Sachs v. Goldberg

159 S.W. 92, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1355
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 6, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 159 S.W. 92 (Sachs v. Goldberg) 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
Sachs v. Goldberg, 159 S.W. 92, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1355 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This suit was brought by appellant against the appellee to recover an undivided one-half interest in lot No. 1, block No.' 138, in the city of Port Arthur.

In addition to the usual allegations in a suit of trespass to try title, plaintiff’s petition alleges, in substance, that on May 14, 1910, plaintiff and defendant became joint owners by purchase of a building situated on the lot before described and are now the joint owners of said building; that soon after the purchase of said building “plaintiff and defendant made and entered into a certain agreement, whereby it was agreed that plaintiff and defendant would negotiate and consummate a purchase of said lot upon which the said house was located from the owner thereof, and that the said purchase when negotiated and consummated by either the plaintiff or the defendant should inure to the benefit of both plaintiff and defendant, and the plaintiff and defendant were to become joint owners of the said lot, each to own an undivided one-half interest therein when the said purchase of the said lot was consummated, and the title to the said lot was to be taken in the name of the plaintiff and the defendant as joint owners thereof” ; that on *93 December 9, 1910, defendant purchased said ■lot from the owner thereof, J. S. White, for the sum of $5,000, paying $500 in cash and the remainder to be paid in nine installments •of $500 each, evidenced by vendor’s lien notes, and without the knowledge of plaintiff took the title in his own name, in violation, of -said agreement with plaintiff, and refuses to .recognize said agreement and convey to plaintiff, upon payment of his one-half of said purchase money and assumption of one-half ■of said notes, an undivided one-half of said lot. Plaintiff tendered into court the sum of $250, one-half of the cash payment made by the defendant on said lot, and offered to assume one-half of said purchase-money notes, ■and prayed “that defendant be forced to accept from plaintiff the said sum of $250 .and interest hereinbefore tendered to the defendant, and that it be decreed by this court that upon plaintiff becoming bound for the payment of one-half of said vendor’s lien notes the defendant holds in trust for plaintiff the equitable title to an undivided one-.half interest in said lot, and that plaintiff recover of and from the defendant both the .legal and equitable title to an undivided one-half of the lot hereinbefore described, and all costs of this suit, and for any other and further relief to which he may be entitled in law or equity.”

The defendant answered by general demurrer and general denial and plea of not guilty. He further answered by cross-bill against the plaintiff in which it is alleged that, when plaintiff and defendant purchased the building upon said lot, they also purchased from H. A. Gottlich, from whom they purchased :said building, a lease held by him on said lot from J. S. White, the owner thereof, which lease was transferred by the written consent of the said White; that said lease was for a term of three years from April 2, 1909, and provided for the payment as ground rent for said lot of the sum of $150 per year, and to secure the payment of said rent a lien was •expressly given in the lease upon said building. “Defendant further alleges that heretofore, on, to wit, December 9, 1910, this defendant purchased from the said owner, J. S. White, who held and owned the fee-simple title to said lot from and under the sovereignty of the soil, and the latter then conveyed to the defendant, A. Goldberg, the fee-simple title to said lot; and defendant has ever since owned and still owns said lot in fee-simple, and is entitled to collect and receive the said ground rent accruing after December 9, 1910, at the rate of $150 per annum, payable quarterly in advance as specified in said lease, during the time when said lease was in force and effect, and have a lien on said building to secure any part thereof, in the event of default. Plaintiff herein, B. Sachs, has hitherto failed and refused to pay to defendant the one-half of said ground rent accruing, after December 9, 1910, for which he is justly liable, urging as an excuse or justification for not paying said rents the contention or claim that he is the owner of, or equitably entitled to, one-half interest in said lot, upon the alleged ground that defendant agreed with plaintiff to buy said lot for the joint account or benefit of both parties, so that plaintiff would have half interest therein, or that some agreement to this effect was entered into between the parties hereto. Defendant specially and positively denies that there ever was any such agreement, and especially denies that when he purchased and procured said deed he was under any agreement or understanding with plaintiff to buy any interest in said lot, either for or with him, or to take any conveyance to himself for the benefit or use of said plaintiff, or to acquire any interest in said lot in trust for plaintiff. On the contrary, plaintiff, shortly before said deed to defendant was made, requested of defendant to let plaintiff join defendant in the equal purchase of said lot," which request defendant positively and unequivocally refused; and thereupon plaintiff violently abused and assaulted defendant, and left his presence with the expression, in substance, that ‘you (meaning defendant) can have the lot; I don’t want it’; and after this altercation and declaration, the deed was forthwith made to defendant alone, there being no agreement whatsoever for a joint purchase. But, on the contrary, defendant alleges that before any title or interest in the land vested in defendant there was an express refusal and renunciation -by said defendant of any agreement or understanding for a joint purchase, if any such agreement or understanding had ever existed, and plaintiff likewise renounced and abandoned such agreement, if any there ever was. Defendant, however, especially denies that he ever at any time agreed to a joint purchase of said lot, and alleges that by reason of the facts hereinbefore stated plaintiff did not and could not have relied on defendant to buy a half interest for plaintiff at the time of the transaction. Defendant specially alleges that all that ever passed between plaintiff and defendant was verbal, and defendant here now pleads the statute of frauds in bar of any effort to. make any alleged verbal understanding or agreement the basis of a title to said lot or any interest therein. Wherefore, premises considered, defendant prays that plaintiff take nothing by his suit, and that defendant may go hence without day and recover all costs by him in this behalf incurred; that defendant, A. Goldberg, may have judgment against plaintiff, B. Sachs, for title to and possession of said lot, and for one-half of the ground rent due and unpaid on said lot, in accordance with the terms of said lease, and for a foreclosure of defendant’s lien upon the half interest of said plaintiff in said leasehold right and building, and for the sale of the same *94 under the law to satisfy and pay said ground rent due by said plaintiff to said defendant, as hereinbefore set out; and defendant prays for such other and further relief, general and special, in law and in equity, to which he may be entitled.”

Appellant by supplemental petition denied all of the averments of appellee’s answer, and especially denied that he made the statement abandoning or renouncing his rights under his contract with appellee, as alleged in ap-pellee’s answer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 S.W. 92, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sachs-v-goldberg-texapp-1913.