Pevehouse v. Oliver Farm Equipment Sales Co.

114 S.W.2d 658, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 964
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 28, 1938
DocketNo. 4866.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 114 S.W.2d 658 (Pevehouse v. Oliver Farm Equipment Sales Co.) 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
Pevehouse v. Oliver Farm Equipment Sales Co., 114 S.W.2d 658, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 964 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

JACKSON, Chief Justice.'

The appellant, W. L. Pevehouse, instituted in the district court of Swisher county an. action in trespass to try title against the corporate appellees, Oliver Farm Equipment Sales Company, Distributors Investment Company, and the Southern Rock Island Plow Company, to recover section 33 in block B-3, in said county.

In the alternative, the appellant, in addition to the action of trespass to try title,, set out his title specially attached to and made a part of his petition as exhibits the contracts and agreements through-which he deraigns title, and according to such exhibits he held his title subject to $19,200' evidenced by twenty notes payable to Hickman Price and secured by a lien against the *660 land. He alleged that appellees, according to his information, claimed to own the land involved by virtue of a certain attachment lien, the foreclosure thereof, and a purchase under execution, but avers his ■claim is superior to any and all claims of .appellees, who acquired whatever title they assert with full notice and knowledge of his rights. He prays under the second count that the cloud placed on his title by the claim •of appellees be removed.

The Oliver Farm Equipment Sales Company answered by general denial, plea of not guilty, and alleged that if appellant ever acquired any right or interest in the land by reason of the contracts and agreements alleged in ^the second count of his petition, he had waived and forfeited such right and interest by defaulting in the payment of the purchase price of the land and the taxes thereon for which he was liable under his contract; that this appellee owns and holds the legal title free and clear of any right, incumbrance, or equity of appellant, because in addition to his default his right, if .any he has, is subject to the twenty vendor’s lien notes, which he is obligated to pay Hickman Price; that said notes have not been paid, arid it is the present legal and ■record owner of said section of land under valid court proceedings, and such owner■ship includes the vendor’s lien notes which it acquired by virtue of said proceedings.

Each of the other appellees answered alleging a separate judgment against Hickman Price, the amount thereof, that such judgments were unpaid, but were subject to the lien of the Oliver Farm Equipment .Sales Company. Owing to this admission .and the judgment in this case, it is unnecessary for ⅜ further statement of their pleadings.

At the close of the testimony, in response to a peremptory instruction, the jury found in favor of the appellees, and judgment was ■entered that they go hence without day with their cost, and that appellant take nothing by this suit.

The appellant challenges as error the action of the court in directing a verdict against him, contending that the testimony shows he held the land under a contract ,-of purchase, which evidenced the part of the consideration unpaid; that he was in possession thereof, using and cultivating it at and prior to the time the attachment was levied and the judgments abstracted and recorded, under which appellees had purchased at execution sale; that they had notice of his interest, and, therefore, he had as to them the superior title. '

The' testimony discloses that on April 14, 1930, Hickman Price, acting for Price Bros., entered into a contract, in which they are designated as sellers, by the terms of which M. E. Courtney, designated therein as buyer, purchased section 33, block B-3, in Swisher county, for a consideration of $22,400, to be paid as follows: $500 in cash, $2,700 by August 1st, thereafter, and the remainder of $19,200 in twenty equal annual installments of $960 each. The seller agreed to furnish abstract of title for examination and approval, execute a warranty deed to the buyer, which with the contract and the twenty vendor’s lien notes were to be deposited in the First National Bank of Plain-view, Tex., to be held in escrow until one-half of the purchase price had been paid, at which time the deed was to be delivered to the buyer and the notes to the seller. The forfeiture clause in the contract will be later quoted. Courtney, after the abstract was examined, accepted the title, the deed and notes were executed, the $500 and the $2,700 paid to the sellers, and all the papers placed in escrow as agreed.

On July 21, 1930, M. E. Courtney, by written contract in which he is referred to as first party, bargained and agreed to sell and caused to be conveyed unto W. L. Pevehouse, referred to as second party, said section 33, block B-3, for and in consideration of $22,400, $3,200 cash, which was paid, and the assumption of all covenants an<i agreements made by M. E. Courtney in his contract with Price Bros., including the payment of the twenty vendor’s lien notes of $960 each according to their terms and provisions. The contract, together with a sufficient warranty deed from Courtney to Pevehouse, was by agreement deposited in the First National Bank of Plainview and held in escrow.

The testimony is that in compliance with this contract, Pevehouse, the appellant herein, took possession of the property under his contract, put some improvements thereon, consisting of fencing, windmill, sod breaking, and each year after 1930 had a garden near the windmill, and cultivated and used the land and made crops thereon, except when on account of droughts the crops failed. The appellant testified that he had never recognized Mr. Price as a landlord since his purchase; that in August, 1931, he was unable to meet the payment due, but negotiated with Mr. Price for *661 an extension, which he obtained, for one year by the payment of $750 to be credited •on his contract; that in the fall of 1930 after he bought the land, he told C. L. Cox ■of purchasing the’ section and the next day •Cox’came to the place and had a conversation with him about the price,. the terms, and conditions on which he purchased; that in 1932, about the time he began harvesting, •Cox was again on the section and requested Pevehouse to come into town the next day, which he did; that he went to the Cox & Thompson Hardware Store, and a man, who Mr. Cox advised him was representing the •Oliver Farm Equipment Sales Company, was present and they asked Pevehouse what .arrangements he had with Mr. Price relative to the payment of the notes on the land; that he told them how the payments were arranged and the terms upon which he had bought the section; they asked him to sign ■some papers to tie up the Hickman Price payments on the section, but he refused, and they advised him they were going to tie up the land; that they had a judgment against Price, but if he would sign papers tying up the notes payable to Hickman Price they •■would give him any terms he wanted to pay •for the ground.

On June 25, 1932, C. L. Cox and D. M. 'Thompson, a partnership firm in the mercantile business, had a suit pending in the ■•district court of Swisher county against Hickman Price, and on that date caused a ■writ of attachment to be issued and levied •upon the section as the property of Hickman Price. Cox and Thompson obtained judgment in said suit against Hickman Price for the sum of $7,247.75 on September 20, 1934. The judgment was sold to the ••Oliver Farm Equipment Sales Company in ’December, 1934, order of sale and execution issued September 3, 1936, and sale made to the Oliver people October 6, 1936, and -conveyed to them by the sheriff. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
114 S.W.2d 658, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 964, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pevehouse-v-oliver-farm-equipment-sales-co-texapp-1938.