Smith v. Waggoner

191 S.W.2d 892, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 789
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 4, 1946
DocketNo. 14726.
StatusPublished

This text of 191 S.W.2d 892 (Smith v. Waggoner) 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. Waggoner, 191 S.W.2d 892, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 789 (Tex. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

BROWN, Justice.

This suit involves the title to a tract of 7.6.5 acres carved out of the S. E. corner of the Henry Buckner Survey, situated in Wise County, Texas.

On June 7, 1912, William Renshaw, Jr., obtained title to this tract of land by warranty deed from one A. S. Harris, the then record title owner and holder. The tract is described correctly by metes and bounds. The beginning point being the southeast corner of the said Buckner Survey and the first call running west along the south line of the survey; the next call north; the next call east to a point in the east line of such survey; and the last call south to the place of beginning and to a point on the north line of the Samuel Worthington Survey.

On October 31, 1921, the then owner, Renshaw, executed a Deed of Trust conveying the land to a Trustee for City National Bank of Decatur, Texas, to secure a certain indebtedness. This Deed of Trust was renewed on January 7, 1927. The tract of land is correctly described in both Deeds of Trust.

In September, 1928, the banking institution that held Renshaw’s notes and the Deed of Trust lien securing them, brought suit against Renshaw seeking a judgment for debt and foreclosure of its said lien, and the record of such suit discloses that the tract of land is correctly described by metes and bounds in the pleadings.

While this suit was pending, Renshaw and wife executed a warranty deed conveying the said land to said banking institution, the deed reciting the cancellation and surrender of the notes held by the bank and sued upon, as aforesaid, and this instrument further recites that: “as further part of the consideration herein (the said bank) agrees to dismiss and pay all court costs in a certain suit o.f foreclosure on the herein described lands and premises, now pending in the District Court of Wise County, Texas”; and the tract of land is incorrectly described as “Beginning at the S. W. corner of Henry Buckner Survey; Thence North 523 vrs.; Thence West 838 vrs.; Thence South 525 vrs.; Thence East 838 vrs. to place of beginning, containing 76.5 acres of land.”

The error in the description is found in the employment of “southwest” as the designated beginning corner instead of “southeast.” Because of the insolvency of the said grantee bank, through a Federal Court receivership, the assets of said bank were conveyed to First National Bank of Decatur, including the tract of land in controversy here, which was given the same erroneous description, but which was also described as the land that Will Renshaw and wife conveyed to said City National Bank, citing the recorded instrument.

The First National Bank of Decatur, on July 25, 1932, conveyed to First National Bank in Decatur many tracts of land including the 76.5 acre tract in controversy which was described as: “Situated in Wise County, Texas, and being 76.5 acres out of the Henry Buckner Survey, and described by metes and bounds as follows: Beginning at the southwest corner of the Henry Buckner Survey; Thence north 523 varas; Thence west 838 varas; Thence south 525 varas; Thence east 838 varas, to the place of beginning, containing 76.5 acres, and being the land conveyed by Will Renshaw and wife to City National Bank of Decatur, by deed shown of record in Vol. 119, page 77, of the Deed Records of Wise County, Texas.” W. T. Waggoner as president executed the deed.

From the undisputed evidence, we gather that this last named bank encountered financial difficulties and that W. T. Wag-goner, who was then living and its president, advanced the necessary funds with which to honorably settle its affairs. The evidence establishes the fact that the bank held certain properties and assets whereby it was agreed that if and when any property was sold, the funds received from the sale would go to the credit of Mr. W. T. Waggoner.

Mr. Waggoner died in the year 1934, and it appearing from his will that his surviving wife, Mrs. Ella Waggoner, was the de-visee entitled to .such assets, belonging to said bank, or the proceeds thereof, the bank, *894 through its proper officers conveyed the 76.5 acres “being the land conveyed by Will Renshaw to the City National Bank, by deed recorded, etc.” to Mrs. Waggoner. The description of the tract contains the identical error in the beginning point as the deed from Renshaw to the bank. This deed is dated November 13, 1941.

Mrs. Ella Waggoner brought suit on May 18, 1943, against J. L. Waggoner to recover title and possession of the tract in question, and described same correctly by metes and bounds.

The defendant J. L. Waggoner discovered that a mistake had been made in the. description of this tract of land and he procured from Will Renshaw, on July 7, 1943, a simple quit claim deed which correctly describes the tract. Mrs. Ella Waggoner desired to sell this land and found a prospective purchaser in the person of James'W. Smith, but before entering into any transaction with Smith, Mrs. Waggoner, through her duly authorized agent, learned that J. L. Waggoner was making some claim to this land after he made no effort to purchase same from Mrs. Waggoner, and was told that Smith would buy it. J. L. Waggoner wrote Smith a letter on Septem, her 5, 1942, in which he said: “This is to notify you that I have heard you are considering buying a 76½ acre tract of land from Mrs. W. T. Waggoner that is now a part of my pasture. I wish to advise you that I will contest any sale made and this should serve as sufficient notice to you that I will not give possession of said land.”

With this “monkey wrench” thrown into the transaction, Mrs. Waggoner, in the year 1945, executed a deed conveying to J. L. Smith whatever interest she had in the tract of land, describing it correctly, and also assigning to him her cause of action against J. L. Waggoner, including the right to prosecute same in his own name and right, and Smith then intervened in the suit, and became the actual plaintiff.

Having also learned of the error made in the metes and bounds description of the tract, on November 13, 1944, Will Renshaw and wife executed a correction deed, containing a general warranty, to James W. Smith as grantee, correctly describing the land, and this deed in its recitations gives the history of Renshaw’s transactions with the bank, his past due indebtedness to it, the fact of the suit for debt and foreclosure and the compromise and settlement made, and the fact of the erroneous description employed in the deed executed by him and wife, and expressly reciting that it was the intention of the grantors to convey the tract that is correctly described in the deed.

Fact is this correction deed gives a complete history of the entire transaction beginning with Renshaw’s debts and deed of trust given on the land, down through Mrs. Ella Waggoner and into James W. Smith.

J. L. Waggoner, in answer to Smith’s intervention, defended on two theories: (1) That he held the land through adverse possession for ten years before Mrs. Waggoner brought suit, and (2) that his uncle, the late W. T. Waggoner had made him a gift of the land.

The instant suit between Smith and J. L. Waggoner was tried' to a jury, and, at the conclusion of the taking of testimony and hearing evidence, the trial court instructed the jury to find for the defendant, and judgment was rendered in his favor.

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191 S.W.2d 892, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 789, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-waggoner-texapp-1946.