Munroe v. Munroe

116 S.W. 878, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 320, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 201
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 6, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 116 S.W. 878 (Munroe v. Munroe) 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
Munroe v. Munroe, 116 S.W. 878, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 320, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 201 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Chief Justice.

—This suit was brought by the appellee against the appellant, Fannie Munroe, in her individual capacity and as administratrix of the estate of Alonzo Munroe, deceased, and against other defendants who were heirs at law of said Alonzo Munroe, to recover the amount due upon a note for $200 executed by said Alonzo Munroe in favor of appellee on November 1, 1906; and to foreclose an alleged vendor’s lien upon a tract of thirty acres of land on the Jesse Grimes "survey, in Grimes County, to secure the payment of said note.

The petition alleges in substance that on the 1st day of February, 1900, John T. McGinty sold and conveyed the thirty acres of land before mentioned, and which is fully described in the petition, to Alonzo Munroe for a consideration of $200 cash and a note for $100, payable ten mpnths after date with interest at ten percent per annum, for the payment of which a vendor’s lien was especially reserved in *322 the deed conveying said land; that the said Green Munroe, appellee, paid the said $200 cash payment mentioned in said deed, and signed said note for $100 with said Alonzo Munroe, and subsequently paid the full amount due upon said note and thereby became subrogated to the vendor’s lien held by McGinty; that thereafter, on the 1st day of November, 1905, the said Alonzo Munroe being indebted to the appellee in the sum of $200, balance due him of the monies paid by him in the purchase of said land as aforesaid, executed and delivered to him the following note:

“State of Texas,
County of Grimes.
“November the 1st., 1905.
“On or befour 'the first day of October, 1906, I promis to pay to Green Munroe the sum of $200 two hundred dollars for value Received with tin Per Cent intrust from date to date this the Being Nov. the 1st. 1905.
“This note is aliso for $200, two hundred dollars Payed by Green Munroe on a certain Tract or pareil of land sichuated and Being in Grimes County, Tex. Said land containing 30 acres in the Jesse Grimes headright and deeded to Alonzo Munroe by J. T. McGinty.
“I all so convey this Note to Green Munroe as a vendorse lean Note on said described land. A. L. Monroe.”
“J. T. McGinty.

It is further alleged that the note was duly authenticated and presented to the appellant administratrix for allowance as a claim against the estate of Alonzo Munroe, deceased, but that she refused to allow the same or any part thereof. The prayer is for judgment against the administratrix for amount due upon said note and for foreclosure against all of the defendants of the lien upon said thirty acres.

The defendant, Fannie Munroe, answered by general and special exceptions, and general denial, and by special plea in which it is alleged in substance that the thirty acres of land was the homestead of herself and her deceased husband, Alonzo Munroe, at the time the note sued on was executed, and that the attempt on the part of the plaintiff and said Alonzo Munroe to create a lien upon said land was without her consent and was a fraud upon her homestead rights; that the said Alonzo was not indebted to plaintiff in any amount at the time said note was executed, and that said instrument was executed by him for the purpose of defrauding her and defeating her homestead rights in said land, she and her said husband- Alonzo not being upon friendly terms at the time said instrument was executed. She further specially pleaded that the instrument sued on is void because it was not originally written as one instrument, but was on two separate pieces of paper, and was mere memoranda not intended as a complete instrument, and “that said pretended instrument was patched and put together by plaintiff’s attorney, and plaintiff’s said attorney was the first person to arrange said instrument in such form that it has the appearance of a single and continuous instrument. *323 That said instrument at the time of its execution and for a long while thereafter was void for want of proper form and identification.” This plea was verified by oath of said defendant.

Other defendants waived citation and filed answer admitting the truth of plaintiff’s allegations, and joining in his prayer for recovery of the amount due on the note and for foreclosure of the lien. The cause was tried by the court without a jury and judgment rendered' in favor of plaintiff in accordance with the prayer of his petition.

The appellant’s assignments of error one to twelve, inclusive, omitting assignment number seven, are grouped and presented together. These assignments complain of the rulings of the court upon the general demurrer and special exceptions to plaintiff’s petition presented by the appellant in the court below. The assignments complaining of the rulings on the special exceptions present various different and wholly disconnected questions, and it is clear that under the rules they can not be grouped and presented as one assignment. In addition to this, the statement following the assignments does not point out the particular portions of the petition excepted to and does not set out or give the substance of the defendant’s exceptions to the petition. Under the rules governing the preparation of briefs and the manner of presenting questions for the decision of Appellate Courts, we are not required to consider any of these assignments. We have examined the petition to ascertain whether it alleges a cause of action, and it is sufficient in this respect and therefore was not subject to a general demurrer. If we should, notwithstanding the violation of the rules above mentioned, consider the single proposition advanced by appellant under the various assignments complaining of the rulings of the court upon the special exceptions, the assignment to which said proposition relates could not be sustained. The proposition is as follows:

“Proposition of law under the fifth assignment of error.—Subrogation arises from implied contract and therefore is barred in two years; and when such fact appears from plaintiff’s petition the defect is properly' reached by special exception.”

The fifth assignment of „error is as follows: “The court erred in overruling paragraph ‘d’ of defendant’s special exception, which, said exception was that plaintiff’s petition showed on its face that if plaintiff ever had a lien against the property in question that said lien was barred by the statute of limitations of two and four years, which said period of limitation the defendant here specially invokes in bar of plaintiff’s lien and claim.”

Plaintiff’s petition seeks to recover upon a written instrument and to foreclose the express lien given by said instrument. While the petition does allege that the consideration for the note was the payment by plaintiff of the purchase money for the land sold by McG-inty to Alonzo Munroe, and that by such payment he was subrogated to the vendor’s lien held by McGinty, he does not sue upon the implied promise arising from such payment by him, nor seek to foreclose the lien to which he alleges he was subrogated by such payment, but, as before stated, declares upon the note and the express lien therein *324 given, and.

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

Related

Thames v. Clesi
208 S.W. 195 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1918)
Carter v. South Texas Lumber Yard
160 S.W. 626 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1913)
Baker v. McDonald
159 S.W. 450 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 S.W. 878, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 320, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/munroe-v-munroe-texapp-1909.