McMurrey v. Lampkins

47 S.W.2d 851, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 227
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 24, 1932
DocketNo. 2220.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 47 S.W.2d 851 (McMurrey v. Lampkins) 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
McMurrey v. Lampkins, 47 S.W.2d 851, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 227 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

O’QUINN, J.

There seems to have been some misunderstanding as to what this suit involved. Plaintiff in error states the suit to be one in trespass to try title to certain land, filed by defendants in error, to which he answered and set up a cross-action for judgment on and foreclosure of certain vendor’s lien notes executed by defendant in error Jim Lampkins in payment for the land in question, payable to the order of plaintiff in error. Defendants in error state the suit was for the cancellation of the notes mentioned in the cross-action of plaintiff in error, alleged to have been executed under duress. The judgment awards the cancellation of the notes and the title to the land to defendants in error.

The suit was instituted by defendants in error, Jim Lampkins and his wife, Lizzie Lampkins. Their original petition was filed in the district court of San Jacinto county on October 14, 1926, against Mrs. Eliza Beatrice Hansen of Harris county, and Wm. Mc-Murrey of San Jacinto county, and was in trespass to try title to 110 acres of land, a part of the Ruth Miller league in San Jacinto county. It alleged that on December 1, 1921, they were lawfully seized and possessed of said land, and that on said date the named defendants unlawfully ejected them from said land and unlawfully withholds same from them. They assert a title to the land by virtue of the ten-year statute of limitation. January 31,1927, the defendants in error, Lamp-kins, filed their first amended original petition in which they pleaded as before, and made the further allegation that on December 7, 1921, plaintiff in error, Wm. McMurrey, represented to them that he was the owner of the land in question, and that his title to same was superior to theirs, and that, if they would purchase of him the land, he would make them a good and sufficient title to same; that, acting upon said representations, the said Jim Lampkins purchased the land from said McMurrey for a consideration of $1,500, for which he executed his five certain vendor lien notes, each in the sum of $300, numbered 1 to 5, bearing 8 per cent, interest from date, No. 1 due on December 7, 1922, and the others in numerical order on December 7th in the succeeding years; that said McMurrey executed and delivered a deed to said Jim Lampkins in which he reserved the merchantable pine timber on said land. They further alleged that the representations of said McMurrey that he could and would execute a good and sufficient deed to said land were a fraud on the rights of the defendants in error because he was not able to execute a good and sufficient title to said land, and well knew so at the time he made to them *852 such representations, and that said McMurrey made such representations for the purpose of obtaining possession of the timber on said land; that a few weeks after the execution of said deed they discovered the fraud of said McMurrey, and immediately repudiated the acceptance of said deed, and so notified the said McMurrey. They further alleged that the deed executed and delivered to Jim Lamp-kins by McMurrey was a cloud upon iheir title to said premises.

They further alleged that on November 8, 1926, by force, threats, and fraud, and by threats of taking the life of said Jim Lamp-kins, the said McMurrey, in company with his son, Julian McMurrey, acting together, forced the said Jim Lampkins “to sign some kind of instrument affecting the title to said land as same appears in plaintiffs”; that on said date said Wm. McMurrey met said Lampkins in the corridor of the courthouse at Cold Springs, San Jacinto county, Tex., and told him (Lampkins) that, if he did not sign the instrument handed to him by said McMurrey, they would take his life; that said acts were a fraud upon his (Lampkins’) rights, and constituted a cloud on his title to said land. Their' prayer was that they have judgment canceling the deed from McMurrey to Jim Lampkins, and canceling “the instrument executed on the 8th day of November,. 1926,” and judgment for the title and possession of the land.

The citation issued and served on McMur-rey is in the transcript, and states the nature of 'the plaintiffs’ demand to be “suit to try title and damages for a certain tract of land, being 110 acres of land more or less, a part of the Ruth Miller league. * * *”

The defendant below, Mrs. Hansen, answered by general' demurrer, and plea of not guilty.

Defendant McMurrey answered by general demurrer, general denial of all the allegations in plaintiff’s petition, except the allegations that he conveyed the land in question to Jim Lampkins for the recited consideration, which was admitted, but he denied any act of fraud towards Lampkins; pleaded not guilty, and specially that plaintiffs should not have judgment because at the time he conveyed the land to Lampkins he reserved the timber on said land, and that at the time of said conveyance he had good and perfect title to said land, and held same under a deed duly registered, and pleaded the five-year statute of limitations. By cross-action, defendant McMurrey alleged that on December 7, 1921, he conveyed to Jim Lampkins the land in controversy, excepting the merchantable pine timber on said land, for a consideration of $1,500, for which said Lampkins executed and delivered to him five vendor lien notes, each for the sum of $300, bearing 8 per cent, interest from date, numbered 1 to 5, due in their numerical order December 7, 1922, to December 7, 1926, and each providing for the usual 10 per cent, attorney’s fees, that all of said notes were due and unpaid, and that said Lampkins had refused and still refused to pay same, and that, said vendor’s lien so retained was in full force and effect, and prayed for judgment on said notes and for the foreclosure of said liens, etc.

The defendants in cross-action, the Lamp-kins, by supplemental petition, pleaded the four-year statute of limitation against the notes sued on in cross-action, and specially pleaded said statute in bar of recovery on note No. 1 due December 7, 1922. By amended supplemental petition, plaintiffs, defendants in error here, answered the cross-action against them by plea of the four-year statute of limitation against all of the notes sued on, and plea of total failure of consideration, because the title of said McMurrey who had conveyed the land to them had wholly failed, in that said McMurrey, at the time he so conveyed said land to them, did not have, nor has at any time since had, good title to the land, but that at the time McMurrey conveyed the land to them he represented to them that he had good title to the land, and that his deed executed to them conveyed good title to them, and that, believing said representations, they acted thereon and executed the notes; that said representations of said McMurrey were false and made to induce them to ex'ecute said notes, wherefore the considerations for said notes and deed had wholly failed. They further alleged that for more than ten years prior to said December 1,1921, and at all times since, they had occupied the premises in question as their homestead, and that they had good title to same by virtue of the ten-year statute of limitation, as set forth in their amended original petition, and that they had not at any time executed a deed or any conveyance that was signed by Lizzie Lampkin's and acknowledged by her, as required by law, and that any instrument purported to be signed by Jim Lampkins was obtained by fraud and duress and threats of bodily harm at the hands of McMurrey and his son, and were not the legal acts of said Jim Lampkins. They prayed as in their amended original petition.

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.W.2d 851, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmurrey-v-lampkins-texapp-1932.