Moore v. Chamberlain

152 S.W. 195, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1197
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 15, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 152 S.W. 195 (Moore v. Chamberlain) 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
Moore v. Chamberlain, 152 S.W. 195, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1197 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

SPEER, J.

This case has been once before appealed and will be found reported under the style of Chamberlain v. Trammell in 131 S. W. 227. After a reversal by the Court of Civil Appeals for the Sixth District, the cause was tried on special issues and a judgment rendered for the plaintiff, Hester E. Chamberlain, for title to the land in controversy, and that the defendant, Worth Moore, have and recover from the plaintiff the sum of $2,578.78 with certain interest, together with foreclosure of a lien on the land to secure such payment. The statement of the case made in the report referred to is sufficiently full for the purposes of this appeal and need not be repeated here.

The following are the special issues, submitted to the jury, together with the answers thereto:

“Gentlemen of the jury:
“(1) Was the land the homestead of Chamberlain and wife at the date of the deed to Carson? Answer: Yes.
“(2) Did Chamberlain and wife, when they made said deed to Carson, intend it to be an absolute conveyance of the land to Carson? Answer: No.
“(3) Did Wm. Chamberlain and wife, when they made the deed to Carson, intend it to be merely a mortgage to secure the loan of the $1,500 note executed by Carson to Chamberlain? Answer: Yes.
“(4) Find from the evidence and say whether there was an agreement between the Chamberlains and Carson, made at the time of the deed to Carson, that if the Chamberlains paid off and returned the $1,500 note to Carson when it matured, Carson was to reconvey the land to the Chamberlains? Answer: Yes.
“(5) Did Carson know at the time he accepted said deed that the Chamberlains, intended it only as a mortgage to him as security to him for the payment of the $1,500 expressed in the note? Answer: Yes.
“(6) Who sold said $1,500 note to A. P. Duckett? Answer: Joe Meyer.
“(7) What" did Duckett pay for it? Answer: $1,500.
“(8) Did Duckett have any notice at the time he bought the $1,500 note that the sale and conveyance of the land by the Chamberlains to Carson was a sham and intended only as a mortgage on Chamberlain’s homestead? Answer: No.
“(9) Did Duckett buy the note in good faith? Answer: Yes.
“(10) For whom did Meyer act as agent when he sold the note to Duckett? Answer: The Chamberlains, Wm. Chamberlain and his wife, .the plaintiff.
“(11) Did Meyer make any representations to Duckett at the time he sold the note; if so, what were they? Answer: That the note was good and all right and a vendor’s lien on the land.
“(12) Did Duckett buy the note himself or for Dousue Moore? Answer: Dousue Moore.
“(13) Did Dousue Moore have any notice or knowledge that the sale and conveyance of the land from Chamberlain to Carson was a sham, or was only intended as a mortgage? Answer: No.
“(14) What, if anything, did Dousue Moore pay for the note, and for whom did she buy it? Answer: $1,500; for herself.
“(15) Did she buy it in good faith? An-' swer: Yes.
“(16) Was she or not an innocent purchaser for value before maturity, without notice of any defect or ■ vice in the sale and conveyance or in the note? Answer: Yes.
“(17) Did Dousue Moore buy the $1,500 note for her ward, Worth Moore’s estate? Answer: Yes.
“(18) Did Worth Moore have any notice or knowledge of any defect or vice in said $1,600 note, such as pleaded by plaintiff in her amended and supplemental petition at the time his guardian, Dousue Moore, bought her note, or at the time he accepted it in settlement with his guardian? Answer: No. Unless the possession of her tenants at the time he bought gave him notice of Mrs. Chamberlain’s claim.
“(19) Was or not the $1,600 note and deed of trust given in lieu and in extension of the $1,500 note hereinbefore mentioned? Answer: It was.
“(20) What was the extra $100 for as contained in $1,600 note? Answer: Commission to A. P. Duckett.
“(21) Who was to have the $100, and for what was he to have it? Answer: Mr. A. P. Duckett was to have it for making the extension.
“(22) Was the land ever sold by Duckett, the trustee, under the deed of trust? If so, when and where was it sold, and who bought it at the sale? Answer: It was sold by Mr. Duckett at the courthouse door of Tarrant county, Tex., May 6, 1902, and was bought in by Worth Moore.
“(23) Did Dousue Moore request A. P. Duckett to sell the land to pay the $1,600 note after the same became due? Answer: Yes.
“(24) What notice, if any, did A. P. Duck-ett give of said sale? Answer: By posting three notices in writing at three public places in Tarrant county, Tex.; one being at the courthouse door.
“(25) Did he, Mr. Duckett, or not, give W. M. Trammell written notice of said sale before it was made? If so, when and where? *197 Answer: He did at the time of posting notices in Ft. Worth, Tex.
“(26) When did Luckett first know that Hester E. Chamberlain claimed that the deed to Carson was a mortgage? Answer: 1896.
“(27) When did she first make her claim to an interest in the land to A. P. Luckett? Answer: 1896.
“(28) Did the plaintiff, Hester E. Chamberlain, ever recognize the validity of the $1,600 note, and inquire of Luckett whether Tram-mell was. keeping the interest paid up on it or not? If so, when did she first mention the debt to A. P. Luckett? Answer: Yes, in 1896.
“(29) Did William Chamberlain or not know of the execution of the $1,600 note to B. K. Carson, and did he sign it with Tram-mell? Answer: He did.
“ (30) In what year and in what month in the year did Wm. Chamberlain die? Answer : July 11, 1895.
“(31) Did he leave any will? Answer: No.
“(32) Was there ever any administration of his estate? Answer: No.
“(33) Was possession of said land in writing or otherwise given to A. P. Luckett, as trustee, by Mr. Trammell? If so, when? Answer: Yes, in writing in October, 1895.
“(34) Did or did not A. P. Luckett, as trustee, make and deliver a deed of conveyance of the land to Worth Moore? Answer: He did.
“(35) After maturity of said $1,600 note, did Mrs. Lousue Moore request said Luckett to sell said land as trustee under said deed of trust? Answer: Yes.
“(36) Did said Luckett as trustee advertise said sale? And if you find that he did, then say how and in what manner he advertised it and how long before the day of sale. Answer each of these questions plainly and fully. Answer: He did.

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Bluebook (online)
152 S.W. 195, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-chamberlain-texapp-1912.