Norfleet v. Berryman

25 S.W.2d 212
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 8, 1930
DocketNo. 3340.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 25 S.W.2d 212 (Norfleet v. Berryman) 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
Norfleet v. Berryman, 25 S.W.2d 212 (Tex. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

JACKSON, J.

In this suit the plaintiff M. E. Norfleet and her husband, J. F. Norfleet, sought in the district court of Hale county, Tex., to cancel a deed theretofore made by them conveying the north 200 acres of section 2, block D-10, in Hale county, Tex., to H. H. Berryman, the defendant.

Plaintiffs dismissed as to the other defendants, and no further notice will be taken of such other defendants.

The plaintiffs allege: That on December 22, 1924, and long prior thereto, and at all times since they were husband and wife, and-ón said date, they were occupying said 200 acres of land as their homestead. That on September 9, 1924, they were the owners of sections 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 9 and the northwest quarter of section No. 7 and 440 acres out of section 2 in .block D-10 in Hale county, Tex., which was incumbered by a lien to secure to the Texas Security Company the payment of $66,082.55, with interest and attorney’s fees. That on said date judgment was rendered again.st the plaintiffs and others in favor of the Texas Security Company for the sum of $74,347.77 and for the foreclosure of the lien and the sale of the land covered thereby. That on November 3, 1924, the defendant contracted with the Texas Security Company for the purchase of said judgment and lien, and on November 19th thereafter consummated such contract of purchase and became the owner of said indebtedness and judgment. That on November 3, 1924, the defendant entered into' a written contract with J. F. Norfleet, by the *213 terms of which he obligated himself to purchase all the lands covered by said judgment lien and also the north 200 acres of said section 2 in block D-10, the homestead of plaintiffs, and which was clear of all debts and incumbrances. That as a part of the consideration for plaintiffs’ lands, the defendant contracted to convey to plaintiffs seven brick buildings, clear of all liens, situated in the town of Alto, in Cherokee county, Tex., at an agreed value of $75,000, and further contracted to rent said buildings from plaintiffs for a period of two years, beginning January 1, 1925, at and for the price of $500 per month.

Plaintiffs allege: That on December 22, 1924, the north 200 acres of said section 2 in block D-10, in addition to being their homestead, was the separate property of M. E. Norfleet. That on said date the defendant induced M. E. Norfleet to join her husband in executing a deed conveying said. 200 acres of land to defendant by falsely promising and fraudulently representing that he would pay off and satisfy the judgment he had purchased against the incumbered land and also convey to them the seven brick buildings in Alto, Tex., for which he would pay the plaintiffs, as rent, $500 per month on said property for a period of two years. That, as a matter of fact, at the time the defendant acquired said judgment and contracted with J. F. Norfleet for the purchase of said lands, and at the time he made the representations to induce M. E. Norfleet to join her husband in conveying to the defendant the 200 acres of land which constituted their homestead, he did not intend to carry out said contracts nor the promises made to induce plaintiff to convey to him said 200 acres of land, but all of such agreements, contracts, and promises were fraudulently made with the intention of acquiring all of plaintiffs’ land, and especially said 200 acres, in fraud of plaintiffs. That they relied and acted upon such agreements, promises, and representations in the execution of said deed. That the defendant had all of the incumbered land sold under an execution issued on the judgment he had purchased, at which sale he became the purchaser and received a sheriff’s deed itherefor. That the defendant has failed and refused to make deeds to plaintiffs to the seven brick buildings in Alto, and refused to pay plaintiffs any money for said 200 acres of land. Plaintiffs ask for judgment canceling the deed made by them conveying said 200 acres of land to the defendant and for recovery thereof.

The defendant answered by general and special exceptions and general denial. He also alleged:

That the 200 acres involved in this suit were included in the contract of November 3, 1924, entered into by himself and J. F. Nor-fleet. That by the terms of said contract said 200 acres were to be conveyed to him, and, if it ever was the homestead of plaintiffs, they had by proper deed conveyed it to him and abandoned it as a homestead, and thereby estopped themselves to set up any homestead rights thereto. That the lands acquired by the judgment which the defendant contracted to purchase were sold at sheriff’s sale to satisfy the judgment which was for the sum of $74,347.77, interest and costs. That plaintiffs induced the defendant to purchase 'the said judgment and have the lands incumbered thereby sold at execution thereunder in order that plaintiffs could convey to defendant said lands free from any other liens and judgments, as the contract of November 3, 1924, with J. F. Norfleet stipulated.

That on said judgment lien and other liens, including taxes, the defendant was compelled to pay out the sum of $86,829.52. That the defendant acquired good title to but 3,896 acres of the lands included in the contract, which, at the agreed value, was the sum of $114,152.80; hence, if plaintiffs had complied with their contract, after deducting the $75,000, the agreed value of the Alto property, from the agreed value of the acreage acquired by the defendant of $114,152.80, the defendant would have been required to have paid plaintiffs in money approximately $39,152.80, but that the plaintiffs were unable or unwilling to discharge the incum-brances against the land they had contracted to convey to the defendant, and he was required to pay in cash a sum greatly in excess of what he would have been 'required to pay if plaintiffs had complied with their contract.

That, in order to assist the plaintiffs to comply with their contract, the defendant offered to advance to them $30,000 and retain a lien to secure the repayment thereof, against the Alto property, but plaintiffs were unable or unwilling to obtain the necessary amount of money in excess of said $30,000 to enablé them to carry out said contract, and the defendant then proposed to convey or have conveyed to plaintiffs a brick building in Sulphur Springs, Tex., for a consideration of $38,000, incumbered with a lien in the sum of $20,000, in lieu of conveying to them the Alto property. That this proposition was accepted by the plaintiffs, and J. F. Norfleet, in order to keep the title to the Sulphur Springs property so his creditors could not place liens against it, requested that the title be allowed to remain in M. C. Parrish, and it was agreed that said Parrish should hold the title to the Sulphur Springs property and convey it to plaintiff when requested, but that the $20,000 against the Sulphur Springs property matured, and *214 J. E. Norfleet, who had assumed the payment thereof, was unwilling or unable to pay it, and requested that he be relieved from the payment thereof and released from such transaction. That thereupon the defendant and J. E. Norfleet made a final settlement of all contracts, agreements, and promises .theretofore entered into relative to all of these transactions, and the defendant paid him the sum of $1,750, and received a receipt therefor.

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Related

Berryman v. Norfleet
41 S.W.2d 722 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 S.W.2d 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norfleet-v-berryman-texapp-1930.