Pickett v. Dallas Trust & Savings Bank

13 S.W.2d 195
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 13, 1928
DocketNo. 722. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 13 S.W.2d 195 (Pickett v. Dallas Trust & Savings Bank) 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
Pickett v. Dallas Trust & Savings Bank, 13 S.W.2d 195 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

STANFORD, J.

Appellants, Mildred Pickett and son, Ray Pickett, sued appellee to cancel a vendor’s lien note for $3,000,executed by W. A. Wilkerson and payable to Edward Pickett, now deceased, and by the said Edward Pickett and wife, appellant Mildred Pickett, transferred to appellee, and also to cancel two deeds of trust executed by Wilkerson to appellee, given to better secure said $3,000 vendor’s lien note. Briefly stated, the facts out of which this controversy arose are as follows;

Edward Pickett' and wife executed a warranty deed to W. A. Wilkerson on July 15, 1925, conveying to him their homestead for a recited cash consideration of $4,500 and one vendor’s lien note executed by Wilkerson for $3,000, payable to the order of Edward Pickett. This note was assigned to appellee by Edward Pickett and wife. W. A. Wilkerson and wife executed to appellee a first and second deed of trust on said property to better secure certain notes given in lieu of and to extend said $3,000 vendor’s lien note and interest notes. Later Edward Pickett died, and this suit was brought by Mrs: Mildred Pickett and her son, Ray Pickett, to cancel said; notes and deeds of trust, alleging said sale to Wilkerson was a simulated transaction, not intended to convey title to the homestead, and that Wilkerson only assisted Pickett in procuring a loan on his homestead.

Appellee interposed a general demurrer, general denial, a plea of estoppel, and that it was an innocent purchaser of said note and lien for value without any notice of any vice or defect in either said note or lien, etc. The court submitted only one issue, to which the jury answered: “At the time of the execution of the deed from the plaintiffs, Mr. and Mrs. Pickett, to W. A. Wilkerson, and the execution of the note for $3000.00 by W. A. Wilkerson to Ed Pickett, it was not the intention of Mr. and Mrs. Pickett to establish their home in Cameron County, Texas.” The court entered judgment for appellee, and appellants have duly appealed and present the record here for review.

Under their first proposition, appellants contend, that, since appellee has not challenged by assignment of error any of the findings of fact by the trial court, such findings are binding on appellee in this court. If this case had been tried before the court, without a jury, and the court had filed findings of fact as provided in article 2'208, Revised Statutes, then the above proposition would be correct, but this case was tried to a jury, and in such eases there is nd law requiring or authorizing the trial court to file findings of fact. It is not error for the court in eases tried to a jury to file findings of fact on issues not submitted nor requested to be submitted to the jury, and where such *197 findings are in no way in conflict witli tlie findings of the jury, but such findings have no binding effect upon either party or the appellate court, and may be wholly disregarded. Such findings are important only in so far as same may be helpful to the appellate court in determining the facts from the record. Crosby et al. v. Di Palma et al. (Tex. Civ. App.) 141 S. W. 321; Robinson v. Lynch Davidson & Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 1 S.W.(2d) 677; Ward et al. v. Etier, 113 Tex. 83, 251 S. W. 1028.

Under other propositions appellants contend, in effect, that, since the property in question was the homestead of Pickett and family, and the deed by Pickett and wife to Wilkerson and the $3,000 vendor’s lien note by Wilkerson to Pickett constituted only a pretended sale, and that M. L. Fannin was appellee’s agent and had notice of such facts, that appellants, were entitled to have the deeds of trust canceled. There is no question but that the making of the deed by Pickett and wife to Wilkerson and the taking of the $3,000 vendor’s lien note executed by Wilkerson, which purported to be in part payment for the lot, was only a simulated transaction, for the purpose of getting a loan from appellee on the homestead of Pickett and wife. Ed Pickett and a Mr. Glass first inquired of M. L. Fannin if Pickett could get a loan on said property for $3,000. Mr. Fannin told them he would drive by and see the property. This he did, and reported to Pickett that the security was sufficient, and, in this second conversation in reference to a loan for Pickett, Fannin testified he learned said property was the homestead of Pickett and wife; whereupon Fannin proceeded no further, telling Pickett he could not mortgage his homestead. Pickett then suggested that he deed the property to his son, he being single, and let him mortgage it for the loan desired, but Mr. Fannin told him that would not help matters; that it would not do to deed it to his son or any member of his family; that he could not get a loan on it as long as it was owned or occupied by any member of his family. Some ten days or two weeks later Ed Pickett and W. A. Wilkerson appeared at Mr. Fannin’s office and announced that the property had been sold by Pickett and wife to W. A. Wilkerson, and had a deed duly executed by Pickett and wife purporting to convey said property to Wilkerson for a cash consideration of $4,500 paid, but said parties explained to Mr. Fannin that the real consideration was $7,-000, and that, as the property would not be the homestead of Wilkerson, he wanted to borrow $3,000 from appellee and secure same by a deed of trust on the property. Mr. Fannin suggested that this deed be destroyed and another one executed, showing the real consideration; that he preferred to have the $3,000 note a vendor’s lien note and not a deed of trust only. This was agreed to, so such deed was destroyed, and Mr. Fannin wrote another, reciting the consideration as $4,500 cash paid and one vendor’s lien note for $3,000, which note also was written by Mr. Fannin. Mr. Fannin then took the acknowledgment of Ed Pickett at his office to said deed, and went out to the Pickett home, which, was on the property involved, and took Mrs. Pickett’s acknowledgment to said -deed. W. A. Wilkerson having signed the $3,000 note, Mr. Fannin took his application the same day to appellee for a loan to take up and extend said $3,000 vendor’s lien note. Pickett and wife executed a transfer from themselves to appellee of said $3,000 vendor’s lien note, which transfer was in the usual form and duly acknowledged by both Pickett and wife. W. A. Wilkerson and wife executed two deeds of trust to appellee to better secure three notes for the aggregate sum of $3,000, given in renewal and in extension of the $3,000 vendor’s lien note retained in the deed from Pickett and wife to Wilkerson. The loan was closed and the $3,000 paid to Pickett by appellee for said note, August 28, 19-25.

W. A. Wilkerson testified, in substance, that he was a friend of Mr. Pickett and that what, he did was only to enable Pickett to get a loan on his homestead. This witness said that the agreement between them • was that Pickett and wife would convey the property to him; he would get the loan and then reeonvey it to them; that the purpose was to enable Mr. Pickett to get a loan from the Dallas Trust & Savings Bank. This witness further testified that he had written the Dallas Trust & Savings Bank in March, 1928, that he had sold the property to Edward Pickett, who had assumed the payment of the notes, but that he never did notify said company that he agreed with Mr. Pickett to take this deed for the sole purpose of obtaining a loan.

Mrs. Mildred Pickett, one of the appellants herein, testified that the property was the homestead of herself and husband at the date the application was made to appellee for a loan, and that they remained in the house for.

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Bluebook (online)
13 S.W.2d 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pickett-v-dallas-trust-savings-bank-texapp-1928.