Messer v. Ziegler

282 S.W. 620
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 9, 1926
DocketNo. 11350.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 282 S.W. 620 (Messer v. Ziegler) 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
Messer v. Ziegler, 282 S.W. 620 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

•BUCK, J.

Plaintiffs below, Mrs. Emma Ziegler, joined by her husband, J. C. Ziegler, of Wichita Falls, and Mrs. Sallie Smith, joined by her husband, L. F. Smith, of Orange, Tex., sued Chas. H. Messer for partition of lot 6, block 34, Union Depot addition to the city of Fort Worth. They alleged that each was the owner of an undivided one-fourth part of said land and premises, together with the improvements thereon, the same being owned by each of said plaintiffs as her separate property and estate, and that the defendant in error, Messer, was the owner of an undivided one-half of said land and premises. They further alleged that the value of the property was $4,000, and prayed that commissioners be appointed and a writ of partition issue, and that, in the event said property should be found to be incapable of an equitable partition, the same be ordered sold and the proceeds divided between the plaintiffs and the defendant as their interests should appear.

They further alleged that they were sisters by half blood of the defendant’s former wife, Mrs. M. L. Messer, and that at the time of Mrs. Messer’s death she owned the property as her separate estate, and that plaintiffs in error and defendant in error were the only heirs at law of the said Mrs. M. L. Messer, deceased. They further alleged that, since Mrs. Messer’s death, the defendant had had possession of the property, and had collected rents and revenues from the same, and appropriated the same to his own use and benefit.

Defendant filed an answer consisting of a general demurrer and a general denial. Supplemental pleadings were filed by both parties, but their contents need not be here further noticed, except as they appear in the agreed statement of facts filed by the trial court.

Judgment was rendered granting the partition prayed for and finding that the defendant Messer had collected rents and revenues from said property since the death of his wife to the amount of $400, and had expended the sum of $98.45 in the care and management of said property, and that he was entitled to $22 as a reasonable compensation for his management of said property during' said period. Said property was ordered sold, and plaintiffs below were each awarded one-fourth of such proceeds, and in addition the sum of $81.14 each. From this judgment the defendant has appealed.

The agreed statement of facts is as follows :

“We, the parties to the above styled and numbered cause, whose names are signed hereto, being all of the parties to this suit, hereby agree that the following is a true and correct statement of the facts in this cause:
“(1) That the plaintiffs in this cause are Emma Ziegler, joined by her husband, J. O. Ziegler, who resides in Wichita county, Tex., and'Sallie Smith, joined by her husband, L. F. Smith, who, resides in Orange county, Tex. That the defendant is O. H. Messer, who resides in Los Animas county, Oolo.
“(2) That tiie defendant, C. H. Messer, is the surviving husband of Mrs. M. L. Messer, deceased, who died during the month of December, 1922. That the plaintiffs Emma Ziegler and Sallie Smith are the sisters by the half blood of the said Mrs. M. L. Messer, deceased. That the plaintiffs and defendant are the sole and only surviving heirs at law of the said Mrs. M. L. Messer, deceased.
“(3) That on, to wit, the 5th day of June, 1916, Meridith R. Carb and wife, Bessie B. Garb, conveyed by general warranty deed to the defendant, O. H. Messer, the following described property, to wit: Lot 6, block 34, of the Union Depot addition to the city of Fort Worth, Tarrant county, Tex. That immediately thereafterwards the defendant, O. H. Messer, placed improvements on said property consisting of a dwelling house, barn, etc. That at the time of the conveyance of said property to the said O. H. Messer, and the placing of *621 the improvements thereon by him, he was the husband of the said Mrs. M. L. Messer, now' deceased, and said property was paid for with community funds, and was a part of the community estate of the said O. H. Messer and wife, M. L. Messer. That on, to wit, the 22d day of June, 1918, the defendant, O. H. Mes-ser, executed and delivered to his wife, Mrs. M. L. Messer, a general warranty deed, conveying to her said property, the consideration expressed in said deed being ‘love and affection X have for my wife M. L. Messer,’ the deed not reciting that the property was conveyed to Mrs. M. L. Messer as her separate property.
“(4) That on, to wit, the 20th day of June, 1918, one E. Hunt filed suit in .the county court of Tarrant county, Tex., against O. H. Mes-ser, claiming an indebtedness due the said E. Hunt by said O. H. Messer in a sum within the jurisdiction of said county court. That the said O. H. Messer filed an answer in said cause in denial of said claim of the said E. Hunt, which suit remained on file until the 10th day of January, 1921, when the same was dismissed by the court by entry on the docket for want of prosecution.
“(5) That the defendant, C. H. Messer, executed and delivered to his wife, Mrs. M. D. Messer, said deed of conveyance on the 22d day of June, 1918, because he feared that the said E. Hunt would attempt to assert some claim in said property by virtue of said suit filed by the said E. Hunt, or, if the said E. Hunt should recover in said suit, he would attempt to subject the same to execution, and to prevent any contingency of such the payment of such claim, with the agreement entered into by and between the said O. H. Messer and his wife, the said Mrs. M. L. Messer, prior to and at the time of the execution of said deed, that the said O. H. Messer should retain his community interest in said property, and that the said M. L. Messer should hold the legal title to same for the use and benefit of herself and the said O. H. Messer, and that the said O. H. Messer was not parting from his community interest in same; and, further, that at future date the said M. L. Messer should execute a deed to herself and the' said O. H. Messer to said property so that the record would show that both of.them owned a community interest in said property. That the said Mrs. M. L. Messer died intestate, and without reconveying to the said O. H. Messer his interest in said property in accordance with their agreement. That the record title to said property at this time stands in the name of Mrs. M. E. Messer.
“(6) That the property hereinabove described was, at the time of the conveyance of same from C. H. Messer to his wife, Mrs. M. L. Messer, the only nonexempt real property belonging to the defendant, but that at said time of said conveyance, and for a long time subsequent thereto, the defendant, C. H. Mes-ser, had on deposit in a bank in the city of Fort Worth, Tarrant county, Tex., sufficient money to satisfy the claim of the said E. Hunt alleged in the suit which he filed. That the said E. Hunt had been a former business associate of O. H. Messer, and at the time of the dissolution of their business relations, about eighteen months prior to the execution of the deed from C. H. Messer to his wife, he knew in what bank O. H. Messer carried his account. That the time of said conveyance the said C. H. Messer carried his account in the same bank.
“That since December, 1922, the said G. H.

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Bluebook (online)
282 S.W. 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/messer-v-ziegler-texapp-1926.