Owens v. Row

178 S.W.2d 144, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 581
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 27, 1944
DocketNo. 2568.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 178 S.W.2d 144 (Owens v. Row) 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
Owens v. Row, 178 S.W.2d 144, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 581 (Tex. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

HALE, Justice.

Mrs. L. J. Row, individually and as community survivor of her deceased husband, sued Mrs. Lillian Owens and husband for cancellation of a deed upon the ground that the consideration therefor had wholly failed. The case was tried to a jury on special issues and resulted in judgment cancelling the deed. Mrs. Owens and husband have appealed. They say the judgment should be reversed because the court erred in overruling their motions for peremptory instruction and judgment non obstante veredicto, respectively, and because the findings of the jury are contrary to the overwhelming preponderance of the credible testimony and are immaterial.

Mrs. Owens is a daughter of appellee. On July 8, 1941, appellee, individually and as community survivor, executed and delivered a deed, regular in form, by the terms of which she conveyed to her daughter the house and lot here in controversy. The consideration recited in the deed was the assumption and agreement of the grantee to pay the unpaid taxes against the property and an unpaid balance of $490 payable to Mrs. Haddix in monthly installments of $10 per month, and “a further valuable consideration.” It was shown by the pleadings of both parties and by the undisputed evidence that the “further valuable consideration” referred to in the deed was a general verbal agreement by which grantee promised, in substance, to support and maintain grantor and furnish her a home during the remainder of her lifetime. It was expressly stipulated in the deed that a vendor’s lien was retained against the property conveyed until the indebtedness therein described was fully paid, when the deed should become absolute. Appellants immediately moved into the premises thus conveyed and continued to occupy and use the same jointly with appellee until this suit was tried on June 2, 1943, but they did not pay any part of the unpaid taxes or indebtedness to Mrs. •Haddix as the same matured and thereupon appellee paid the taxes and she paid about twenty-three of the monthly installments as they became due to Mrs. Haddix.

Appellants contended by their pleadings and evidence in the trial court that they relied upon the deed and in reliance thereon they had supported and maintained appellee in accordance with the terms of the verbal agreement; that appellee, although not legally obligated to do so, had voluntarily furnished the money to pay the unpaid taxes and the monthly payments made to Mrs. Haddix; and that in reliance upon the deed they had added valuable improvements to the property and had furnished services to appellee for twenty months of the value of $25 per month.

The jury affirmatively found from what it regarded as a preponderance of the evidence that Mrs. Owens had failed to carry out her part of the agreement to support and maintain her mother and that the consideration for the deed had wholly failed. They expressly refused to find from a preponderance of the evidence that the payments made by appellee for taxes and to Mrs. Haddix were made voluntarily, or that the improvements made by appellants, or the services rendered by them to appellee, were made or rendered in reliance upon the deed.

The motion of appellants for a directed verdict did not state any specific ground therefor, as required by Rule 268, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. Their motion for judgment non obstante vere-dicto was grounded upon allegations that the findings of the jury were not authorized or supported by the evidence and were immaterial. Therefore, assuming the sufficiency of the latter motion to comply with the requirements of Rule 301, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, if the findings of the *146 jury as a whole were immaterial, or if any material finding was without any support in the competent evidence, or was contrary to the undisputed evidence, or was so clearly against the overwhelming weight and preponderance of the credible testimony as manifestly to be wrong, then the judgment appealed from should be reversed; otherwise, it should be affirmed.

Under the most fundamental principles of our jurisprudence, the jury is the sole judge of the disputed facts proven in any case and to that end the paramount duty and prerogative of judging the credibility of witnesses and the weight to be given to their testimony is wisely placed upon and vested in the jurors. Hence, in passing upon the sufficiency of the evidence to raise or sustain any of the issues found by the jury in this case, it is unquestionably the duty of this court to view the evidence in its entirety and all reasonable inferences and deductions that may properly be drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to the verdict.

Appellee, being an elderly woman of poor health, was confined duiing most of the time involved in this suit to her bed or wheelchair. She testified in effect that she and her husband acquired the property in controversy from Mrs. Haddix in August, 1938; that they agreed to pay $1,000 for the property, payable $15 in cash and the balance of $985 in monthly installments of $10 per month, with interest, as evidenced by their secured note; they occupied the premises as their home and made all payments promptly to Mrs. Haddix as they had promised to do until her husband died in April, 1941; she thereafter continued to make the payments and to occupy the premises as her home until she conveyed the same to her daughter on July 8, 1941, at which time there was a balance of $490 owing to Mrs. Haddix on the purchase money note and some unpaid taxes; appellants rented out their home for $20 per month and moved into the premises conveyed to Mrs. Owens, but they did not pay the taxes or any of the installments which 'became due to Mrs. Haddix; when ap-pellee would remind her daughter of the taxes and the monthly payments the daughter would say she did not have the money with which to make such payments; appel-lee received an increase in her pension from $9 per month to $24 per month shortly after her daughter moved in with her and, .after complaining to her daughter about the nonpayment of the assumed obligations, she used her pension money to pay the taxes and monthly payments on the note to Mrs. Haddix and to purchase part of the food used by the family; appellee furnished a cow with feed, which appellants milked and from which they sold whatever milk or butter they wanted to sell and gave her none of the money received from such sales; and that appellee’s daughter and family had been very nice to her prior to July 8, 1941, but after the deed had been executed and delivered their attitude and conduct toward her completely changed.

The terms of the verbal agreement between appellee and her daughter as to the exact nature and extent of the services to be rendered by the latter in the proper support and maintenance of the former was the subject of substantial dispute in the evidence. No useful purpose would be served by here attempting to set forth the farrago of conflicting testimony as to just what the daughter was in fact supposed or reasonably required to do under the true intent and meaning of the parties to the agreement, or as to what she actually did do or failed to do, because the voluminous evidence as a whole was undoubtedly sufficient to raise fact issues for the jury as to the true intent and meaning of the verbal agreement and as to whether the daughter did or did not fail to carry out her part of the same.

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Bluebook (online)
178 S.W.2d 144, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owens-v-row-texapp-1944.