Ray v. Metzger

165 S.W.2d 207
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 2, 1942
DocketNo. 14421
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 165 S.W.2d 207 (Ray v. Metzger) 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
Ray v. Metzger, 165 S.W.2d 207 (Tex. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

SPEER, Justice.

A. S. Metzger, as plaintiff, sued defendants T. R. Ray and his wife, Emma Ray, to recover on a note in the principal sum of $550, together with interest and attorney’s fees, and to foreclose a deed of trust lien securing it, covering lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8, 9 and 10, in the T. R. Ray Subdivision of the 3% acres of land, a part of the T. Ak-ers Survey, in Tarrant County, Texas. Other parties were named as defendants under allegations that they were asserting an interest in the land, but they filed disclaimers and need not be further mentioned.

Defendants Ray and wife answered by general denial and special pleas that the land in controversy was, prior to and at the time the note and deed of trust were executed by them, a part of their homestead; that they had been for several years past and at said time actually occupying and using the land as a homestead for themselves and their family.

By supplemental petition, plaintiff pleaded that the Rays acquired the whole tract of 3% acres by deed dated August 1, 1934, and on July 16, 1938, the defendants executed a plat of said tract, cutting the land into ten lots known as the T. R. Ray Subdivision, and had same recorded in the deed records of Tarrant County; that defendants subdivided said tract into lots, with the intention of selling all of said lots except No. 6, which they retained for homestead purposes; that they had previously lived on that lot and lived there at the time of the execution of the note and deed of trust; that defendants told plaintiff prior to the execution of the note and lien that they had so divided the property with the intention of selling all but lot No. 6, so reserved as a homestead, and that they had no intention of ever using said other lots, or any part thereof, in connection with their said homestead; that plaintiff relied upon said statements so made by defendants and but for same he would not have parted with the consideration paid by him and that defendants knew at the time plaintiff so relied thereon. Further allegations were made that at the time the note and deed of trust were executed and the money paid by plaintiff, defendants were not using said lots in any way in connection with their said homestead on lot No. 6. By a trial amendment plaintiff alleged that if defendants ever used the lots for homestead purposes, upon which plaintiff asserted the lien, said defendants had abandoned same as a part of their homestead prior to the time they executed the note and deed of trust involved in this suit.

Trial was to a jury on special issues. The verdict was (1) defendants abandoned for homestead purposes those lots against which the lien was sought to be foreclosed; (2) the lots were not in use by defendants for purposes of a home when the note and deed of trust were executed; (3) defendants did not abandon said property as a homestead after the execution of the note and deed of trust; (4) at the time of the execution of the note and deed of trust, T. R. Ray told plaintiff that he was not occupying and using said lots for homestead purposes in connection with the house in which he lived; (5) plaintiff relied upon said statements by defendant T. R. Ray; and (6) the entire premises were not being used and occupied by defendants as a homestead.

On the verdict, judgment was entered for plaintiff for the amount of his debt against T. R. Ray and for foreclosure of the deed of trust lien as against both defendants. Motion for new trial made by defendants was overruled and from the judgment entered appeal was perfected.

Defendants do not complain of the judgment for debt but challenge that part foreclosing the lien. The ten points presented for reversal may be grouped by us into three, as follows: (1) Error of the court in refusing to instruct a verdict for defendants ; (2) error in submitting issues of fact to the jury; and (3) error in admitting testimony of witnesses that defendants had said to them the land in question was not their homestead and that they were not using same as such, prior to and at the time the note and deed of trust were executed.

No error is presented in the failure of the court to instruct a verdict for defendants, based upon the asserted grounds by defendants that the undisputed testimony shows they actually occupied and were using the property for homestead purposes at the time the note'and deed of trust were executed. If the record supported the contention of defendants, their position would be well taken, but it finds no support in the record. We shall discuss this point further under the next group of points.

Error is assigned because issues were submitted to the jury on the questions [209]*209above indicated by the verdict, because, as claimed by defendants, there was no evidence to warrant such submissions and because there was no evidence to support the jury verdict.

It is now too well settled to require citation of authorities that where testimony is conflicting and is of such a nature that a jury could reasonably find either way, the verdict must be respected by the appellate court if there is any testimony of probative value to support the finding. It is equally well settled that no instructed verdict should be given, if to consider all the testimony against the proposed instructed verdict in its most favorable light to the one against whom the verdict would have been given under the request, a jury might have found to the contrary.

We are fully aware of the constitutional provisions in this state inhibiting the mortgaging of the homestead for any other purpose than those therein named. We are also familiar with the line of decisions in this state which in effect hold that if the homestead claimant is in actual possession of and is occupying and using premises for homestead purposes, his declarations and representations (oral or written) to the contrary, will not deprive him of the constitutional protection against encumbrances of the homestead. 22 Tex.Jur., pp. 179, 180, Sects. 124, 125 and 126. There is competent evidence in this case tending to show that defendants purchased the 3% acres of ground located outside of any city, town or village, although located about a mile and a half from Birdville. In the locality of this property many people resided on homes ranging in tracts from the size of defendants’ to ten or twenty acres and were engaged in truck raising. That after defendants purchased the tract above referred to, they moved into the house, cultivated portions of the tract in vegetables; the number of years they so cultivated it and whether they cultivated and used the ground the year before and the year in which the note and mortgage were given is controverted by the testimony. Witness Clarence Jones, who showed himself to be familiar with the property and saw it a time or two each week over a period of several years, said a short time before the note and deed of trust were executed that T. R. Ray came to him and said he was cutting the tract up and wanted to sell it; Ray wanted witness to build some houses on it and sell the lots with houses on them; witness asked him about his homestead rights and Ray said his homestead, as platted, would be on lot No. 6; Ray showed witness the plat and told him he had no use for the lots and did not figure on ever using them; Ray wanted to get the money out of the lots or borrow some money on them; that he was not using them at that time. The witness said the lots had not been used the year before nor were they being used the year of the loan transaction; that they were covered with grass and weeds like any other vacant lot.

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Bluebook (online)
165 S.W.2d 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ray-v-metzger-texapp-1942.