Samuell v. Brooks

207 S.W. 626, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1248
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 9, 1918
DocketNo. 8016.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 207 S.W. 626 (Samuell v. Brooks) 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
Samuell v. Brooks, 207 S.W. 626, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1248 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinions

* Writ of error refused. Mar. 12, 1919. Appellant sued appellee S. B. Brooks to recover principal, interest, and attorney's fees upon a past-due promissory note for $5,000, payable to Zora Samuell or order, executed in part payment of 210 acres of land in Hunt county, conveyed by appellant to appellee S. B. Brooks, and to foreclose the vendor's lien retained in said conveyance to secure payment of same. A. M. Samuell, to whom appellee Brooks subsequently conveyed the land, was made a defendant, as was Zora Samuell, the payee. Against A. M. Samuell a foreclosure of the lien was sought, and against Zora Samuell judgment decreeing she was without interest in the note, etc. In support of her right to maintain suit upon the note, appellant alleged that the note was made payable to Zora Samuell, her daughter, by mistake on her part, and through fraud, accident, or mistake on the part of the said Brooks and A. M. Samuell, in that the said A. M. Samuell, brother of her deceased husband, advised her to sell the land to Brooks, pay existing debts against it, and send him the surplus, with which he would speculate and make her large returns, and for which purpose he could use a note payable to Zora, and that when she concluded the sale to appellee Brooks she delivered the note to Clark Leddy, attorneys, with instructions to forward same to A. M. Samuell, at Dallas, Tex., which they did immediately, but that A. M. Samuell, instead of using the note for the purpose agreed upon, without the knowledge or consent of appellant, forwarded it to appellee Brooks, who was his agent, and who placed it with the private papers of A. M. Samuell, of which he had charge, and concerning which appellant knew nothing until she called upon A. M. Samuell and learned that he had refused to use the note, but had delivered same to appellee Brooks as aforesaid. Appellant further alleged that she never intended the note to be a gift to her daughter Zora, and never delivered it to her, or to another for her use, and when she learned the disposition made of it she immediately and continuously demanded possession and payment of same from the appellee Brooks, which he refused, and as a consequence appellant was compelled to employ counsel, to whom said Brooks finally delivered the note.

After appellant filed her suit, but before service of citation was had upon appellee Brooks, he filed a suit in the same court against appellant and her daughter Zora, alleging in substance that he was and always had been willing to pay the note since its maturity, but that both appellant and her daughter Zora claimed the fund. He tendered the principal and interest of the note into court, and prayed that it be adjudged to the real owner, and that he be discharged, with his costs. In answer to appellant's suit, appellee Brooks alleged in substance that appellant's conveyance of the land and the taking of the note payable to her daughter Zora was the culmination of appellant's plan and purpose to set aside to her daughter Zora the sum of $5,000 in trust, to be administered by appellee Brooks, who was directed to pay the income derived therefrom to said Zora for her maintenance and education, but that, due to the controversy relating to the ownership of the fund, he desired to resign his trust and as maker of the note to pay same, but could not pay it to Zora, because of her minority, and could not pay it to appellant, because it was by its terms payable to Zora. Prayer was that appellant and her daughter be required to litigate the ownership of the note and fund, that he be relieved from further duties as trustee, and for his costs.

At this point in the controversy, on motion of appellee Brooks, the causes were consolidated. After consolidation appellant amended her pleading to meet the new phase of the proceeding, but made no substantial change in her cause of action. Subsequently Zora Samuell, by her guardian ad litem, answered the suit of appellant, and after adopting certain pleadings of appellee Brooks, among them the allegations that it was appellant's purpose to create a trust fund for her use and benefit by the sale of the land, pleaded that the note was her individual property, and that she owned, by inheritance from her father, an undivided one-sixth interest in the land in part payment of which said note was given, of which appellant was cognizant at the time she conveyed same. Appellee A. M. Samuell, in effect, adopted the pleading of appellee Brooks in the suit he filed, and in the answer to the suit brought by appellant.

By supplemental petition appellant replied to the pleadings of the parties just recited, raising issues of law and fact, and specially pleading other facts. It is not necessary, however, to recite the pleading in order to understandingly discuss the issues presented in the brief. Jury was waived, and trial was had before the court, who adjudged that appellee Zora Samuell was the legal and equitable owner and holder of the note, and entitled to the fund tendered into court against all parties to the suit, and that *Page 628 appellant was entitled to nothing by her suit, and that all parties, as to her suit, go thence and recover costs, etc. From such judgment this appeal was taken.

Upon request of the appellant the court filed conclusions of fact and law. The facts found are, in substance, these: On March 10, 1915, appellant, Mrs. Berta V. Samuell was indebted to First National Bank of Greenville and its cashier, appellee S. B. Brooks, in an amount aggregating $5,534.80. On that date Mrs. Samuell conveyed to Brooks 210 acres of land in Hunt county by general warranty deed absolute in form, but intended as security for her indebtedness. Thereafter, on October 12, 1915, Mrs. Samuell signed, acknowledged, and delivered to Brooks another instrument, in the nature of a declaration, which recited in substance that the conveyance of March 10, 1915, to Brooks, while absolute in form, was intended to secure Brooks and the bank in the sum of $5,534.80; also that against said land so conveyed there was a prior lien securing the British American Mortgage Company in payment of a debt of $8,000; and that it was her desire to sell the land and pay the debts enumerated, and, in addition, to create, out of the proceeds of the sale, a trust fund of $5,000 for the benefit of her daughter Zora. For the purposes enumerated she authorized and empowered Brooks to speedily sell the land for not less than $100 an acre, and with the proceeds, first, pay all indebtedness due British American Mortgage Company, or permit the purchaser to assume such indebtedness; second, pay the debt due by her to the First National Bank of Greenville and Brooks, including any additional sums advanced; third, to retain, as trustee for Zora Samuell, $5,000, which should be invested and reinvested in her behalf, paying to her, for her maintenance and education, the income from said fund as it accrued, whether annually, semiannually, or monthly, said trust to continue for _____ years, after which the entire fund was to be paid to Zora; fourth, the remainder of the proceeds from said sale, if any, to be paid over to said Mrs. Berta V. Samuell. Thereafter, on November 29, 1915, appellant, Mrs. Berta V. Samuell, signed, acknowledged, and delivered to appellee Brooks a general warranty deed to the 210 acres of and referred to in the former instruments. The consideration was $21,000, paid by Brooks assuming the $8,000 due British American Mortgage Company, $8,000 in cash, and appellee Brooks' note for $5,000, payable to Zora Samuell, and due January 1, 1916, being the note in controversy. The deed to Brooks referred to the former conveyance to Brooks, and declared it was but a mortgage to secure the debts enumerated in the trust declaration subsequently recorded.

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Bluebook (online)
207 S.W. 626, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samuell-v-brooks-texapp-1918.