Smith v. Rozelle

282 S.W.2d 122, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2030
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 16, 1955
Docket3244
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 282 S.W.2d 122 (Smith v. Rozelle) 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
Smith v. Rozelle, 282 S.W.2d 122, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2030 (Tex. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

McDONALD, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment sustaining defendants’ motion for an instruct *123 ed verdict, discharging the jury, and rendering judgment for defendants. Plaintiffs sued defendants for partition of 128 acres of land in Dallas- County which had been the property of Samuel D. Smith, Sr., deceased. Plaintiff A. Merrill Smith, one of the four children, and an heir, at law, of the deceased, who died intestate on 4 July 1939, sued for partition against George F. Rozelle, Jr., and wife, Erma Smith Rozelle, Edna Smith Watson and husband, Fred Watson, and S. D. Smith, Jr. Erma Smith Rozelle, Edna Smith Watson, S. D. Smith, Jr., are the other surviving children and heirs at law. {Margaret Smith, widow of the deceased, whom he married in 1937, was also a party but has not appealed).

Plaintiff alleged that the 128 acres involved in this suit was in 1936 owned by their father, Samuel D. Smith, Sr., who made a general warranty deed to George F. Rozelle, Jr., his son-in-law, and Erma Smith Rozelle, his daughter, for the purpose of refinancing the loan on said land, owned by their father, and to secure the Rozelles for any advancements which they may have made; plaintiff tendered the Rozelles such sums as may be due them; prayed that the general warranty deed be treated as a mortgage as to advancements, and asked the court to partition the land one-fourth each to plaintiff, Erma Smith Rozelle, Edna Smith Watson and S. C. Smith, Jr. Edna Smith Watson and S. D. Smith, Jr., each answered alleging the same facts as plaintiff and filed cross-actions in which they sought the partition of the land, and the same relief as prayed for by plaintiff.

Defendants Erma Smith Rozelle and husband, George F. Rozelle, Jr., answered by denials, pleas of the various statutes of limitations, and specially answered that after the execution of the deed they paid off loans due by S. D. Smith, Sr. (deceased), the father of the parties, and owner of the land, to John Hancock Life Insurance Company and Nannie B. Redmond totalling $10,250, and approximately $1,600 additional paid by them as taxes, for all of which they claimed reimbursement, should it be found they were not owners of the land.

Trial was to a jury. At the conclusion of plaintiffs’ evidence, after plaintiffs rested their case, defendants filed a “Motion for Peremptory Instruction”, in which they moved the court to discharge the jury and render judgment for defendants Rozelle and wife. The trial court granted this motion, discharged the jury, and rendered judgment that plaintiffs take nothing, and in favor of defendants Rozelle and wife. Motions for New Trial were overruled and plaintiffs (and cross plaintiffs) A. Merrill Smith, Edna Smith Watson (joined by her husband), and S. D. Smith, Jr., appeal.

Basically we have this situation. A father of four children owes money on h's 128 acre farm. One of the children advances the money to pay off the indebtedness on the farm and the father deeds the farm to this child. The father dies and some years later three of the children tender the amounts paid on the father’s debts by .the fourth child, and seek to have the deed the father gave to the child advancing such money construed to be a mortgage, and the 128 acres partitioned four ways. The farm is worth nearly twenty times the amount the fourth child advanced to take care of the father’s debts. The Trial Court refused to admit into evidence much of the plaintiffs’ evidence, and then took the case from the jury and itself rendered judgment that the plaintiffs take nothing. We are confronted 1st) with whether or not there was evidence sufficient to tender an issue of fact to go to the jury on whether the deed executed by'the deceased father was intended to be in fact a deed or in fact a mortgage, and 2nd) with whether or not the Trial Court erred in excluding certain of plaintiffs’ evidence.

In determining whether or not there was sufficient evidence to entitle plaintiffs to go to the jury on the question of whether the deed was a mortgage, a review of the record reflects: After the death of deceased in 1939, his daughter *124 Edna Smith Watson and her husband lived on the land seven or eight years. Their moving onto the land was occasioned by the defendants’ suggestion, defendant Rozelle .pointing out to Edna Smith Watson that she had as much eguity in the land as did-his wife and that it was as much to her interest as to his wife’s to look after the- place. Defendant Rozelle, immediately before the execution of the deed to the land involved here, in March 1936, told Edna Smith Watson that he was going to lend his father-in-law the money to refinance the loan; then he told her he decided he had better secure himself with a deed .to the land. . Shortly after the death of their father, the Watsons and the Ro-zelles discussed partitioning the land involved in this suit, and the Rozelles urged the Watsons to delay partition until a good price could- be obtained, to which plaintiffs agreed. The deceased made valuable improvements on the land after he executed the deed. The Rozelles told Edna Smith Watson they advanced about $2,000 to deceased, their father, in refinancing the loan on the land. It is un-contradicted that the land is worth about $1,500 per acre (or about twenty times what defendants advanced on -same). A letter in evidence from defendant Rozelle to -deceased about refinancing another piece of land owned by deceased, suggested that a “deed” be made - to defendant, thus showing- defendant’s manner of handling transactions 1 of this sort. The testimony of -F. M. Parsons, erroneously excluded by the Trial Court (which is hereinafter -discussed) contains sufficient evidence within itself to entitle plaintiffs to go to the jury. Further to the above, hbwever, defendants admit in their pleadings that the purpose of the deed from the father to them was to refinance the note due by the father to John Hancock Life Insurance Company, and they set out and allege in detail the terms of the extension and renewal of said note, which was secured by a deed qf trust on the land involved herein, and the advancements made by them in behalf of the owner, their fathér.

The plaintiffs’ contention is that the deed to the land was executed by the deceased for the purpose of refinancing the loan on this land and that by reason thereof the defendants took the deed as-the agent of deceased and held it in trust for their -father or his- heirs as security for the money advanced by them. The question for determination here is, does-the evidence1 raise such issue? We believe that it does. It is the law that oral testimony is admissible to show that a deed absolute on its face was intended to be as-between the grantor and grantee a mortgage, or trust, or was conveyed for some purpose other than a conveyance, and that the grantor did not intend for title to pass. Bradshaw v. McDonald, 147 Tex. 455, 216 S.W.2d 972; Henderson v. Jimmerson, Tex.Civ.App., 234 S.W.2d 710; Norriss v. Patterson, Tex.Civ.App., 261 S.W.2d 758 (ref. n. r. e.). And when the transaction is between members of a family the transaction is to be examined more closely because of the confidential relationship.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
282 S.W.2d 122, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2030, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-rozelle-texapp-1955.