Meyer v. Sheffield

208 S.W. 679, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 138, 1919 WL 1459
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 11, 1919
DocketNo. 8071.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 208 S.W. 679 (Meyer v. Sheffield) 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
Meyer v. Sheffield, 208 S.W. 679, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 138, 1919 WL 1459 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

RASBURY, J.

Appellant sued certain of the appellees in statutory trespass to try title. Others who were not original defendants intervened in the suit. Appellees, with one exception, were heirs of George and Laura Wilson, the common source of title to the land in controversy. There was jury trial resulting-in verdict that appellees were entitled to the land, and appellant to judgment for $297.29, the balance due on certain purchase money notes hereinafter referred to, with interest thereon from February 24, 1895, at 6 per cent, and foreclosure of the vendor’s lien followed -by judgment for $697.95 and such foreclosure of lien on the land, etc., from which this appeal is taken.

The evidence discloses the following chain of record title culminating in appellant: S. M. Ansley et ux., conveyed the land in controversy to Robert Wilson December 14, 1889, in consideration of three notes due, respectively, November 15, 1890, 1891, 1892. All the notes were payable in lint cotton, two each by delivery of five bales weighing 500 pounds and one by six similar bales. Robert Wilson, who was married at the time of the conveyance, died August 23, 1894, intestate, survived by his wife, Laura, and appellees. Thereafter on February 24, 1895, Laura conveyed the land to A. Harris, reciting the consideration to be a balance of $297 due on the Ansley notes just described, which had been acquired *680 by Harris, and which, was declared to be a community debt. On March 18, 1912, Harris, in consideration of $800, conveyed the land to Pitluck & Meyer, a firm composed of M. Pit-luck and Joe Meyer, by special warranty deed. In January, 1917, Pitluck conveyed his interest in the land to Meyer. January 12, 1917, this suit was commenced. In opposition to the title asserted by appellant just detailed, appellees alleged that, while the conveyance from Laura Wilson to A. Harris was in form a warranty deed, it was in fact a mortgage given to secure payment of the balance due on the Ansley notes then held by A. Harris of which appellant had knowledge at the time he acquired the land. Appellant in replication of such claim averred, among other matters, that he paid a valuable consideration for the land without notice of any equitable interest of appellees in the land. On the issue so raised the jury found in favor of appellees.

Appellant’s first assignment of error, in substance, asserts that such finding is without support in the evidence. The issue requires, of course, a Review of the evidence. The facts dedueible therefrom, all conflicts being resolved in favor of the verdict, are, stated in our language, substantially these: At the time Robert Wilson acquired the land from Ansley, it was of the value of $750 or $1,000, and the improvements thereon consisted of two small log houses. Robert Wilson after his purchase of the land reduced his indebtedness in money to $270. Upon this debt he had five bales of cotton to apply of the probable value at that time of $200. At the suggestion of Ansley, Harris, to whom Wilson was largely" indebted on store account, purchased the unpaid notes and took over the five bales of cotton and credited their value on the store account. Subsequently, and after the death of Robert Wilson, as we have shown, Laura, his surviving wife, conveyed the land to A. Harris; the recited consideration being an unpaid balance of $297 on the Ansley notes. At the time the case was tried, both Robert and Laura Wilson were dead, and the evidence supporting the claim that the deed to Harris was in fact a mortgage consists of the following facts and circumstances: Por four years after conveying the land to Harris, Laura Wilson assessed it and paid the taxes thereon. In the fall of the year in which Laura conveyed the land to Harris, or the subsequent year, Lipsitz, Harris’ agent, advised Laura Wilson that she owed on the land only $192. On another occasion, placed at three, years after the conveyance Harris, on an occasion when he presented Laura with a calico dress and a half dollar, told her the home was hers. Prom the time Robert Wilson acquired the land and up to the period Harris conveyed to Pitluck & Meyer, Robert, his wife Laura, or the ap-pellees, their heirs, remained in continuous possession of same using and cultivating it without adverse claim by Harris. They similarly occupied and used it after Harris conveyed to Pitluck & Meyer, without adverse claim by latter until 1915, when for the first time appellant demanded rent, which appel-lees refused to pay and denied appellant had any interest in the land. Subsequent to the time Harris deeded the land to Pitluck & Meyer, Laura Wilson died, and appellees, from money received on insurance on her life, constructed a new five-room residence on the place without objection by appellant. They also, after their mother’s death, built new wire fences on the place, purchasing part of the wire for that purpose from appellant. Prior to and at the time Harris conveyed the land to Pitluck & Meyer, and subsequently, Laura Wilson, while living, and some of the appellees, “traded” with appellant and had for several years; but after the conveyance to appellant he made no claim to the land until the occasion in 1915 just enumerated. When appellees, while trading with appellant, asked appellant about paying the taxes, appellant would tell them to bring him the cotton and he would pay the taxes. During the year 1915, after Harris conveyed the land to Pitluck & Meyer, appellant agreed with some of the appellees to exchange a farm of his for the one in controversy, which was not consummated because other of the appellees receded from the agreement or refused to join in it. Appellees never paid any rent to appellant for Harris. A witness testified that appellant in 1912 or 1913, when the witness was marketing his cotton, admitted that Laura Wilson owned the land.

The facts dedueible from the evidence tendered by appellant are in radical conflict with those just detailed and tend with much probative force and sequence and corroborative circumstances to show that the land was purchased outright by Harris from Laura Wilson, survivor of the community, in consideration of the unpaid purchase-money notes and the settlement of a store account of considerable proportions, which was also a community debt, followed by regular payment of rental thereafter coupled with failure to assert any adverse title.

[1, 2] In Joske v. Irvine, 91 Tex. 575, 44 S. W. 1059, it was said in effect that it is the duty of the trial court to instruct verdict, and by analogy the duty of this court, when the issue is presented, to reverse a cause, though there be slight evidence in support of the verdict, if its probative force be so weak as to raise only a mere surmise or suspicion of the fact sought to be established, since in legal contemplation such testimony falls short of being “any evidence.” The question for our determination then is: Do the facts detailed raise only a mere surmise or suspicion that *681 the conveyance to- Harris by Laura Wilson was intended as a mortgage and that Meyer was cognizant oí that fact? Restated in a general way, the facts as to Harris disclose that, in order to secure the cotton due Ansley upon the purchase-price notes and apply same upon payment of Robert Wilson’s store account, Harris purchased the notes and took over the cotton and so applied it. Shortly after Robert’s death, his wife, Laura, deeded the land to Harris, the recited consideration being a balance of $297, on the Ansley notes, which was much less than the value of the land.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sheffield v. Meyer
229 S.W. 614 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 S.W. 679, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 138, 1919 WL 1459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyer-v-sheffield-texapp-1919.