Murphy v. Sills

268 S.W.2d 296, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 2420
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 5, 1953
Docket4888
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 268 S.W.2d 296 (Murphy v. Sills) 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
Murphy v. Sills, 268 S.W.2d 296, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 2420 (Tex. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

The appellant N. W. Murphy is the plaintiff and appellees R. E. Sills and wife are the defendants and also are cross-plaintiffs.

On November 16, 1942 the plaintiff leased to the defendant Sills, in writing, certain land in the Wm. Harris Survey in Liberty County. The lease was for a term of 12 months, at a rental of $20 per month, and it contained an offer by lessor Murphy to lessee Sills to sell to Sills the demised property, or a part of it, when the lease ended. This offer is the source of the suit now on appeal.

Defendant Sills and wife moved a small dwelling house upon the property immediately after this lease was made, and they have resided upon the property since that time. They have fenced the land and have cleared some of it, apparently a large part, and they have also erected other improvements of very substantial value.

The defendants paid plaintiff the $240 rental reserved in the lease, and that is all they have paid him.

The parties disagree about what happened after the term of the lease ended. The defendants testified, in substance, that they accepted the offer to sell which the plaintiff made to them in the lease and that in 1951, the plaintiff demanded as a condition to his making a deed that they pay him some interest to which they thought him not entitled and which they'refused to pay. The plaintiff testified, in substance, that the defendants never did accept his offer, although he tried .to persuade them to do so, and that he eventually withdrew this offer and brought this suit.

The suit is in trespass to try title for the title and possession of a tract which, the *299 plaintiff alleged, included the leased premises; and the lease was pleaded in full, as an exhibit to the petition. The defendants plead not guilty and a general denial, and they specially alleged in defense their acts in acceptance of the plaintiff’s offer to sell. They also plead a cross action for specific performance of this contract to convey, which they had thus charged against the plaintiff.

The cause was tried to the court without a jury and the trial court rendered a conditional judgment in behalf of defendants for title to and possession of 20 acres of land, less a mineral reservation provided in the lease, and also directed the plaintiff to make a deed conveying this property to the defendants. The condition on which this part of the decree depended was the defendants’ payment of $180.38 to the clerk. The record does not show what this $180.38 represented but it evidently included the balance owed by the defendant Sills for the 20 acres of land and is large enough to include interest thereon which Murphy would have received if Sills had given him promissory notes for this balance as is provided for in the contract. The trial court awarded to the plaintiff the land claimed by him other than the 20 acres awarded defendants.

From that part of this judgment awarding defendants the 20 acres of land and directing the plaintiff to make a deed conveying this land to the defendants the plaintiff has appealed, assigning five Points of Error for reversal.

No findings of fact have been made: The trial court’s judgment therefore impliedly determined all issues of fact in favor of the defendants.

WALKER, Justice.

Points 1 and 2 assign as error that the description of the land which Murphy offered in the lease to sell to Sills and that the description in the judgment of the 20 acres awarded to Sills are too indefinite and uncertain to be applied to any land. It is claimed that this uncertainty is in the words of these descriptions; the plaintiff does not say that extrinsic proof has made an apparently sufficient description ambiguous.

In his petition the plaintiff first alleged title to a “parcel of land * * * in Liberty County, Texas * * * a part of the Wm. Harris survey * * * described as follows: that part of the L. K. Moss tract in the Wm. Harris League * * * bounded on the west by the G. R. Morris 200 acre tract and on the north by the north line of the League and on the east and south by the M. S. Fortier 50 acre tract * * * containing about 112 acres ⅜ * This description was taken from the only deed to, the plaintiff which was proved, namely, the deed.of 1930 from persons who described themselves as heirs of Ashly W. Spaight. Among other . documents, the plaintiff proved the field notes of the league and conveyances locating on this league a Granville R. Morris 200 acre tract and a tract conveyed by E. C. Fortier and wife, Mary S. Fortier. The evidence indicates that the L. K. Moss tract referred to in the plaintiff’s deed and in the petition, and that part of said tract conveyed to the plaintiff, could be located on the ground; the description in plaintiff’s deed and this same description in the petition is at least not patently insufficient.

The plaintiff, having alleged title as stated, next alleged, in substance, that the land leased to the defendants was a part of the tract owned by the plaintiff and that the defendants, acting under their lease, had taken possession of and yet held the leased premises.

The material parts of this lease are as follows:

“It is agreed that N. W. Murphy has rented to R. E. Sills a part of the acreage lying in the Wm. Harris Survey, on the East side of the Wallisville Road: Beginning at a point on the east side of the Wal-lisville Road at a distance of 210 feet South of the Northeast corner of the Volney Hilton line on the West side of the Wallisville Road and running in an Easterly direction across the marsh to the east line of the Murphy acreage, and including all the acre *300 age in said tract south of said line, for a monthly rental of $20.00 per month payable in advance.”

“It being a further condition of this agreement that if said payments are not duly paid as herein provided at any time after thirty (30) days, that said Murphy may have the right to dispossess and move from premises said tenant at any time after ten days written notice by registered mail to his last known address, and retain any improvements such as houses, fences, or other fixed improvements.”

“It is further a part of this agreement that if the said Sills should well and truly pay the said rental according to the terms and tenor of the agreement as herein provided, that the said Murphy agrees to sell to the said Sills whatever acreage of land that may be found in said tract South of the line herein described, or up to twenty (20) acres as a correct survey may develop when duly surveyed, in said South part of said tract south of the line above stated, at the price of $20.00 per acre, and apply the first twelve (12) months rental as a cash payment, namely $240.00. When said monthly payments have been duly paid, said Murphy agrees to make to said Sills a Special Warranty Deed to said property of what ever acreage it may contain or up to twenty (20) acres, Save and Except % of all minerals that said property may contain or later be developed which is reserved by N. W. Murphy, Lessor, his heirs or assigns, with full rights of ingress or egress for the exploration thereof, and take his notes for any balance that may exist after deducting the cash rental paid as above stated, payable at $20.00 per month, with interest at 5%, secured by Vendor’s Lien notes and Deed of Trust on said property.”

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

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 S.W.2d 296, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 2420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-sills-texapp-1953.