Priddy v. Tabor

189 S.W. 111, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 994
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 6, 1916
DocketNo. 8373. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 189 S.W. 111 (Priddy v. Tabor) 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
Priddy v. Tabor, 189 S.W. 111, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 994 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

Lots Nos. 1 and 2, adjoining each other and situated in McBride’s first addition to the city of Wichita Falls, was the community property of S. H. Tabor and his wife, Dora Tabor, and lot No. 2 and a strip off the rear end of lot No. 1, 65 feet.in length and of the entire width of the lot, constituted the homestead of the family.

On June 22, 1912, Mrs. Dora Tabor was duly adjudged insane by the county court of Wichita county. As a part of that, decree the court ordered that she be conveyed to one of the asylums of the state for the insane. She was then placed in. the county .jail' by the sheriff, presumably to await accommodations in the asylum, as it is a matter of common knowledge .that such institutions ‘are inadequate to care for all such wards of the state.

On June 27th following, S. H. Tabor executed a bond payable to the state, conditioned that he himself would restrain and properly- care for his wife as long as her mental unsouhdness should continue, or until he should return her to the custody of the sheriff; and upon the execution of that bond she was discharged from the jail and her custody intrusted to her husband.

■ On August 6,-1912, S. H. Tabor returned her to the custody of the sheriff by reason o'f the fact that her mental condition had grown worse, and he "was unable to properly care for her. Thereupon she was again incarcerated in the county jail, and there confined until September 23, 1912, when she was finally discharged, and she has been of sound mind ever since.

On September 4, 1912, during her last incarceration. in the county jail and while she was insane, S. H. Tabor sold all of lot No. 1 to M. H. Moore by a deed of conveyance *112 executed by him alone and without the signature and acknowledgment of his wife, as required by the Constitution and statutes for a valid conveyance of the homestead. It is reasonably apparent from the record that while Mrs. Tabor was confined in the county jail, and at the time of the sale to M. H. Moore, S. H. Tabor, with the two minor children of himself and Mrs. Dora Tabor, continued to occupy and claim the same property as a homestead, which had theretofore been the homestead of the family, and which had been noted above. Lot No. 2, upon which was situated the dwelling house of the family, was never sold, and when Mrs. Tabor was released from the county jail she returned thereto and has occupied it as her home ever since.

The total consideration for the conveyance from S. H. Tabor to M. H. Moore was $565, of which amount $350 was evidenced by seven promissory notes executed by the grantee to the grantor for $50 each; $100 was 'paid in cash, and $115 was paid by the cancellation of an account in that sum then due M. H. Moore, who was a physician, for professional services rendered S. H. Tabor and his family during the year 1912. Later S. H. Tabor executed a release of the vendor’s lien on the lot in consideration of the full payment of said notes. M. H. Moore then sold the lot so purchased from S. H. Tabor to Charles Hill, who in turn sold it to W. M. Priddy. All the deeds mentioned above were duly recorded.

S. H. Tabor died November 1, 1913. On November 19, 1914, Mrs. Dora Tabor, for herself and as next friend for Etta May Tabor and Myrtle Alice Tabor, minor children of herself and S. H. Tabor, instituted this suit against W. M. Priddy in the form of trespass to try title to recover all of lot No. 1 so sold to M. H. Moore by S. H. Tabor. Plaintiff also pleaded specially that defendant was claiming title under some character of deed to him and his vendors executed by S. H. Tabor, but that such conveyance was invalid by reason of the fact that at the time of the execution of such deed by S. H. Tabor the property was a part of the homestead oí S. H. Tabor and his family, and the deed was never executed by his wife, Mrs. Dora Tabor.

The defendant Priddy, in addition to a plea of not guilty and a plea of innocent purchaser for value, and a plea of valuable improvements placed upon the lot by him in good faith, interpleaded his vendor Charles Hill, who likewise interpleaded his vendor, M. H. Moore, each of said vendees praying judgment on the warranty of title to him. Hill and Moore each filed an answer 'adopting the pleas filed by Priddy. By supplemental petition plaintiff denied the facts set forth in all those pleas.

Lot No. 1 was 170 feet in depth, a portion of which, 105 feet in depth, measured from the front and the entire width of the lot had been separated from the remainder by a fence and had been rented out. Plaintiffs were, denied a recovery for that portion of the lot, but judgment was awarded in their favor against all defendants for the remainder, which was the rear portion of the lot, and also for rents. Judgment was also rendered on the warranties of title given by Moore and Hill in favor of their respective vendees. Defendants Moore and Hill have appealed from the judgments in plaintiffs’ favor.

No findings of fact were filed by the trial judge who tried the case without the aid of a jury, but it is apparent that the recovery awarded was upon a finding, which was amply supported by the evidence, that the portion of the lot so recovered by plaintiffs was a part of the homestead of S. H. Tabor and his wife at the time of the sale to M. H. Moore, and that as the deed to Moore by S. H. Tabor was not executed and acknowledged by Mrs. Dora Tabor, it conveyed no title. Whether that conclusion was correct is the principal question presented by appellants here.

In Shields v. Aultman-Miller & Co., 20 Tex. Civ. App. 345, 50 S. W. 219, in which a writ of error was denied by our Supreme Court, the sale of the homestead by the husband alone while his wife was hopelessly insane was held to be a valid sale; and the evidence showed that the property constituting such homestead was the community property of the two. In the opinion rendered in that case, following a reference to the statutes authorizing the appointment of guardians of the estates of insane persons, and giving to the husband a preference right to such appointment for the estate of his insane wife, the court said:

“In the case under consideration the property was 'community property, and the homestead at the time of the sale, and was never abandoned, according to the findings of the jury upon the special issues submitted. Had the wife been sane, her consent to its alienation, expressed in the way; provided by law, must have been obtained, in order to give the sale validity. Her personal consent was rendered impossible by her insanity. To have resorted to the guardianship proceeding would not have obtained her consent, and, unless the husband had authority to separately convey, the property was hopelessly tied up in his 'hands. It is an old-established maxim that the law never requires impossibilities. We think it also clear that courts ought not to construe laws regulating the conveyance of property so as to unnecessarily and unreasonably interfere with personal proprietorship therein. It is' admitted in the pleadings of the parties, and an unquestioned fact in the case, that the wife was hopelessly insane when the property was occupied as a homestead; that she was in an insane asylum in St. Louis at the time it was sold by the husband; and that she has remained there, and continued insane, since. Under these conditions we think the husband had the right to sell the property.”

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

Related

Morris v. Porter
393 S.W.2d 385 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1965)
Power v. Cravens
241 S.W.2d 301 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1951)
Ross, by Next Friend v. Tidewater Oil Co.
145 S.W.2d 1089 (Texas Supreme Court, 1941)
F. C. Crane Co. v. Gosdin
94 S.W.2d 221 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1936)
Duclos v. Applin
66 S.W.2d 1105 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1933)
Reynolds Mortgage Co. v. Gambill
280 S.W. 531 (Texas Supreme Court, 1926)
Green v. Windham
278 S.W. 1101 (Texas Supreme Court, 1926)
Reynolds Mortgage Co. v. Gambill
276 S.W. 480 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1925)
Prescott-Phœnix Oil & Gas Co. v. Gilliland Oil Co.
241 S.W. 775 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1922)
Lawson v. Armstrong
227 S.W. 687 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1921)
Elmendorf v. City of San Antonio
223 S.W. 631 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1920)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 S.W. 111, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 994, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/priddy-v-tabor-texapp-1916.