Robinson v. Faville

213 S.W. 316, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 817
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 28, 1919
DocketNo. 6228.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 213 S.W. 316 (Robinson v. Faville) 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
Robinson v. Faville, 213 S.W. 316, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 817 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

FLY, C. J.

This is a second appeal of this case; the result of the first being reported in 201 S. W. 1061. The object of the suit, which was instituted by Kate Robinson and her husband, George C. Robinson, against Margaret Faville and Ada M. Atchison, was to cancel a certain deed made by appellants to Mrs. Faville, which they allege was procured from them by fraud or to ingraft a trust on the same. The court sustained a general demurrer and special exception to the fifth amended petition, and/ appellants declining to amend, the cause was dismissed.

The allegations in the petition show that Mrs. Faville is the mother of Kate Robinson and Ada M. Atchison; that in 1869 F. D. Faville, at that time the husband of Margaret Faville, acquired a parcel of land on the east side of Soledad street, in San Antonio, Tex., the purchase price being $760, being lot 7 in city block 138, division 2. After acquiring the property, Faville abandoned his wife, leaving her and his daughter Kate to pay off claims against the property. The other daughter, Ada, married William W. Cox in 1879, and he died in Kenedy in 1886, and in December, 1897, she married J. T. Atchison, and lived with him in Gaines-ville, Tex., until 1916, when he died, since which time Mrs. Atchison has resided in San Antonio and Gainesville. It was further alleged that Kate Robinson spent her girlhood with her mother on the property in question, assisting her in conducting a rooming house, except when she was absent teaching school and earning money to pay off certain claims against the property amounting to 81,100. In 1889 Kate married George O. Robinson, and they made their home with Mrs. Faville, and continued to live with her until 1916, when they were ordered off by Mrs. Faville. In December, 1899, Mrs. Faville obtained a divorce from her husband, and in the decree was the provision that Mrs. Faville should he entitled during her life to the possession, revenues, use, and enjoyment of the property in question, and at her death it was to be divided between Mrs. Atchison and Mrs. Robinson, the former receiving one-third, and the latter the remaining two-thirds, the larger share being given to Mrs. Robinson because of her services in paying for and keeping up the property. It was further alleged that at or about the date of the divorce Mrs. Faville informed her daughter Kate that Mrs. Atchison had volunteered to convey her one-third expectancy to her mother, and suggested that, if Kate Robinson would convey her interest, she, Margaret Faville, would bequeath all her property to Mrs. Robinson, and that Mrs. Atchi-son would be given 81,000 for her interest, that on January 23, 1900, a joint deed was made by Mrs. Atchison and Mrs. Robinson conveying all their interest in the land to Mrs. Faville, and on December 8, 1906, Mrs. Faville made a will in which she bequeathed to Mrs. Atchison an interest of $1,000 in the property, and to Mrs. Robinson all the residue of the estate, but that afterwards Mrs. Faville repudiated her agreement, and Mrs. Robinson seeks to cancel her deed, or ingraft a trust on it

There is no allegation in the petition that Mrs. Faville at the time she made the promise to bequeath the whole of the property to Mrs. Robinson, that is, in 1900, did not fully intend to comply with her promise, but, on the other hand, the circumstances alleged tend to show that at that time she did intend to comply with her promise. It is alleged that she actually executed a will which was intended to carry the promise into execution, and kept the will for six years, when she destroyed it. The reason for such destruction goes to show that the promise was made in good faith, for it is alleged:

“A life of toil was beginning to tell on Mrs. Faville, and she gradually grew to feel that she was no longer obligated to recognize any right in said property in the Robinsons. Plaintiffs are unable to account for this change in their mother, but they attached no importance to the increasing frequency of unpleasant family episodes until they received notice from an attorney advising them in effect that Mrs. Fa-ville no longer desired them tb occupy said property.”

In other words, the effect of the allegations is that family disagreements had caused Mrs. Faville to change her mind about bequeathing the property to Mrs. Robinson.

[1] The decision of this court on the former appeal is probably not as plainly and clearly expressed as it should have been, but we think there is no ground for mistaking that part of it, based on .decisions of the *318 appellate court of Texas, to the effect that, where it is sought to set aside a deed for failure to keep an oral promise, such promise will not form the basis for such cancellation unless .it is alleged and proved that there was an intention at the time the promise was made not to carry it into execution. Let it be admitted that the promise of Mrs. Faville formed a large part of the consideration for the execution of the deed, and that appellants had the right to show that promise; there would.be no basis for the cancellation of the deed, unless it was shown that at the time the promise was made it was the design and intention of the party making it to disregard it.

In the case of Taylor v. Merrill, 64 Tex. 494, it is held that it was not necessary to allege fraud, accident, or mistake in order to show that the consideration was different from that recited in the deed, and it was sought to cancel the notes because full consideration had been paid for the property received by the defendant. The cancellation of the notes was sought because certain personal property not mentioned in the deed had been included and had not been delivered. The court said:

“This principle of allowing extraneous proof of a different or additional consideration is not bounded upon any right, such as is enforced in courts of equity, to have an instrument reformed when, through fraud, accident, or mistake, it does not state truly the contract of the parties. It is a common-law rule, and enforced in courts having common-law jurisdiction. In the present case we think no allegation of fraud, accident, or mistake was necessary to be made. The answer, too, sought only to establish a consideration in addition to the one recited in the written instruments evidencing the transaction; and then to show that this consideration had in part failed as well as that which appeared in the writings.”

The case now before this court is a very different one from the case cited. This is an action to destroy a contract evidenced by a warranty deed, and in order to accomplish that end it was absolutely necessary to allege and prove that when the deed was obtained Mrs. Faville made verbal promises to obtain its execution, which she at that time did not intend to fulfill. In other words, in order to cancel a deed or other contract in a court of-equity, there must in Texas be allegations anjl proof of fraud, accident, or mistake.

[2] It is the general rule that mere failure by a grantee to perform a promise, which formed the whole or - part of the consideration inducing an executed conveyance, gives no right of rescission in the grantor, either at law or in equity, unless such promise amounts to a condition, and in case of doubt as to the intention, the promise of the grantee will be construed to be a covenant. 2 Pom. Eq. Jur. 6, § 686; Railway v. Titterington, 84 Tex. 218, 19 S. W. 472, 31 Am. St. Rep. 39.

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Bluebook (online)
213 S.W. 316, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-faville-texapp-1919.