Simms Oil Co. v. Rutledge

53 S.W.2d 673
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 28, 1932
DocketNo. 3867.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 53 S.W.2d 673 (Simms Oil Co. v. Rutledge) 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
Simms Oil Co. v. Rutledge, 53 S.W.2d 673 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

JACKSON, J.

The plaintiff, Simms Oil Company, a corporation, instituted this suit in the district court of Childress county, Tex., against the defendant, T. E. Rutledge, to recover possession of a tract of land 50x40 feet, a part of lots Nos. 23 and 24 in block No. 6 of the town of Childress, and to cancel a contract by the terms of which the plaintiff had subleased said tract to the defendant for the purposes of operating a filling station and selling and distributing Simms Oil Company gasoline, greases, and oils, for a term of six. years and one month from March 14, 1929.

The plaintiff alleges the terms of the contract and its provision authorizing it to terminate the lease and the breach of said provision by the defendant.

■ The defendant answered that the premises involved were a part of lots 23 and 24 of the town of Childress, which were and are the business homestead of himself and wife, Ver-dia Rutledge; that on December 13, 1924, and at all times since, there was located on said lots a building approximately 75 by 115 feet, which was used, occupied, and enjoyed by the defendant and his wife as their business homestead, and on said date, by written contract, he temporarily leased said 50x40 feet of land for the purpose of operating a filling station to M. G. Brock, for a period of ten years; that the said Brock defaulted, and on the 12th day of March, 1929, the defendant assigned to the plaintiff the remaining period of the Brock lease; that the plaintiff reassigned or sublet the property to the defendant with the privilege of subletting; that contemporaneously with and as a part of said transaction, the defendant agreed to sell from the premises and said filling station only the plaintiff’s gasoline, oils, and greases, and the plaintiff orally, agreed that it would furnish to the defendant and his assigns its products at wholesale prices; that the lease to Brock and the assignment thereof to plaintiff were an attempt to convey an interest in land and were made without the consent of his wife and without her signature or acknowledgment thereto, and were therefore void and unenforceable.

The defendant also pleaded that the plaintiff had breached its ■ agreement, failed and refused to furnish him or his assigns gasoline, oil, and greases at wholesale prices, and by such breach rendered it impossible for him and those to whom he subleased to operate and conduct the filling station on said premises; that such breach was made with the fraudulent purpose of forcing him and his sublessees to close the station so plaintiff could obtain possession thereof without remuneration to the defendant; and if defendant was in default, it was due to the breach of the contract by plaintiff.

Mrs. Yerdia Rutledge’ intervened and alleged that on the 13th of December, 1924, and at all times since, she and her husband were the owners of the premises in question and *674 were actually using, occupying, enjoying, and claiming said premises as their business homestead, that the lease of M. G. Brock and the subsequent reassignment of the unexpired portion thereof to plaintiff were made by her husband without her consent or knowledge, and that she had not signed or executed either of said instruments and had not received or retained the benefits thereof, and that said lease contract and assignment were void. She also adopted the pleading of her husband and prayed that the contracts be declared null and void.

The plaintiff, by supplemental petition, urged a general demurrer and numerous exceptions to the pleadings of the defendant and of the intervener, specially denied that the property constituted any part of the business homestead of said parties or had been dedicated as such business homestead, asserted the validity of the contract, and pleaded that on the 11th of March, 1929, M. G. Brock transferred and assigned the unexpired term of his lease to the defendant in consideration of the defendant’s assumption of and promise to pay plaintiff the sum of $3,714.36, which amount Brock was then indebted to the plaintiff; that on March 15, 1929, the defendant assigned the unexpired portion of the said Brock lease to plaintiff in consideration of the cancellation of the Brock indebtedness, and on the same day the plaintiff, as lessor, sublet the unexpired term of said lease to the defendant, and, if said lease for any reason is void, the consideration for the cancellation of plaintiff’s debt failed, and it should have judgment therefor.

The plaintiff filed a trial amendment alleging that, if the premises were the business homestead of the defendant and interve-ner, the defendant had abandoned the premises prior to the execution of the Brock lease arid 'the assignment to it; that defendant and intervener owned a residence homestead in the' city of Childress, and it, together with the property claimed as a business homestead, exceeded the value of $5,000.

The case was tried before the court without the intervention of a jury, and judgment rendered that the plaintiff- take nothing against the defendant or the intervener and that the purported transfer of the lease agreement from the defendant to plaintiff and from plaintiff to the defendant be canceled and that the defendant and intervener recover their costs, from which judgment the plaintiff prosecutes an appeal.

By numerous assignments, all of which may be considered together, the appellant assails'as error the action of the trial court in holding that the assignment of the unexpired term of the Brock lease to the plaintiff was void, because the defendant had abandoned the filling, station as a homestead by dedicating it to lease purposes and the joinder of his wife in such lease or assignment was unnecessary.

The court in his judgment includes his findings of fact, which are, in substance: That in the year 1921 T. E. Rutledge was a married man and Yerdia Rutledge was his wife; that during that year the defendant purchased lots 22, 23, and 24 in block 6 in the town of Childress and established thereon his place of business, consisting of an auto garage, a welding shop, and a gasoline filling station; that he continuously used said property as his business homestead, operating thereon the filling station, auto garage, and welding shop; that on December. 13, 1924, T. E. Rutledge executed a written lease to M. G. Brock, covering the land in controversy, the west end of lots 23 and 24, for a period of ten years,' beginning on the 14th day of April, 1925; that, at the time the lease was executed, T. E. Rutledge was to build a one-story brick building on the three lots, and the filling station leased to Brock was to occupy the 50x40 feet of said building; that the building, which was 75x115 feet in size, was erected on said lots in 1923, and T. E. Rutledge continued to occupy a part thereof for the purpose of a garage and welding shop; that he leased a portion of said building on the east end of the lots to a Coca-Cola bottling works; that, at all times from 1921 until the date of the lease to M. G. Brock, the property covered by said lease was used by the defendant Rutledge as his business homestead; that after the completion of the building M. G. Brock went into possession of said 50x40 feet and operated on said premises a filling station until the 11th of.March, 1929, on which date he assigned said lease to T. E.

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Related

Simms Oil Co. v. Rutledge
86 S.W.2d 209 (Texas Supreme Court, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
53 S.W.2d 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simms-oil-co-v-rutledge-texapp-1932.