Sanger v. Calloway

61 S.W.2d 988
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedJune 24, 1933
DocketNo. 1384—5983
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 61 S.W.2d 988 (Sanger v. Calloway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanger v. Calloway, 61 S.W.2d 988 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1933).

Opinion

SHORT, Presiding Judge.

Inasmuch as the law of this ease depends upon a variety of facts, which the trial court found to be true, and which are not assailed by the Court of Civil Appeals, except in two immaterial particulars, we adopt the statement made in the application for the writ of error as being correct, together with the statement of the facts in the Court of Civil Appeals [37 S.W.(2d) 243]:

“Defendants in error, Calloway and wife, sued plaintiffs in error, Hubert Bookout and Chas. L. Sanger, alleging that on and prior to.the 9th of December, 1926, the property in controversy constituted their homestead upon which they resided; that on said date they signed a deed, which, upon its face and according to its reading and tenor, purported to be a warranty deed, whereby they conveyed said land and premises to E. O. Snead of Dallas, Tex., for the sum of $7,500; ‘that said instrument was in fact intended by plaintiff, Calloway, to operate only as a mortgage, the same being executed by him upon the following agreement made between him and the said Snead’:

“ ‘(a) Plaintiff W. A. Calloway, cashier of the Home State Bank, a corporation of Howe, Texas, and said Bank was indebted to the State Trust & Savings Bank, a corporation of Dallas, Texas, with which the said E. O. Snead was connected, being Vice President of said Bank, and which the said Snead, represented in said transaction.
“ ‘(b) The said Snead stated to the said W. A. Calloway that if said lands and premises were conveyed to him, the said Snead, that the said State Trust & Savings Bank of Dallas, Texas, would give the Home State Bank, of Howe, Texas, credit on its books for the sum of Seventy-Pive Hundred ($7,509.00) Dollars, and that the said W. A. Calloway would have the privilege of redeeming said property by the payment of said amount any time within two years after said date. That upon said promise plaintiff W. A. Calloway executed said purported deed as aforesaid. That he never received any consideration, personally whatever for said conveyance.
“ ‘(c) That the said W. A. Calloway executed said purported deed, and before his wife signed the same the notary public made out [989]*989his joint certificate of acknowledgment, and affixed his seal thereto, as the same appears upon said purported deed, prior to the time that the said Minnie Calloway signed the same.
“ ‘(d) That after the notary had placed his said certificate and seal on said purported deed the said W. A. Calloway took the same to his wife, the said Minnie Calloway, and told her that it was a paper that he desired her to sign in order to help the Home State Bank out of its financial difficulties, or words to that effect, and she thereupon signed said purported deed. That the said W. A. Callo-way never explained to the said Minnie Callo-way that it was a deed conveying their homestead, or made any further explanation to her other than as above set forth.
“ ‘(e) That the said Minnie Calloway never at any time appeared before said notary public, and said notary public did not explain said instrument to her privily and apart from her husband, and never asked her whether she had willingly signed the same and did not wish to retract it, and said certificate of said notary to said instrument is wholly untrue.’
“That thereafter, in the month of January, 1927, said E. O. Snead reconveyed the property to Calloway for $2,509 cash and the note of Calloway and wife for $5,000, said deed reserving a vendor’s lien to secure said note; that said Calloway paid the $2,500 by his cheek and executed said note, and on the 26th day of February, 1927, said Calloway and wife executed a deed of trust on the property in controversy to secure the payment of said note; that Minnie Calloway never acknowledged said deed of trust before the notary taking her acknowledgment; that Minnie Calloway never knew the character of either said deed or deed of trust when she signed the same; that the note executed by Callo-way and wife to Snead had been transferred to State Trust & Savings Bank, and by it to Hooser and by Hooser to Sanger, and that appellee, Bookout, had been appointed substitute-trustee under the deed of trust and was proceeding to sell the property for the payment of said note; that they asked that Bookout and Sanger be enjoined and that said deed, deed of trust and note be canceled.
“Defendant Snead answered alleging that the sale of the land by Calloway and wife to him was an actual bona fide sale and that he paid the $7,500 recited as the consideration therefor.

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Bluebook (online)
61 S.W.2d 988, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanger-v-calloway-texcommnapp-1933.