Pearce v. Dyess

101 S.W. 549, 45 Tex. Civ. App. 406, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 341
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 6, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 101 S.W. 549 (Pearce v. Dyess) 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
Pearce v. Dyess, 101 S.W. 549, 45 Tex. Civ. App. 406, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 341 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

EIDSON, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought in the court below by the appellees against the appellants to recover an undivided one-half interest in three certain tracts of land, situated in Bell County, and particularly described in their petition, and for a decree of partition of said lands between appellees and appellants. A trial before the court and a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of appellees for an .undivided 5-12 interest in the lands described in their petition, and a decree for the partition thereof between appellees and appellants, according to their respective interests.

All of appellants’ special exceptions to appellees’ petition which set' up that said petition showed upon its face laches in the prosecution of this suit, or that appellees’ cause of action was barred by the statute of limitation, or was a stale demand, were properly overruled by the court below. Appellees, who are the children of J. P. Dyess deed., and appellant Mrs. M. J. Pearce, she having married D. L. Pearce subsequent to the death of the said Dyess, based their right to recover in this suit upon the ground that D. L. Pearce after his marriage with Mrs. M. J. Dyess, the mother of appellees, invested the proceeds of property belonging to the community estate of the said J. P. Dyess, deceased, and his surviving wife, Mrs. M. J. Dyess, in the purchase of said lands, and took the deeds thereto in his name, and that thereby there was created a resulting trust in said lands to the extent of an undivided one-half interest thereof in favor of appellees; and they allege in their petition that the said D. L. Pearce at all times during his lifetime recognized and admitted that said lands were bought and paid for with funds *411 belonging to said community estate, and that said appellants did the same up to a few months prior to the filing of this suit. We think the petition sufficiently alleged a resulting trust in the lands in favor of appellees. Where property is purchased and the conveyance of the legal title is taken in the name of one person while the purchase price is paid by another person, a trust at once results in favor of the person who paid the price or whose funds were used in the payment thereof. (Burns v. Ross, 71 Texas, 516; Eastman v. Roundtree, 56 Texas, 112; Worst v. Sgitcovitch, 42 S. W. Rep., 72; Caldwell v. Brown, 49 S. W. Rep., 240; 2 Pom. Eq. Jur., sec. 1037.) And the petition of appellees alleged facts showing a recognition of such trust by the trustee up to the date of his death, and by appellants thereafter up to a date the interval between which and the filing of this suit was too short to base 'any statutory period of limitation upon. It is well settled by authority that limitation, laches or stale demand can not be urged against the enforcement of a resulting trust until such trust has been repudiated.

(Wilson v. Simpson, 80 Texas, 287; Oury v. Saunders, 77 Texas, 278; Rucker v. Dailey, 66 Texas, 284.)

We think the allegations that Mrs. M. J. Pearce and her husband David L. Pearce after their marriage, continued to exercise the care, control and management of all the property of said community estate, and to exercise care, control and authority of parents over the persons of appellees during their childhood and minority, were proper as matter • of inducement, and also to show that D. L. Pearce held a fiduciary relation to appellees and their property, which came into his hands by virtue of his marriage with their mother.

There is no inconsistency between the allegations of appellees’ petition that D. L. Pearce purchased and paid for the lands with the funds of the community estate of J. P. Dyess, deceased, and Mrs. M. J. Dyess, his surviving wife and took the deeds in his name 30 years prior to the institution of this suit, and those that the said Pearce and his wife admitted that he held a one-half undivided interest in said lands in trust for appellees. These allegations taken together, explain the true character of the transaction as claimed by appellees, and the reason why they did not proceed earlier to recover their interest in the lands. It was unnecessary for appellees’ petition to allege that D. L. Pearce and Mrs. M. J. Pearce or either of them, promised or agreed to convey to appellees any interest in the lands, as the obligation to convey to appellees their interest in the lands arises as matter of law, from the fact of the lands being paid for with their funds.

We think the allegations of appellees’ petition relating to the property belonging to the community estate of J. P. Dyess, deceased, and his surviving wife Mrs. M. J. IWess, and the recognition and admission by D. L. Pearce and Mrs. M. J. Pearce of appellees’ interest in the lands in controversy, were sufficiently specific and certain to properly apprise appellants of what they were expected to defend against; and it was not necessary for appellees to plead their evidence as to such matters.

Appellants contend that the evidence is insufficient to support the finding of the jury that the lands in controversy were paid for out of funds belonging to the community estate of J. P. Dyess, deceased, and Mrs. M. J. Dyess, his surviving wife. While it is true, there is no tes *412 timony in the record showing the money used by David L. Pearce in paying for the lands in controversy was derived from the sale of any particular property belonging to said community estate, there is ample testimony tending to show that at the death of J. P. Dyess there was considerable real and personal property belonging to the community estate of himself and surviving wife, consisting of a farm in Louisiana, cotton and stock, and that at the date of the marriage of his widow to David L. Pearce there was considerable of this property in her possession, which the said Pearce then took into liis possession and control; that the said Pearce made on said farm from 15 to 28 bales of cotton each year from 1866 to 1869, inclusive, and plenty of corn for the use of his family, and that the said Pearce brought with him to Texas $500 or $600 in money, the proceeds of the sale of property belonging to said community estate, and that he afterwards, in 1871, collected $800 for property sold by him belonging to said community estate, and that he, the said Pearce, stated, in effect, at the time he paid for the lands in controversy, that- the money he used in payment for same belonged to the community estate of J. P. Dyess, deceased and his surviving wife; and thereafter and up to the date of his death, made statements in consonance with this, and recognizing and admitting that appellees in this suit had an interest in said lands. While the witness testified that D. L. Pearce told him that the moneys mentioned above were the proceeds of property belonging to the Dyess estate, without giving the initials or first name of Dyess, the reasonable inference is that the said Pearce in using the words “Dyess estate,” meant the estate of J. P. Dyess, deceased, or the community estate of him and his surviving wife. This is the natural and usual inference to be drawn from the language used, as it is unnatural and 'unusual for the word “estate” to be used in relation to the property of a living person in ordinary conversation. This evidence, when considered in connection with the testimony that D. L. Pearce owned no property at the date of his marriage to Mrs. M. J. Dyess, except a horse, saddle and bridle, justified the jury in finding that the lands in controversy were paid for with money, the proceeds of the community estate of J. P.

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Bluebook (online)
101 S.W. 549, 45 Tex. Civ. App. 406, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearce-v-dyess-texapp-1907.