of "equity would not compel the promisee to perform services and care for the promisor during the remainder of prom-isor’s life if promisee had refused to do so. Furthermore, no court of equity would require the promisor to live with promisee if their relations had ceased to be cordial and if life with the promisee had become intolerable. A court of equity simply does not have the means to enforce such a judgment. Such a court could not require the promisee to be kind and thoughtful and considerate of promisor, and in the absence of such things the contract should not be enforced. Furthermore, the promisor may outlive the promisee and in this manner it may become impossible for the promisee to carry out her contract, and also the promisee may become incapacitated to properly care for promisor and in this manner be prevented from carrying out the agreement.

In the case of Prusiecke v. Ramzinski, Tex.Civ.App., 81 S.W. 771, cited with approval in Sanderson v. Sanderson, 130 Tex. 264, 109 S.W.2d 744, in discussing a contract in which the promisor had agreed to convey or devise certain real property to the promisee in consideration of certain personal services to be rendered by the promisee, the court said: “Even if the court could foresee that Prusiecki would outlive Ramzinski, it could not, by any power it possesses, or any process at its command, compel the former ‘to support, house, and clothe Ramzinski as a member of his family during his natural life,’ though ‘at his death’ it might compel Prusiecki ‘to decently inter his remains.’ But no one can say that Prusiecki would outlive Ramzinski, and, if he should not, it is needless to say that after his death he could not be compelled to support, house, and clothe Ramzinski, and upon his death decently inter his remains. But suppose the court did have such power, would its exercise subserve the ends of justice? Unless, as we have seen, the court is satisfied that it would, it would refuse to interfere. That the exercise of such power might not subserve the ends of justice, but would be ruinous to Ramzinski, cannot be more aptly illustrated or demonstrated than 'is by Shakespeare in his King Lear.” 81 S.W. 773.

We take the following from 7 A.L.R.2d p. 1172:

“Thus, in Poe v. Kemp (1921) 206 Ala. 228, 89 So. 716, the court, holding a contract under which complainant was to live with defendant and take care of the latter during her life in consideration of defendant devising her house to the complainant was not specifically enforceable against the defendant, who had made a new will and devised the house and lot to another, stated: ‘This contract, as alleged in the complaint, is continuous in its nature. It cannot be completed until the death of the defendant. It requires and calls for continued and successive acts by complainant and defendant of a mutual nature during defendant’s life. The character and nature of these acts are such that they cannot be enforced by a decree of the court. The contract is not complete. It is mutually executory. It involves personal acts of each party. It will not end during the life of defendant. Equity would be in the bill of complaint if complainant had performed her part in full and defendant was dead and enforcement of the contract was asked against her representative.

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Bluebook (online)
230 S.W.2d 547, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-martin-texapp-1950.