Snodgrass v. Robertson

167 S.W.2d 534
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedDecember 18, 1942
DocketNo. 2314
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 167 S.W.2d 534 (Snodgrass v. Robertson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snodgrass v. Robertson, 167 S.W.2d 534 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1942).

Opinion

LESLIE, Chief Justice.

D. L. Snodgrass, Trustee of the Estate in Bankruptcy of II. A. Robertson, instituted this suit in trespass to try title against said [536]*536H. A. Robertson and wife, Lillie Robertson, and his brother, R. C. Robertson, to recover a ⅛ interest in 532 acres of land described in plaintiff’s petition. The defendants answered by general demurrer and plea of not guilty and alleged that a certain deed of trust in question was executed more than four months before the bankruptcy of H. A. Robertson.

The opinion in this case on a former appeal, 137 S.W.2d 146, 148, disposes of all the questions of the validity and effect of said deed of trust and that instrument is not involved in this appeal.

This cause was tried before the court and jury. On answers of the jury to special issues, judgment was rendered that plaintiff take nothing. Plaintiff appeals, insisting that the court committed twelve reversible errors in the trial.

J. A. Robertson and his wife were the parents of the six Robertson children mentioned in this litigation, and at a time when each of them owned a interest in the 532 acres of land involved, R. C. Robertson by deed dated April 15, 1932, conveyed to Lillie Robertson, wife of H. A. Robertson “all of his” undivided right, title, interest, and estate in said 532 acres described by metes and bounds in a deed from N. L. Robertson to R. C. Robertson et al., dated and filed for record July 23, 1930, and recorded in Vol. 191, page 94, Deed Records of Coleman County, Texas.

This deed from R. C. Robertson to Lillie Robertson, of date, April 15, 1932, recited as consideration $5 and “the further consideration of the love and affection which I have for said Lillie Robertson, she being my sister-in-law; and in further consideration of the fact that my wife, Frances Ann Robertson, is about to procure a divorce from me, the said'R. C. Robertson, in the District Court of Tom Greene County, Texas, and my sister-in-law has promised and agreed to take charge of and care for and maintain my son, Ralph Frank Robertson after said divorce is granted, and it being my purpose to make some payment and remuneration to the said Lillie Robertson for her trouble, care, and loving interest in so caring for and looking after my said son.”

R. C. Robertson in said deed conveyed his ⅝ interest to Lillie Robertson “to and for her own separate use, benefit and estate, with covenants of general warranty.”1

Thereafter, on May 16, 1935, said H. A. Robertson and wife, Lillie Robertson, deeded to R. C. Robertson an undivided ½ interest in, the same 532 acres and described it as “that certain ⅜ undivided interest in and to 532 acres of land * * * fully described in a deed from N. L. Robertson to R. C. Robertson et al., dated July 23, 1930, and recorded in Vol. 191, page 94, Deed Records of Coleman County, Texas *

(The 1932 and the 1935 conveyances each merely refers to a ⅜ interest in a tract of land described by metes and bounds in the deed from N. L. Robertson to R. C. Robertson, et al., recorded in Vol. 191, page 94.

In the outset this deed of May 16, 1935, from H. A. Robertson and wife to R. C. Robertson recites: “That I, H. A. Robertson, joined by my wife, Lillie Robertson, * * * for and in consideration of the sum of $1 to us paid by R. C. Robertson and other good and valuable consideration, have granted, sold and conveyed, etc.” This instrument is not one reciting that- H. A. Robertson joined pro forma in a deed by his wife.

The appellant contends that this 1935 deed by H. A. Robertson and wife, Lillie Robertson, reconveyed to R. C. Robertson the same land which R. C. Robertson first conveyed to Lillie Robertson by deed of April 15, 1932, and that H. A. Robertson at said dates and at all times owned and continued to own the ⅛ interest in the 532 acres of land originally inherited by him, and that he owned the same at the date of his taking bankruptcy, December. 28, 1937, and that he failed to list the same as an asset of his estate. The recovery of that alleged asset is the object of this suit by the trustee in bankruptcy.

On the other hand, the appellees contend that the conveyance of May 16, 1935, was not a conveyance to R. C. Robertson of the ⅜ interest he conveyed to Lillie in 1932, but that this deed of May 16, 1935, was a conveyance of H. A. Robertson’s original and inherited ⅝ undivided interest in the 532 acres, and that the consideration therefor was payment in part of various loans of money R. C. Robertson had theretofore made to H. A. Robertson.

Appellees throughout the trial and in this court contended that the 1932 deed was made to Lillie Robertson in her separate right at the direction of her husband, H. A. Robertson, and was conveyed so as to become, in fact, her separate property for the reason that during the married life of himself and Lillie she inherited $800, which he had borrowed or used, and the deed of April 15, 1932, amounted to a repayment or [537]*537reimbursement of said $800. That is, the services rendered and to be rendered in caring for R. C. Robertson’s son was recognized as community property within itself, and $800 thereof was in said manner devoted to a reimbursement by said community property of Lillie’s said separate funds theretofore appropriated by said husband for their community estate.

It was appellees’ further contention that there is no evidence in this record to show that H. A. Robertson was insolvent or contemplating bankruptcy at the time said reimbursement was made or the execution of the deed of April 15, 1932. They contend that the evidence conclusively shows that a contrary situation existed at that time, and we believe the record supports that conclusion.

The appellees interpret the transaction evidenced by the execution of the first deed in this language: “There were two contracts entered into on April 15, 1932, — one between R. C. Robertson and H. A. Robertson and wife, a written contract, and an oral contract between Lillie Robertson and her husband, by the terms of which Lillie Robertson’s separate estate was reimbursed for the money advanced to the community estate. Since at that time, April 15, 1932, and later, when H. A. Robertson deeded his separate interest to R. C. Robertson, the creditors, if he (H. A. Robertson) had any, were not pressing him, and he, so far as the record reveals, was not contemplating bankruptcy or evasion of his debts, if any he owed at the time, and it was not proven that he owed any at either date, he (H. A. Robertson) had the right, and did instruct the vendor in the deed of April 15, 1932, to convey the interest in the land to his wife as her separate property.”

Appellant’s first two assignments go to the very gist of this law suit. He contends that at all times, from the date he inherited it, down to December 28, 1937, when he filed his petition in bankruptcy, H. A. Robertson owned his originally inherited undivided ⅝ interest in said 532 acres of land, and that his title thereto was in no way divested or affected by the deeds or transactions of April 15, 1932, and May 16, 1935. That the verdict and the judgment, insofar as either finds or holds, respectively, to the contrary is erroneous.

As stated, the case was presented to the jury on special issues. The following verdict was returned:

Special Issue No. 1:

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