Openshaw v. Rickmeyer

102 S.W. 467, 45 Tex. Civ. App. 508, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 367
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 16, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 102 S.W. 467 (Openshaw v. Rickmeyer) 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
Openshaw v. Rickmeyer, 102 S.W. 467, 45 Tex. Civ. App. 508, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 367 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Associate Justice.

Rickmeyer and wife, plaintiffs below, brought this suit against Openshaw to have two deeds executed by them to Openshaw, and also a deed from the city of Houston to said Openshaw, conveying to him lots numbers (2) two and (3) three, in block (293) two hundred and ninety-three, in the W. R. Baker addition to the *510 city of Houston, adjudged to be mortgages and to be void because the property thereby conveyed was the homestead of plaintiffs at the time said instruments were executed.

The petition alleges in substances that the plaintiffs are and were on the 30th day of January, 1900,. the owners in fee of the property before described, having title thereto by conveyance from and under the sovereignty of the soil and also by limitation of ten years, and áre and were on said date in the possession of said property using and occupying same as their homestead; that plaintiffs are illiterate and ignorant and unable to read and write and therefore are incapacitated to attend to business transactions; that on said date before mentioned the defendant, knowing said incapacity of plaintiffs and fraudulently taking advantage of same, induced them to execute to him an instrument in writing which he represented to them to be a mortgage to secure a sum of money which he falsely and fraudulently claimed was due him by plaintiffs; that plaintiffs have since learned that said instrument was in form an absolute deed conveying to defendant the property before described for a recited consideration of $375; that said recital is wholly false, and said instrument was without consideration, and plaintiffs were not at said time indebted to defendant in any amount, having theretofore fully discharged all indebtedness which had at any time been incurred by them to defendant, and that plaintiffs were induced to execute said instrument by said false and fraudulent representations of the defendant that they were still indebted to him; that after the execution of said instrument and on the same day and as a part of the same transaction the defendant executed and delivered to plaintiffs a deed to said property retaining a vendor’s lien therein to secure the payment of $450, the recited purchase price of said property, but which was in fact the amount of indebtedness then falsely claimed to be due defendant by plaintiffs, and said two deeds so executed as aforesaid were intended by all the parties to be and operate as a mortgage to secure the payment of said fictitious indebtedness'which defendant falsely and fraudulently claimed was due him by plaintiffs, and that the whole transaction was a fraudulent scheme on the part of defendant to evade the law and secure a mortgage upon plaintiffs’ homestead. That thereafter on March 18, 1902, the plaintiffs being indebted to the city of Houston for taxes due on lot (3) three before described requested defendant to advance the money to pay said indebtedness for them, which defendant agreed to do, and promised to procure from said city (by whom said property had been previously purchased at a sale for delinquent taxes) a deed reeonveying same to plaintiffs, but that in violation of said agreement defendant procured a deed from the city conveying the property to him; that notwithstanding the deed from the city conveyed the property to defendant he, by reason of the facts before stated, took the title thereto in trust for plaintiffs, and that plaintiffs have repaid to defendant the full amount paid by him to the city for said property.

It is further alleged that again on April 2, 1902, plaintiffs executed and delivered to defendant an instrument which he fraudulently represented to them was a mortgage, but which they have since learned was a quit claim deed to the two lots before described; that at the time of the execution of said instrument and as a part of the same transaction plaintiffs *511 and defendant entered into a written contract which purports to be a contract of sale and lease of said property, but that said instruments were together intended by the parties thereto to operate as a mortgage and were executed for the purpose of securing defendant in a loan of $25 made by him to plaintiffs; that said mortgage is inoperative and void because the property upon which it was intended to operate was the homestead of plaintiffs.

The prayer of the petition is that the said instruments before mentioned be adjudged void and that the cloud cast upon plaintiffs’ title by their execution be removed and plaintiffs be quieted in the title and possession of their said property.

The defendant’s answer admits the execution and delivery of the several instruments mentioned in the petition and avers, in substance, that the transactions described in the petition were bona fide and that the several conveyances to him by plaintiffs were in truth and in fact what they purported to be, bona fide and absolute conveyances to him by plaintiffs of the title of said property for the considerations therein stated. It is further averred that in 1891, plaintiffs being then the owners of lot 3 described in their petition, executed and delivered to B. B. Sassar an instrument in writing creating a mechanic’s lien upon said lot to secure the said Sassar in the payment of an indebtedness of $233.65 evidenced by a note executed by plaintiff, said sum being due for labor and material furnished by Sassar in making improvements upon said property; that thereafter in June, 1895, said note being due and unpaid and plaintiffs being unable to pay same proposed to sell said property to defendant if he would pay said note and other indebtedness due by them amounting to $250; that defendant accepted said proposition and paid said Sassaffs note and also said indebtedness of $250, and plaim tiffs thereupon conveyed said property to him by deed of date June 29, 1895, and thereafter occupied said property as tenants of defendant paying him rent therefor at the rate of $5.00 per month until January 30, 1900. It is further averred that in the instrument creating the mechanic’s lien and also in the deed of June 29, 1895, just mentioned, the lot is erroneously described as lot 3 in block 12 in Baker’s addition to the city of Houston, while the lot intended to be described was lot 3 in block 293 of said addition; that there was no block 12 in said addition and that the only property owned by plaintiffs in the city of Houston was lot 3 in block 293 in said addition and that said lot 3 in block 293 was the property upon which the improvements were placed under the contract by which said mechanic’s lien was created; that said mistake in said instruments in designating the number of the block in which said lot was situated was not discovered by the parties until January, 1900, and that the deed from plaintiffs to defendant of date January 30, 1900, was executed for the purpose of correcting said mistake.

Defendant prayed for the recovery of the land, and in the alternative for judgment for the amounts due him by plaintiffs with foreclosure of lien upon said property.

The trial court after hearing the evidence instructed the jury to find a verdict in favor of plaintiffs, and upon the return of such verdict judgment was rendered in accordance therewith.

It would serve no useful purpose to discuss the various assignments *512 of error in detail, as many -of them present the same question in different forms.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 S.W. 467, 45 Tex. Civ. App. 508, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/openshaw-v-rickmeyer-texapp-1907.