Sanborn v. Nelson

134 S.W. 855, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 642
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 21, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 134 S.W. 855 (Sanborn v. Nelson) 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
Sanborn v. Nelson, 134 S.W. 855, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 642 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinions

This appeal is from an order of the honorable J. N. Browning, judge of the Forty-Seventh district, appointing a receiver upon the petition of appellee. Omitting much detail and transmutation in title not deemed necessary to an understanding of our conclusion, appellee's petition exhibits transactions leading to the joint acquisition by appellant and appellee of some 135,736 acres of land known as the "Bravo Ranch," together with several thousand dollars worth of personal property consisting of horses, cattle, and ranch appurtenances, all situated in the counties of Hartley and Oldham, and a later partition of the same whereby appellant became the sole owner of a specified three-fourths and appellee sole owner of the remaining one-fourth, consisting of certain designated sections of the land. It was alleged that the ranch had been bought with a view of subdividing it and of reselling the same in smaller quantities and at a profit, in the meantime the ranch to be operated at the greatest advantage; that in the acquisition of the ranch and in its operation until the partition mentioned, including a resale of some nine thousand acres for cash and notes, appellant and appellee were partners and doing business as such; that the notes and personal property had never been divided, but was yet, so far as unwasted, wholly retained by appellant. It further appears that at the time of the partition appellee was indebted to appellant in a large sum, viz., about $30,000, for moneys advanced in behalf of appellee in part payment for his one-fourth interest, and that appellant had incurred a liability for a further large sum, viz, some $80,000, upon appellee's paper due the vendors. Appellee, being unable to pay or secure these several sums, and at appellant's insistence that he be paid and secured, joined appellant in a further agreement dated June 1, 1907, placing in escrow with J. L. Smith of Amarillo, Tex., a deed termed a "quitclaim deed," by which appellee in terms conveyed to appellant the fee-simple title to the one-fourth, or 31,493 acres, of land set apart to appellee in the partition, which deed, the conditions of its deposit not having been complied with on appellee's part, was delivered by said J. L. Smith to appellant in accordance with the terms of deposit on the _____ day of November, 1907.

This agreement of June 1, 1907, after reciting the indebtedness and obligation of appellee to pay appellant, contained among other things the following:

"(a) Should the said O. H. Nelson at any time before Oct. 1st, 1907, pay to the said H. B. Sanborn the full amount, principal and interest, owing to him by said O. H. Nelson and for which he is surety or in any wise liable, or pay such indebtedness and indemnify and protect the said H. B. Sanborn, then said deed shall be returned to the said O. H. Nelson, and may be destroyed and shall be of no force and effect.

"(b) Should the said O. H. Nelson fail to pay his indebtedness to H. B. Sanborn by Oct. 1st, 1907, and fail to have him released from all of the obligations of the said O. H. Nelson for which he is surety or in any way liable, or fail to pay said indebtedness and indemnify the said H. B. Sanborn against all obligations for which he is liable satisfactorily to the said H. B. Sanborn, or fail to do either or any of said acts, then said deed shall be delivered by the said J. L. Smith to H. B. Sanborn and shall be effective, operative, and binding, as a deed of conveyance, and the said H. B. Sanborn may have said deed recorded. *Page 856

"Fourth. Should the said O. H. Nelson fail to pay his indebtedness to the said H. B. Sanborn by Oct. 1st, 1907, and have him released from or indemnified against the obligations of the said O. H. Nelson for which he is or may be liable, the fee-simple title to said lands embraced in said deed from the said Nelson to the said Sanborn shall be and remain in the said H. B. Sanborn, and may be sold and conveyed by the said H. B. Sanborn for such prices and upon such terms and conditions as he may see fit: Provided, however, that one-half of the net profits arising from the sales of said lands shall belong to the said O. H. Nelson, but the interest of the said Nelson therein shall be retained and applied by the said Sanborn to the payment of the indebtedness of the said Nelson, and provided, further, that after the payment of all indebtedness on and obligations assumed against the said lands, and of the full payment of all indebtedness to said H. B. Sanborn, the said lands then remaining unsold, if any, shall be equally divided on the basis of value between the said H. B. Sanborn and O. H. Nelson, and the said H. B. Sanborn shall execute and deliver to the said O. H. Nelson, a deed of conveyance to his portion thereof.

"Fifth. It is understood that the said O. H. Nelson in the interim between this date and Oct. 1st, 1907, may continue the sales of his said lands at retail through the agencies now existing with Eli Browning and George Knoblauch Land Company, and shall use and apply the proceeds as under the arrangements and agreements now existing, but should the said Nelson at any time attempt to sell and convey said lands in any manner other than through such regular channels, and in a manner that would or may defeat the rights of the said H. B. Sanborn, such acts shall constitute a breach of this contract, and the said deed this day placed in escrow shall be delivered to the said H. B. Sanborn and may be placed of record by him, and no rights or profits shall belong to the said O. H. Nelson, and the said H. B. Sanborn shall be and become the full and absolute owner of said lands."

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

Related

McKellar v. Bracewell
473 S.W.2d 542 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1971)
Rosenberg v. Titsa
278 S.W. 896 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1925)
Ferguson v. Dickinson
138 S.W. 221 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 S.W. 855, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanborn-v-nelson-texapp-1911.