Morrill v. Bosley

88 S.W. 519, 40 Tex. Civ. App. 7, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 60
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 3, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 88 S.W. 519 (Morrill v. Bosley) 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
Morrill v. Bosley, 88 S.W. 519, 40 Tex. Civ. App. 7, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 60 (Tex. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

TALBOT, Associate Justice.

This suit, as originally instituted, was substantially an action by plaintiff in error against the city of Dallas and defendants in error, J. B. Bosley and his wife, Ida C. Bosley, to prorate taxes due said city on different parcels of land, alleged to be the property of plaintiff in error and defendants in error respectively, that had been assessed together for taxation, and to recover from the said J. B. Bosley his proportion of certain taxes which plaintiff in error had been compelled to pay on said property, in order to be alkwed to pay the taxes on the property alleged to be her own, and which had been assessed with Bosley’s property. By the allegations of defendants in error it became also a suit to recover or quiet title to the property described in the petition.

The original petition alleged that on January 1, 1890, J. B. Bosley and ivife Avere the OAAmers of a lot fronting 100 feet on the southeast side of Live Oak Street by 160 feet deep on Floride Street, in Dallas, Texas; that on February 20, 1892, J. B. Bosley and wife conveyed, by general warranty deed, to W. J. Betterton, a lot 50 feet on Live Oak Street by 11Ó feet deep, said lot being a part of the 100 feet by 160 feet, and being 50 feet northeast of Floride Street (said lot so sold being hereinafter, for brevity, called the Morrill lot) ; that the said Bosleys have ever since continued to be the OAvners of all of said 100 by 160 feet lot except said Morrill lot. That in the deed of said Morrill lot from Bosley and wife the consideration Avas recited to be $1,550 paid, and one note for $1,200 and one for $500, to secure which the vendor’s lien was expressly retained, the deed providing that the $1,200 note was a first lien and the $500 note Avas a second lien upon said Morrill lot; that by agreement of all parties the $1,200 note was made payable to plaintiff, Avho paid the full amount thereof to the said Bosley and wife; that on February 20, 1892, as part of the same transaction, W. J. Betterton executed to Joseph M. Dickson, as trustee, a deed of trust on said Morrill lot to secure said $1,200 note, authorizing a sale of said lot; that, default was made in the payment of said $1,200 note, and that on June 7, 1898, in compliance with the terms of the trust deed, which A?ere alleged, the said trustee sold the Morrill lot, and the same was bought in by plaintiff, who received a deed therefor, and had ever since been the OAvner and in the possession thereof. That said entire 100 by 160 feet had been assessed together by the city of Dallas for taxation for the years 1890 to 1898, inclusive; that the city of Dallas had refused to prorate the taxes on said property for any of said period, and the other defendants had refused to pay any part of the taxes or make any agreement about them; that plaintiff had paid all the *10 taxes for 1898; that the Morrill lot, during said period, was worth one-third the entire lot. The prayer was that the taxes for 1890, 1891, 1892, be adjudged to be primarily a lien on that part of the 100 by 160 feet owned by the Bosleys, and that the taxes for 1893-1897 should be prorated and adjudged primarily to be liens, one-third on the Morrill lot and two-thirds on the remainder of the lot, and that plaintiff should have judgment against J. R. Bosley for two-thirds of the taxes for 1898, with foreclosure of lien.

The city of Dallas pleaded that the taxes for 1890 to 1897, inclusive, had been legally assessed and levied on the property, and prayed for judgment with foreclosure of tax lien.

The defendants J. R. Bosley and wife pleaded: (1) That on January 1, 1890, the property described in plaintiffs petition was the separate estate of Ida C. Bosley, and was the .homestead of defendants in error. (2) That the instrument executed by them to W. J. Betterton, described in the petition, and purporting to be a deed to the Morrill lot, was merely a pretended conveyance executed by them solely for the purpose of enabling them to procure a loan of $1,200 on said lot; that said deed was not acknowledged privily and apart from her husband by Mrs. Bosley; that Y. J. Betterton never paid the cash consideration recited in the deed, and never had any interest in the property; that the whole transaction was a scheme to fix a lien on their homestead for •the $1,200 note. (3) That they believed, at the time of the execution of their deed to W. J. Betterton, that they were borrowing money from Joseph M. Dickson, and that the said Dickson not only had notice of the fact that said transaction was entered into for the purpose of borrowing money on a homestead of defendants in error, but suggested that the papers be drawn as they were, and assured defendants in error that they could in this way give a valid lien for borrowed money on their homestead. (4) That plaintiff had full and complete knowledge of said facts. That, even if the lien was valid, it was agreed between the plaintiff and the Bosleys that if said land was ever sold under said deed of trust it should bring at least a sum sufficiently large to pay said lien and the $500 note held by J. R. Bosley. (5) that the $1,200 note had been paid; that on November 2, 1894, it was agreed by J. R. Bosley and plaintiff that Bosley had paid $430; that it was also then agreed that from that time plaintiff should collect the rents on said property and apply them on the debt, and that the rents were $18 per month ; the plaintiff was notified to produce an account showing the amounts received. (6) That Ida C. Bosley was not examined privily and apart from her husband when she acknowledged the deed to W. J. Betterton, but that at the time she and her husband were together in the same room with the notary. (7) That the plaintiff had never had possession of the Morrill lot. The pleading closed with a prayer for the title and possession of the property.

The plaintiff filed her first supplemental petition on January 8, 1904. This consisted of a demurrer to the pleadings of the Bosleys, a general denial, a plea of not guilty, and pleas of the two and four years statutes of limitations, and a special plea of the five years statute of limitations. Plaintiff then specially pleaded the execution of the deed, note arid trust deed mentioned in her original petition, and the *11 purchase by her of the Morrill lot at trustee’s sale under the trust deed securing the $1,200 note, on June 7, 1898; that her deed to the lot was filed for record on June 10, 1898, and duly recorded in volume 234, page 365, Records of Deeds, etc., of Dallas County, Texas; that on June 7, 1898, she took possession of the property by tenant, and thereafter held peaceable and adverse possession thereof to August 20, 1903, paying all taxes thereon, when defendants in error took forcible possession of said property. That the plaintiff bought said note for $1,200, relying tipon the truth of the recitals therein, and in the said deed and trust deed, and without any knowledge whatever as to the alleged facts which the defendants Bosley allege made the lien of said note invalid; that she believed said property had been actually sold by the Bosleys to W. J.

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

Related

Browne v. Fechner
159 S.W. 461 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 S.W. 519, 40 Tex. Civ. App. 7, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrill-v-bosley-texapp-1905.