Mustain, Exr. v. Stokes

38 S.W. 758, 90 Tex. 358, 1897 Tex. LEXIS 306
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 38 S.W. 758 (Mustain, Exr. v. Stokes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mustain, Exr. v. Stokes, 38 S.W. 758, 90 Tex. 358, 1897 Tex. LEXIS 306 (Tex. 1897).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

Plaintiff in error, as executor of Butler H. Waters, deceased, sued H. G. Stokes and wife on two promissory notes for $393.75 each, signed by the defendants, and sought to foreclose an alleged lien on a certain lot in the city of Austin, which constituted appellee’s homestead at the time the notes were given. Verdict and judgment wrere rendered against Stokes on the notes, but against the plaintiff in error as to his lien, which judgment was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals.

Plaintiff in error insists that the uncontroverted facts show that his testator, Butler H. Waters, was, by the transaction in question, subrogated to the vendor’s lien on the lot described in the plaintiff’s petition, and that the District Court erred in not instructing the jury to so find.

The Court of Civil Appeals made no finding of the facts in the case, and we must therefore resort to the record to ascertain what is the undisputed evidence upon this issue.

The following facts are established by uncontroverted testimony as shown by the statement of facts. ’

On the 23rd day of November, 1885, B. H. Waters, who lived in the State of Kentucky, sent to H. G. Stokes, at Austin, Texas, a draft for $1575, which draft H. G. Stokes received and applied to the payment, so *360 far as the sum would, go, of- four notes given by himself and wife, S. C. Stokes, to Henry Perkins, for $425 each, due respectively in one, two, three, and four years from date, dated June 27, 1885, bearing ten per cent interest from date, and on the face of each note retaining a vendor’s lien on the land in question in this suit. On the 27th day of November, 1885, H. G. and S. C. Stokes executed four promissory notes, each payable to Butler H. Waters and Lou Anne Waters, each for $393.75, due respectively at one, two, three, and four years after date, bearing eight per cent interest from date until paid, reciting upon the face of each that it was given for the purchase money for parts of lots seven and eight in block 77 in the city of Austin, Travis County, Texas. On the same day, November 27, 1885, H. G. Stokes and wife executed to B. H. and Lou Anne Waters a deed for the land in question, reciting that they had received the consideration of $1575, which deed was filed for record December 7, 1885, in the office of the county clerk of Travis County. On the same day Stokes had prepared a deed from B. H. and Lou Anne Waters to H. G. Stokes and S. C. Stokes, reconveying to the latter the same land which Stokes and wife had conveyed to Waters and wife, reciting in the face of the deed a consideration of one dollar and the four notes given by Stokes and wife to- Waters and wife and further reciting that a vendor’s lien was retained upon the land, describing it, to secure the payment of the said notes. This deed was duly executed by Waters and wife in Kentucky on December 11, 1885, and recorded in Travis County February 9, 1886.

H. G. Stokes sent the notes made by himself and wife to Waters and wife and the deed from Waters and wife to Stokes and wife, with the following letter, to B. H. Waters in the State of Kentucky:

“Austin, Texas, Dec. 7, 1885.

“Dear Uncle and Aunt:

“1 herewith enclose all papers in my possession regarding transfer of property to you.

“My deed to you has been filed with the Dist. Clerk and he will have it recorded some time in the next three or four days, he has so much ahead that he could not let me have it to send with the notes. However, you can both sign the deed I enclose from yourselves to us and hold it until I get your deed, when you can return all papers except the notes. I have got property all released up to date of your deed; our deed to you is absolute, so, until you sign the enclosed deed, property is in your name. It is a vital law question in Texas that married man, deeding property, must have signature of his wife acknowledged before proper officer, or else the deed is null and void. You will find embodied in the deed proper blank for Aunt Lo-u to acknowledge. I would wait until I got your deed to send these, but thought you might feel a little uneasiness at delay. I saw one of the best lawyers, here, and he told me the most secure way for yourself and us was to deed the property to you and have you deed it back, after getting release from all previous holders. If at any time in the future we have extraordinary .bad luck yo.u can help us *361 by splitting the notes, making it easier on monthly payments, but I see no bad luck ahead; at present all looks bright. I think in a couple of years the property will be worth $3000; at any rate it is a good investment and the man who held my notes hated to give them up. Kate and children are all well and the weather is splendid. In your next, say if you would prefer monthly or yearly payments. I am right in the middle of business, so excuse haste: will write when I send you your deed, insert book and page in your deed to us in which our deed to you is recorded. You will see it is left blank. Love to all. I remain your aff. nephew, " Henry G. Stokes.”

On June 27, 1885, Henry J. Perkins and wife, Mildred, conveyed the land described in plaintiff’s petition to H. G. Stokes and Sarah C. Stokes, for the consideration of $700 paid in cash and four notes of $425 each, being the same paid off by Stokes with the draft received from Waters, ■and to secure the payment of which notes the deed retained a vendor’s lien upon the land. On the 5th day of February, 1886, John H. Robinson, Jr., executed a release to H. C. Stokes and wife of the lien of the four notes given by Stokes and wife to Perkins and wife on the land described in plaintiff’s petition, acknowledging the payment of the said notes in full. This release was recorded in Travis County, the 9th day of February, 1886.

Lou Anne Waters died in February, 1888, and Butler H. Waters died in June, 1890, the plaintiff in error being appointed executor of the will by Butler H. Waters, and duly qualified and the will properly probated in this State. The following letter was written by Butler H. Waters to Mrs. H. G. Stokes:

“Horse Cave, Ky., July 8, 1888.

“Mrs. H. G. Stokes, Austin, Texas.

“My Dear Niece:

“As I am expecting to start to the Dawson Springs to-morrow I thought I would place these two notes in an envelope backed to you, for fear of some accident; these are yours, and if I don’t fall sudden I expect to have them and other fixed better. I hope I will be able to attend to it myself.

Your uncle, Butler H. Waters.”

The two notes which first fell due, of those executed by Stokes and wife to Waters and wife, were marked paid and were not claimed in this suit, but they were not found in the envelope as stated in the letter above •copied.

•At the time the notes sued on were given, the land in question was ■occupied by H. G. Stokes and wife as a homestead, claimed by them under the deed from Henry J. Perkins and wife, as above stated. There is no controversy over any of the facts herein stated, and the question presented for our consideration is, should the District Court have instructed the jury, upon this statement of the evidence, to find a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, as to his right to foreclose the vendor’s lien upon the land described in the petition?

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38 S.W. 758, 90 Tex. 358, 1897 Tex. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mustain-exr-v-stokes-tex-1897.