Phillips v. Anderson

93 S.W.2d 171, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 284
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 1, 1936
DocketNo. 8215.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 93 S.W.2d 171 (Phillips v. Anderson) 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
Phillips v. Anderson, 93 S.W.2d 171, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 284 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

McCLENDON, Chief Justice.

Anderson sued Mrs. Phillips, his sister, for partition of the estate of their mother, Mrs. Crownover, who died intestate March 9, 1932; Anderson and Mrs. Phillips being her sole heirs at law. Mrs. Phillips, by cross-action, sought to cancel a deed of Mrs. Crownover conveying to Anderson a 1,060-acre ranch in Burnet county, and to have the ranch .included in the partition as an asset of the estate. The only controversy involved in the case relates to Mrs. Phillips’ cross-action. The case was tried to the court without a jury, and resulted in a judgment against Mrs. Phillips, from which she has appealed.

Appellant presents three assignments of error, which urge:

(1) The evidence conclusively shows as a matter of law that the deed was ineffective as a conveyance because (a) there was no legal delivery thereof by Mrs. Crown-over ; and (b) Anderson did not accept the deed during the lifetime of Mrs. Crown-over. ' • ' .

(2) Error of the trial court in .excluding testimony of Anderson’s wife of statements made to her by Mrs. Crownover some. time after she had signed and acknowledged the deed and delivered it to Fowler, a banker in Marble Falls, to keep and deliver to Anderson after her death.

Mrs. Crownover’s husband, Anderson, father of appellant and appellee, died some 30 odd years ago. In 1914 she married Crownover, who owned the ranch and.had one child, a daughter, Mrs. Johnson. *172 Crownover died in 1922, and devised the ranch to Mrs. Crownover for life, with remainder in -fee to Mrs. Johnson. The latter , conveyed her reversionary title to the ranch to Mrs. Crownover July 18, 1927, for $6,000, represented by a vendor’s lien note in that amount. August 24, 1927, the unpaid balance of this note ($5,130.00) was transferred by Mrs. Johnson to the Federal Land Bank, and Mrs. Crownover executed to the bank a note for $5,400 in extension and renewal of the obligation, securing it by trust deed on the ranch.

The recited consideration and granting clause in the deed of Mrs. Crownover to Anderson, ‘ read: “* * * The sum of Ten Dollars to me in hand paid by H. R. Anderson, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged and the natural love and affection I have for my son H. R. Anderson, and the further consideration that the said H. R. Anderson, assumes the payment of one-half the indebtedness against the hereinafter described land and premises said indebtedness being evidenced by a note to Federal Land Bank of Houston, Texas, in the sum of Fifty-four Hundred Dollars payable in semi-annual installments, and signed by Mary E. Crownover. Also the further consideration that I, the said Mary E. Crownover, shall retain all income from said land and premises during my life, and at my death shall become the property of the said H. R. Anderson, upon the payment ' by said H. R. Anderson of the unpaid balance due to Federal Land Bank, if any, have granted, sold and conveyed, and by these presents do grant, sell and convey unto the said H. R. Anderson of the County of Burnet, State of Texas all that certain pieces, parcels or tracts of land lying and being situated in Burnet County, Texas described as follows:”

The deed was dated September 23, 1927, was acknowledged by Mrs. Crownover before D. E. Fowler, notary public, Burnet County, Tex., September 24, 1927, and was recorded in Burnet county deed records April 16, 1932.

Fowler testified, in substance: He wrote the deed at the instance of Mrs. Crown-over and took her acknowledgment to it. She told him what to put in the deed, “what the terms of the dee’d would be and what the trade was,” and he “put down the consideration as detailed to him by Mrs. Crownover.”- The consideration expressed in the deed “is the consideration she told me to put in the instrument.” After she had signed and acknowledged the deed, she gave it to Fowler and told him to keep it and deliver it to Anderson after her death. He put the deed in the deposit box in the bank that formerly belonged to Crownover, Mrs. Crownover’s deceased husband, where it remained until after her death, when he mailed it, in April, 1932, to Anderson at Norman, Old., with an inclosed letter reading:

“Dear Hal: I found the enclosed deed in Uncle Alec’s box. I am reasonable sure now that your mother did not have a will, as this is the behest I remembered.
“[Signed] Earnest.”

Anderson testified he received this letter and the deed on April 14, 1932.

On May 2, 1932, Fowler addressed a letter to Anderson at Oklahoma City, reading:

“The deed I sent you a short time ago, from your Mother to yourself, was- prepared at your mother’s request, and after it was executed, she turned it over to me to be delivered to you after her- death.
“At her request I kept the deed in the vault, as she did not wish to have it in her lock box.”

Anderson testified that Fowler delivered this letter to him in person at Marble Falls.

Fowler further testified: After Mrs. Crownover delivered the deed to him, she never requested that it be returned to her for cancellation.

The evidence was uncontradicted that Anderson paid his one-half of the Federal Bank obligation as it accrued up. to the time of his mother’s death.

August 12, 1929, Mrs. Crownover entered into a contract with Anderson (later reduced to writing and signed by both parties) whereby Anderson was to have all rentals upon the ranch in excess of $1,250 per annum, in consideration of payments he had agreed to make under a contract between him and Mrs. Crownover’s tenants, whereby he was to furnish $2,000, and the tenants were to do certain work to improve portions of the ranch for pecan culture. If the rentals did not amount to $1,-250 per annum, Anderson was to get the profits from the pecan trees he had budded. At the expiration of the lease (January 1, 1932) Anderson was given “the privilege of negotiating a new lease on said premises for the joint benefit of himself and” Mrs. Crownover, “provided always” she *173 was to receive $1,250 rental from the place. Anderson testified that up to the time his mother died he received no rent from the* ranch, and paid out all told approximately $3,000.

One of the grounds assigned by appellant as evidencing conclusively that there had not and could not have been “as a matter of law an acceptance of the deed by plaintiff,” was his own evidence “that he did not know of his own knowledge” that the deed was in existence until after Mrs. Crownover’s death. Under our holding below, we do not regard this issue as having controlling effect upon the judgment; however, we give the substance of the testimony thereon. It was Mrs. Phillips’ contention that Anderson did know of the deed. She testified to a conversation with him at her home in Oklahoma City on April 13, 1932. Anderson had just had a long distance telephone conversation with Fowler.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Stout v. Clayton
674 S.W.2d 821 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1984)
Foster v. Cumbie
315 S.W.2d 151 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1958)
Sweatt v. Painter
210 S.W.2d 442 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1948)
McMonigal v. North Kansas City Development Co.
129 S.W.2d 75 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1939)
State v. Hale
96 S.W.2d 135 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 S.W.2d 171, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-anderson-texapp-1936.