Sitton v. American Title Company of Dallas

396 S.W.2d 899, 1965 Tex. App. LEXIS 2235
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 29, 1965
Docket16594
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 396 S.W.2d 899 (Sitton v. American Title Company of Dallas) 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
Sitton v. American Title Company of Dallas, 396 S.W.2d 899, 1965 Tex. App. LEXIS 2235 (Tex. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

BATEMAN, Justice.

The appellants Russell H. Sitton and wife brought this suit for actual and exemplary damages alleging that they were the victims of an unlawful conspiracy between the defendants by which they both suffered extensive emotionally induced physical injuries, including the recurrence to Mr. Sitton of a childhood speech impediment; it being also alleged that among other ill effects Mrs. Sitton on one occasion became so emotionally overwrought by the situation that she fell from a moving automobile and sustained serious injuries. The defendants, who are the appellees here, were American Title Company of Dallas, Katherine H. Brown and husband, Jarvis L. Brown (Mrs. Brown being alleged to have been a notary public and manager, vice-president and alter ego of American Title Company), the American Insurance Company, alleged to have been the surety on the bond given by Mrs. Brown as a notary public; Leonard Cooksey Duckworth, a licensed real estate broker trading as Leonard Duckworth Agency; Trinity Universal Insurance Company, surety on Duckworth’s bond as real estate broker; Harry Clifton Summer, Jr., a licensed real estate broker and vice-president of Duckworth Agency; Lawyers Surety Corporation, surety on Summer’s bond as real estate broker; and Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Moorman.

The appellants alleged that they agreed to exchange their home at 331 Andover Drive in Mesquite, Texas, on which was a mortgage securing a first lien note in favor of T. J. Bettes Company, insured and guaranteed by the Veterans Administration, for a home owned by Walter J. Moorman; that the transaction was handled by Summer as sales manager of the Duckworth Agency; that pursuant to arrangements made by that agency appellants went to the offices of American Title Company of Dallas, met with its vice-president, Katherine Brown, and executed a deed conveying their home to Moorman, leaving the deed with Mrs. Brown for further handling; that this deed *901 provided that as part of the consideration therefor the grantee assumed and agreed to pay the balance owing on appellants’ mortgage note; that thereafter, in order to defeat Moorman’s liability to assume appellants’ note his name was erased after appellants had executed the deed, and the name of one Trout was substituted therefor. They further alleged that Trout failed to pay the monthly installments on the note and the property was foreclosed, resulting in a substantial deficiency which they were called upon by the Veterans Administration and T. J. Bettes Company to pay; that they, being of limited education, became very frightened and emotionally upset over these developments, the loss of Mr. Sitton’s veteran’s benefits and the numerous demands by mail and telephone that the deficiency be paid, all of which resulted in the physical injuries which, together with the deficiency they were called upon to pay, were made the basis of their claim for damages.

The court sustained American Insurance Company’s motion for summary judgment and this was affirmed in Sitton v. American Insurance Co., Tex.Civ.App., 390 S.W.2d 34.

The case was submitted to the jury on numerous special issues, all of which were answered favorably to appellants, after which the court rendered judgment non ob-stante veredicto that appellants take nothing. In appealing to this court they assign fourteen points of error.

The appellee Moorman has filed a motion to strike and disregard all of appellants’ points of error as being multifarious, too general and insufficient under Rule 418, Vernon’s Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. While this motion points up numerous inadequacies and defects in appellants’ points of error, after reading the statements and arguments thereunder, we are of the opinion that the points do inform the court and opposing counsel of the contentions made by appellants. The motion is therefore overruled. Fambrough v. Wagley, 140 Tex. 577, 169 S.W.2d 478; Rule 422, T.R.C.P.

Facts

Appellants pitch their case entirely on their contention that all of the appellees (except the sureties on the notary’s and real estate brokers’ bonds) conspired to effect the alteration of their deed, after they had signed it, in order to deprive them of a valuable right, viz., the assumption by Moor-man of the balance owing on their mortgage indebtedness, to their great loss and damage because, while Moorman was a man of financial means and would have paid the debt, the substitute grantee, Trout, was of such poor financial worth that he did not pay the debt and could not be compelled to do so.

The contract of exchange, signed by Moorman and the appellants, was dated July 14, 1962 and provided that Moorman and wife sold and agreed to convey unto appellants their property known as 2219 Pleasant Drive, Dallas, Texas for a purchase price of $11,500, and that the Moor-mans would take in trade appellants’ home located at 331 Andover Drive, Mesquite, Texas, allowing them credit “for all down payment and closing costs in amount not to exceed $700.00.” This contract did not specify the balance owing by appellants on their property, and it did not provide that Moorman would assume or agree to pay any such balance. This exchange of properties was arranged for by the appellee Summer and another employee of the Duck-worth Agency. Appellants testified that they were assured by these two employees and Mrs. Brown that Moorman would assume the debt.

Appellants went to the American Title Company’s branch office, where they met with the appellee Mrs. Brown, vice-president and manager of the branch office of the title company, and where they signed the deed conveying their property to the appellee Moorman. The deed recited as part of the consideration the assumption of, *902 and the agreement “by the Grantee herein” to pay, the unpaid balance owing on the note given by appellants, in the original principal sum of $10,450, when they purchased the property. This deed was dated September 7, 1962. At some subsequent time the names of Moorman and his wife were erased in the four places where they appeared in the deed and the names W. R. Trout and wife, Joanne Trout, substituted therefor. There is some dispute in the testimony as to whether this erasure and alteration were made prior or subsequent to the signatures by appellants to the deed, but the jury found, and for the purposes of this opinion we shall assume, that it was done subsequently. Moorman called someone at the office of the title company and requested that the names of W. R. Trout and his wife be inserted as the grantees in the deed in lieu of his and his wife’s names. Trout was an employee of Moorman’s plumbing company. This substitution was made by someone in the office of the title company. Trout failed to pay the installment due on appellants’ note on May 1, 1963 and appellants thereafter, beginning in June 1963, began receiving letters from the Veterans Administration demanding payment, threatening foreclosure and telling appellants that unless they made satisfactory arrangements for curing the default they would lose their property and their credit standing in the community would be seriously affected and, in addition, that if the property should sell at foreclosure sale for less than the debt, they might become indebted to the United States Government for the deficiency.

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Bluebook (online)
396 S.W.2d 899, 1965 Tex. App. LEXIS 2235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sitton-v-american-title-company-of-dallas-texapp-1965.