Morgan v. Brown
This text of 156 S.W. 361 (Morgan v. Brown) 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.
Opinion
Appellee sought to recover on two promissory notes for $750 each, executed to his order by C. B. Morgan and J. C. McCamy, and to foreclose a vendor’s lien on land for the purchase money of which the two notes were given, and upon an allegation that the makers of' the notes had sold an interest in the land to the Gulf Coast Immigration Company, a private corporation, it was also made a defendant in the suit. The corporation disclaimed any interest in the land and does not figure in this appeal. A general demurrer was sustained to the answer of appellants, and judgment, as prayed for, rendered in favor of appellee.
In the answer the purchase of the land and the execution of the notes was admitted, but payment of a portion of the purchase money was contested, on the ground that appellants had bought 125 acres of land, but in fact obtained only 60 acres of land. It was alleged that appellants “are in danger of being evicted from all that part of said land in conflict with other surveys and lands”; that appellants had bought the land by the acre at a certain price. It was further alleged: “That since said purchase by defendants the county surveyor of Aransas county has furnished defendants with a plat of said lands made up from a survey on the ground, which said plat shows a material conflict between the lands sold to defendants and the Carper survey on the north and the Paup survey on the south, and defendants allege the fact to *362 be that the land described in plaintiff’s petition, and in the deed from plaintiff to defendants, is in conflict with the Oarper survey on the north and the Paup survey on the south (or with one or the other of said surveys, which cannot be definitely alleged), to the extent of about 50 per cent, of the area thereof. And these defendants say that if required to pay the full price agreed upon for said one hundred and twenty-five (125) acres of land they will be damaged in about the sum of $1,125 or 50 per cent, of the purchase price of said land.” They prayed that an official survey of the land be ordered by the court, that certain adverse claimants be made parties, and for an abatement in the price of the land. The answer was not verified by affidavit.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.
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156 S.W. 361, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 713, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-brown-texapp-1913.