Ryan v. Fort Worth National Bank

433 S.W.2d 2, 31 Oil & Gas Rep. 149, 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 2584
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 16, 1968
Docket11626
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 433 S.W.2d 2 (Ryan v. Fort Worth National 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
Ryan v. Fort Worth National Bank, 433 S.W.2d 2, 31 Oil & Gas Rep. 149, 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 2584 (Tex. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

HUGHES, Justice.

This suit is by Mary Lou Ryan, Guardian for Texanna Ledbetter, a person of unsound mind, against the Fort Worth National Bank, Executor and Trustee of the estate of G. R. White, deceased, to quiet title to certain mineral interests in Concho County, Texas. Trial to the court without a jury resulted in a judgment that the guardian for Texanna Ledbetter take nothing by her suit.

At appellant’s request, the trial court made and filed findings of fact from which we quote:

‘ By deed dated October 1, 1928, G. R. White and wife, Victoria L. White, and C. C. Ledbetter and wife, Texana Ledbetter, conveyed to John Hargis, Ray C. Hargis and Wood P. Hargis some 8103.95 acres of land in Concho County, Texas, which deed is of record in Vol. 35, Page 60, Deed Records of Concho County, Texas, and contains the following reservation, towit:

‘Grantors herein reserve for themselves, their heirs assigns and legal representatives, an undivided ½6⅛ interest in and to all minerals, of every kind and description, including oil and gas, in, upon and under said lands; but the right to control and manage and make any and all gas and oil leases or other mineral leases upon said land is hereby granted exclusively to grantees herein, their heirs, assigns and' legal representatives, and they shall be entitled to any and all cash bonus or bonuses paid on any and all oil and gas leases on said land, together with all casfi rentals under such leases; but an undivided ¼6⅛ of any and all oil and gas and other minerals developed from said land shall be owned by grantors herein, their heirs, assigns and legal representatives.’

2. The said C. C. Ledbetter died testate on or about September 24, 1940. His wife, Texana Ledbetter, was the sole devisee in said will and was also named independent executor without bond. Said will was admitted to probate and Mrs. Ledbetter was appointed independent executor on October 14, 1940.

3. At the time of C. G. Ledbetter’s death and for many years prior thereto the said C. C. Ledbetter and G. R. White conducted a partnership business under the name of C. C. Ledbetter and Company.

4. At the time of C. C. Ledbetter’s death said partnership was heavily indebted, owing nearly $200,000.00, far in excess of the value of the assets of said partnership.

5. The land mentioned in Finding No. 1 above, 8103.95 acres, more or less, was *4 the property of the said G. R. White and C. C. Ledbetter, as partners aforesaid, at the time they made said conveyance to the Hargises on October 1, 1928, and had been acquired by them during the marital relationship of Mr. and Mrs. Ledbetter.

6. On or about August 3, 1945, Texana Ledbetter executed the deed to G. R. White which bears date July 1, 1945, is recorded in Vol. 116, Page 352, Deed Records of Concho County, Texas, and is mentioned in the plaintiff’s petition in this cause.

7. The consideration for said deed was that G. R. White had paid and discharged all debts of the Ledbetter and Company partnership, it having been agreed between Mr. White and Mrs. Ledbetter after Mr. Ledbetter’s death that Mr. White would pay such debts and take all property of every kind and description belonging to said partnership which also included all property, both real and personal property, in the joint names of G. R. White and C. C. Ledbetter.

8. In connection with the agreement that Mr. White would pay the partnership debts and have all property belonging to the partnership, including all property in the joint names of White and Ledbetter (Finding No. 7 above) the parties did not intend to exclude the community interest of Mrs. Ledbetter in any property which had belonged to the partnership, and it was the intention of Mrs. Ledbetter and Mr.

“THE STATE OF TEXAS COUNTY OF McCULLOCH
That whereas during the lifetime of Claude C. Ledbetter, the said Claude C. Ledbetter and G. R. White were partners, doing business under the partnership name of C. C. Ledbetter and Company; and whereas said partnership owned certain lands and interest in lands in Concho County, Texas, and owned livestock and other property located in various places; and whereas said partnership of C. C. Ledbetter and Company was heavily in-White for the deed bearing date July 1, 1945, to sweep up and include the whole Ledbetter interest in all properties then on hand which had belonged to the partners or which stood in the name of G. R. White and C. C. Ledbetter at the time of Mr. Ledbetter’s death, and particularly all the Ledbetter interest in any real estate or interest in real estate in their names in Concho County.

9. At the time the deed from Mrs. Led-better to Mr. White was made, there was no real estate in Concho County, outside of the minerals reserved in the deed to the Hargises, to which the deed from Mrs. Ledbetter to Mr. White, could have possibly applied.

10. The deed from Texana Ledbetter to G. R. White was prepared by Sam Mc-Collum, attorney, of Brady, Texas, at the instance of G. R. White. Mr. McCollum was representing Mr. White generally at the time. Mr. McCollum represented the partners prior to Mr. Ledbetter’s death, and he represented Mrs. Ledbetter in connection with her deceased husband's estate, but the Court cannot find whether or not he was still doing her legal work at the time of the conveyance to Mr. White. She read the deed before signing it.”

The deed of July 1, 1945, from Mrs. Ledbetter to G. R. White, mentioned in the court’s findings, we copy in full:

KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS
debted at the time of the death of Claude C. Ledbetter, which occurred at Brady, Texas, on September 24, 1940; and whereas the said Claude C. Ledbetter died testate and under his last will and testament all property passed to his surviving wife, Texana Ledbetter, subject to the payment of his debts; and whereas after the death of said Claude C. Led-better and after his will had been duly admitted to probate in the Probate Court *5 of McCulloch County, Texas, the said Texana Ledbetter as sole devisee and legatee under the last will and testament of the said Claude C. Ledbetter, deceased, entered into an agreement with the said G. R. White, whereby the said G. R. White was to take all property of every kind and description belonging to the partnership of C. C. Ledbetter and Company which also included all property, both real estate and personal property, in the joint names of G. R. White and C. C. Ledbetter, in consideration of the said G. R. White agreeing to pay off and discharge all partnership debts; and whereas the said G. R. White has fully complied with his agreement and has paid off and discharged all said partnership debts:
Now therefore I, Texana Ledbetter, as sole devisee and legatee under the last will and testament of the said Claude C. Ledbetter, deceased, in consideration of the said G. R. White having paid off and discharged all indebtedness owing by the partnership of C. C. Ledbetter and Company, have this day and by these presents sold, conveyed, and transferred to the said G. R. White all property of every kind and description wheresoever situate, both real estate and personal property, and all interest in both real estate and personal property dwned and held in the name of C. C.

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

Related

McCuen v. Huey
255 S.W.3d 716 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2008)
Joseph W. McCuen v. George Philips Huey, Jr.
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2008
Timothy Hargrove v. State
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2003
Krug v. Reissig
488 P.2d 150 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1971)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
433 S.W.2d 2, 31 Oil & Gas Rep. 149, 1968 Tex. App. LEXIS 2584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryan-v-fort-worth-national-bank-texapp-1968.