Neil v. Yager

55 S.W. 416, 22 Tex. Civ. App. 628, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 82
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 10, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 55 S.W. 416 (Neil v. Yager) 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
Neil v. Yager, 55 S.W. 416, 22 Tex. Civ. App. 628, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 82 (Tex. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

RAINEY, Associate Justice.

—A general demurrer was sustained to plaintiff’s first amended original petition, and she refusing to amend, her suit was dismissed. This action of the court raises the only issue for our determination. The petition of plaintiff is as follows:

And now comes the plaintiff, and having obtained leave of the court so to do, files this her first amended original petition herein as a substitute for and in lieu of her original petition, which was filed herein October 4, 1897, and plaintiff, by way of amendment to said pleadings, avers and charges that the petitioner, Emily Feil, complaining of R. W. Yager, L. E. Mattingly, and of Collin County, Texas, of which M. G. Abernathy is the county judge, and of Tom Stimpson and Ike Stimpson, all of whom reside in Collin County, Texas; the plaintiff also resides in Collin County, Texas. Plaintiff charges that heretofore, to wit, on or about the 15th day of March, 1877, George Feil, who was then the lawful husband of plaintiff, purchased from Collin County the lands hereinafter described, and that said Collin County issued to said George Feil a certificate of purchase of said land, executed by said county; that said certificate is in the possession of the defendants, or some one of them, and they are each hereby notified to produce the same to be used in evidence on the trial of this case. Plaintiff charges that she and her husband went into immediate possession of said land and made permanent and valuable improvements on the same, to wit, the improvements amounted to the value of $1000, and consisted of residence house, cabin, wells, fencing, and breaking up the same and putting the same in fine state of *629 cultivation; that from said last date plaintiff and her husband continued to occupy and live on said premises and used the same as a homestead until the death of said George Neil, which occurred on or about the 10th day of January, 1894; that since the death of plaintiff’s said husband the plaintiff has continued in the peaceable and adverse possession of said land, occupying and using the same as her homestead. That during all of the time since the purchase thereof from Collin County plaintiff and her said husband have paid all the State and county taxes on said land, which plaintiff charges amounted to the sum of $200; that plaintiff and her said husband paid to Collin County a large amount of interest on the purchase price agreed upon for said, land annually, since the purchase of the same, to wit, the sum of $720; that the plaintiff and her said husband paid to Collin County a part of the principal of said purchase money; that said land was purchased on a credit of twenty years, the principal to bear interest at the rate of 10 per cent per annum; that said principal did not mature until March, 1897; that there has never been any administration of the estate of George Neil, and that he departed this life intestate, in Collin County, Texas, at his home upon the land in controversy, on the date hereinabove mentioned. That there is still owing and due from George Neil, deceased, or from his estate, to Collin County, the sum of $410, principal and interest on said land. Said land described as follows: “Situated in Collin County, Texas, and being lot No. 1 of survey No. 6, Collin County school lands, situated on the waters of Little Elm Fork of the Trinity River, and bounded as follows: Beginning at the northeast corner of said survey No. 6, at a bois d’are post at the west boundary line in a survey made in the name of G. A. Martin; thence west 15 chains to a bois d’arc post; thence south 53 chains and 30 links to a bois d’arc post; thence east 15 chains to the southwest corner of the aforesaid Martin survey to a bois d’arc post and a rock; thence north 53 chains and 30 links to the place of beginning, containing 80 acres of land. Said lot No. 1 is recorded in volume 3, page 93, Collin County record of deeds, and to the plat of said lot as there recorded reference is here made for description.” That said land was community estate of plaintiff, and George Neil, deceased; that George Neil, at the time of his death, left no other debts unpaid except the debt to Collin County; that all other debts had been fully paid off and discharged by plaintiff; that the said George Neil, deceased, left no other estate real or personal, except the land herein described.

Plaintiff charges that the defendants entered into a conspiracy to overreach, cheat, and defraud plaintiff out of said tract of land and to obtain the title and possession of it for the defendants, and in pursuance thereof the defendant R. W. Yager, knowing that plaintiff was in a straitened financial condition, on or about the 5th day of February, 1895, came to plaintiff and offered to take up the debt about to fall due on said land, and carry it for plaintiff. She charges that plaintiff is an illiterate and ignorant old woman, who can neither read nor write, and who did not know anything whatever about legal transfers or convey *630 anees, and who was wholly ignorant ah out business transactions, and this fact was then well known to defendants. She charges that the defendant R. W. Yager represented to the plaintiff that it would be necessary, in order to secure him, Yager, in the money to be so advanced by him to pay out said land, for plaintiff to execute to defendant Yager a conveyance of said land, and that he would get the defendant county to make him a deed thereto also, and as soon as he got such deed he would deed said land back to defendant Ike Stimpson, who was the son of plaintiff, taking his notes for the said amount the said Yager was required to pay the said county, said notes secured by a vendor’s lien on said land, and giving the said Ike Stimpson time in which to repay him said money, and that thereby the plaintiff would have a home secured to her on said land with her .son; unless plaintiff did this that the debt to the county was due or about to fall due, and if defendant county would proceed to foreclose its lien and sell said land, then the plaintiff would lose all that she had paid in for the same, and all the work and improvements made thereon, and would be left without anything and without a home. She charges that if she is mistaken in the representations so made by defendant Yager, that as soon as he got the deed from defendant county to said land he would deed the same back to the defendant Ike .Stimpson, on time, taking his notes to be secured by the vendor’s lien on the same to secure him in the repayment of his money, then she charges that said Yager then and there told plaintiff that as soon as he got the deed from the county he would deed said land back to Ike Stimpson for the use and benefit of plaintiff, to be held by Ike Stimpson in trust for the plaintiff, taking his notes therefor secured by a vendor’s lien on the same, and that the same would thereby be secured to her; that the said Ike Stimpson at the time did not own any interest in the land.

If mistaken in the above allegation, then plaintiff charges that the de- • fendants entered into a conspiracy to overreach, cheat, and defraud plaintiff out of said- tract of land and to obtain the title and possession of it for the defendants, and in pursuance thereof the defendant R. W.

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Bluebook (online)
55 S.W. 416, 22 Tex. Civ. App. 628, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neil-v-yager-texapp-1900.