Simank v. Alford

441 S.W.2d 234, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2468
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 7, 1969
Docket11670
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 441 S.W.2d 234 (Simank v. Alford) 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
Simank v. Alford, 441 S.W.2d 234, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2468 (Tex. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinions

O’QUINN, Justice.

When Elmo R. J. Simank died intestate in 1963 he owned 67.9 acres of farm land in Williamson County which is the subject of this lawsuit.

The sole question is whether the undivided one-half interest in the land awarded to Simank’s mother, brother, and sister by the trial court is subject to the homestead interest of Simank’s widow.

Simank’s mother and his brother and sister brought this lawsuit in trespass to try title against the widow as administratrix of Simank’s estate and against Lee Hurst Alford as her lessee.

The cause was tried before the court in March, 1968, resulting in a judgment entered October 31, 1968, awarding an undivided one-half interest in the land to plaintiffs and an undivided one-half to the widow, with the further provision that the interest of plaintiffs be “ * * * subject to homestead interest of Mildred Simank [the widow] in and to said property * * and that the said Mildred Simank * * * have and recover a homestead interest in [235]*235and to the one-half undivided interest of said property owned by * * * ” plaintiffs.

From this judgment plaintiffs have appealed and contend that the evidence does not support the establishment of a homestead by Simank and his wife during his lifetime. Appellants state, “The plea of not guilty filed by way of answer by * * Mildred Simank * * * placed the burden of proving a homestead interest in her favor * * * and whether or not that burden of proof was met * * * and discharged by her, is the only issue to be decided * * * ” in this appeal.

No findings of fact or conclusions of law were made by the trial court and none was requested. We hold that the evidence sufficiently supports the trial court’s finding implied in the judgment that Mildred Simank had a homestead interest in the land. We affirm judgment of the trial court.

Elmo Simank bought the 67.9 acres of land in 1954, prior to his marriage in December, 1959, to Mildred Simank, appellee. After their marriage, Simank and his wife lived in a house owned by his wife in Austin until January, 1961.

Mildred Simank testified that she and her husband moved to the 67.9-acre farm where they lived “for a little while” before moving about 200 yards to the recently remodeled home of Ella Simank, mother of Elmo Simank, whose farm adjoined the 67.9-acre tract. Ella Simank testified that her son, Elmo, and his wife, Mildred, never did live in the house on Elmo’s farm, but that they started living with her early in 1961 and stayed there until his death June 4, 1963.

Mildred Simank testified without contradiction that she and Elmo Simank moved from her house in Austin in January, 1961, intending “never to live there again” and that their intentions when moving were that, “We were going to live on his land.” The record also shows that Simank and his wife never returned to the Austin house, that Mildred Simank did not return to it after her husband’s death, and that in 1966 the place was sold.

Mildred Simank testified that she and her husband in 1960 looked into the cost of building a home on the 67.9 acres, but instead worked over the house already on the land by repairing the porch, painting, and putting a roof on the residence.

The record does not disclose when these repairs were made but the testimony regarding the repairs was given by Mildred Simank when questioned about the plans in 1960 to build a new home. This testimony is quoted:

“Q All right. Now, as far as .that house in Austin is concerned, just tell us in your own words, without me asking you, when you moved from that house to Simank land or wherever you moved, when you and Elmo moved out of it, what were your intentions at that time regarding that house ?
A Never to live there again.
Q What were your intentions as far as where you were going to live?
A We were going to live on his land.
Q Did you ever investigate the cost or did you ever look into plans, and so forth, to build a home on that land?
A Yes, we did.
Q Can you tell me approximately when that was ?
A In the year of 1960.
Q All right. Did you ever do any work on the house that was on the land at the time that it was there, the house that’s there? Did you ever do any work on that house?
A Yes, I did.
Q What?
A Repaired the porch and painting, and we put a roof on it.”

[236]*236The trial court apparently believed that the repairs were made in anticipation of later occupancy of the house by Simank and his wife and not for any purpose inconsistent with the place being used as a homestead.

Mildred Simank testified that as soon as the remodeling was finished in 1961 on Ella Simank’s house, she and her husband moved out of their house and over to Ella Simank’s house, where they remained until his death following an accident in 1963. Adella Mueller, Elmo Simank’s sister, testified that Simank and his wife never lived on their farm, but moved from the Austin house to Ella Simank’s home in the “latter part of ’61 * * * when mother had the home remodeled so they could move in.”

It is undisputed that Elmo Simank owned no land other than the 67.9 acres. In addition to improvements on the house, which Mildred Simank said they lived in “for a little while,” the farm was cultivated by Elmo Simank during his life, and his mother “had a chicken farm there for a while” before she “moved back in the old homeplace.” At the time of Elmo Simank’s death, in 1963, the land was “in the Soil Bank” and “only the 2-acre lot allotted for corn” was being cultivated.

After Elmo Simank’s death his widow moved back to Austin, where she was employed, and rented the farm to Gene De-vine and later to Lee Hurst Alford, who raised crops on the land. Mildred Simank testified that she and her husband “claimed this 67.9-acre tract as a home” and that she believed it was in the years 1961 and 1962 that her husband claimed the tract “as a homestead.” This testimony was given during inquiry under cross-examination regarding claim of a “home for tax purposes” on the Austin property by Mildred Simank prior to and during occupancy of the Austin place by her and her husband before moving to the farm. Mildred Simank testified that after her husband’s death she left to her attorney matters pertaining to renting the land and all matters pertaining to the estate. She stated that she did not know whether the land had been claimed as her home “since Elmo’s death.”

Mildred Simank testified that she claimed the Austin house as a homestead prior to her marriage and during the year or more she and her husband occupied it prior to moving to his farm in January, 1961. She did not change this designation with the tax collector until a year before she sold the place. After she and her husband moved from the Austin house to the farm, Mildred Simank never lived in the Austin residence. After her husband’s death, when she returned to Austin, Mrs. Simank lived with a friend on Enfield Road before moving to an apartment house where she resided at the time of trial.

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Simank v. Alford
441 S.W.2d 234 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1969)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
441 S.W.2d 234, 1969 Tex. App. LEXIS 2468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simank-v-alford-texapp-1969.