Mayfield v. Eubank

278 S.W. 243
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 26, 1925
DocketNo. 3117. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 278 S.W. 243 (Mayfield v. Eubank) 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
Mayfield v. Eubank, 278 S.W. 243 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

HODGES, J.

During his lifetime, J. B* Mayfield, the father of the appellee Mrs. Eu-bank and the husband of the appellant, held five vendor’s lien notes for $500 each executed by A. S. Allen, a party defendant in this suit. The notes were given in part payment for a tract of land theretofore conveyed by Mayfield to Allen. In January, 1920, May-field assigned these notes by a written transfer, but without indorsement, to Mrs. Eu-bank. At the same time he also executed a written contract guaranteeing the payment of those notes at maturity, and took from the appellee a written receipt. Some time after this transaction, Mayfield died. Upon the failure of Allen to pay the note due in 1923, this suit was instituted by Mrs. Eubank, the appellee, joined by her husband, against Allen and against Mrs. Hattie B. Mayfield as executrix of the will of J. B. Mayfield. Allen made no defense in the trial [>elow. Mrs. Mayfield pleaded, among other things, that the contract of guaranty was without consideration. In a trial before the court a judgment was rendered against Allen on the notes and for a foreclosure of the lien upon the property, and against the appellant as executrix upon the contract of guaranty.

The trial judge ’filed findings of facts and conclusions of law, of which the following is the substance: J. B. Mayfield was.married three times and had three sets of children. By his first wife he had five boys. After her death he married the appellee’s mother, Mrs. Alma Mayfield, and the appellee was the only issue of that marriage. Mayfield and his second wife were divorced while the ap-pellee was very young, and is still living. Some years after the divorce from the second wife, Mayfield married a third wife, the appellant in this suit, and by her had several children. His property included three community estates, the residue of which, after making the settlements with his children, was disposed of by will. In consideration of their release of their respective expectant interests in his estate and in the community estates of their respective mothers, Mayfield gave and transferred to each of his children by his first and second marriages, including the appellee, property and money amounting to the sum of $10,009. Those transfers were made in order to eliminate the children of the first and second marriages from any further claim or interest in his estate and in the community estates of their mothers, and as a settlement of all interests those children had or might have in those estates. A part of the $10,000 paid and delivered to the appellee Mrs. Eubank consisted of the vendor’s lien notes sued on in this case. He delivered to her money and other property *245 which, added to the face of the notes, equaled the sum of $10,000. In consideration of that settlement, the appellee executed and delivered to her father, J. B. Mayfield, a release which recited the receipt of the money and other property, stating that it was “in full payment and settlement of all my claim and interest in the estate of my mother by virtue of, his (her father’s) marriage to her, and in his estate, who has this day paid me this amount of $10,000.00 in full settlement and claim of all my interest that I may have had or may now have in the estate of my above-named parents by virtue of their marriage.” After making these settlements with his first and second sets of children, May-field by will disposed of the remainder of his property, bequeathing “the residue of my estate, including the community interest of my wife, Hattie Bell Mayfield (the third wife), to be given to my wife', Hattie Belle Mayfield, and our children, Jack Hastings Mayfield and Lelia Isabel Mayfield.” The will also recited the settlement made with his first two sets of children in the following language:

“On the 3d day of June, 1920, I paid to my daughter Ewing Elise Mayfield Eubanks, Jr., ten thousand dollars in full settlement and claim of all interest that she may have now or has had in the estate of her parents, J. B. May-field and Alma Mayfield, by virtue of their marriage. The above-described settlements with my sons Thomas B. Mayfield, Eatle B. Mayfield M. G. Mayfield and John P. Mayfield, and my daughter Ewing Elise Mayfield Eubanks, Jr., were made in order to eliminate them from any further claim or interest in my estate; * * * and these settlements I have made are in full of all interest, claim and demands, whether by virtue of any community interest or otherwise, that they may have now or have had in my estate.”

The court concluded that the transaction between J. B. Mayfield and the appellee was part of a family settlement of disputed property interests and claims, and that the contract of guaranty executed by J. B. May-field and here sued on was based upon a val-id legal consideration. The only controverted issue in this appeal is the conclusion of the trial judge that the contract of guaranty was supported by a- valid consideration.

In support of the plea of want of consideration, counsel for appellant contend that the evidence did not show that there was any property constituting a community estate of Mayfield and his second wife, the mother of the appellee. It is apparently admitted that there was no proof of that fact except the inference that might be drawn from the transactions out of which this controversy arose — the settlements between May-field and his children, and the recitals in his will. But conceding that the record is silent upoh that issue: Does the absence of such proof establish appellant’s plea of want of consideration? Clearly it does not. Under our statute every written instrument imports a valuable consideration; and in order to overcome that legal presumption the promisor, when sued, must not only plead the want or failure of a consideration, but has the burden of proving the truth of his plea. Newton v. Newton, 77 Tex. 508, 14 S. W. 157; Gutta-Percha Rubber & Mfg. Co. v. City of Cleburne, 102 Tex. 36, 112 S. W. 1048. In the present state of the record we must therefore assume, in the disposition of this issue, that there was property constituting the community estate of Mayfield and the mother of the appellee at the time his contract .of guaranty was executed. There was then in existence property concerning which the parties could and did contract.

But the further argument is made that even if there was such an estate, it belonged to Mayfield and his former wife, and neither of them could gain any benefit by the execution of the relinquishment which May-field took from the appellee. It is insisted that since the title to that property was then in Mayfield and his former wife, their child had no property interest in that estate which she could convey to her father in consideration of his guaranty of the notes. It is not denied that the appellee had an expectancy which she might convey to other parties, and when conveyed would pass her interest in the estate of her parents if the latter did not otherwise dispose of their property. See Hale v. Hollon, 90 Tex. 427, 39 S. W. 287, 36 L. R. A. 75, 59 Am. St. Rep. 819; Barre v. Daggett, 105 Tex. 572, 153 S. W. 120. It is true that the heir cannot endow the ancestor with a title or right to property which the latter already owns and holds; and if the existence of a consideration in this instance must be tested solely by’ the title or interest which Mayfield acquired from his daughter, there would be much weight in the argument advanced by counsel for the appellant. But in transactions of this character that is not the true criterion.

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Bluebook (online)
278 S.W. 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayfield-v-eubank-texapp-1925.