Sohio Petroleum Co. v. Jurek

248 S.W.2d 294
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 4, 1952
Docket15336
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 248 S.W.2d 294 (Sohio Petroleum Co. v. Jurek) 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
Sohio Petroleum Co. v. Jurek, 248 S.W.2d 294 (Tex. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

■CULVER, Justice.

Appellees Merle Jurek and her brother, H. M. Carlton, brought suit in trespass to try title to an undivided two-thirds interest in Lot 3-B, Block 64, of the townsite of Lane City, Texas. Trial was to a jury *296 and based on the verdict, judgment was rendered for appellees.

They' are the children of Ruth and T. F. Carlton, having been born in 1914 and 1916, respectively. The family was residing in Oklahoma at the time of- T. F. Carlton’s death, intestate, on January 5, 1919, who left an estate consisting of a 70-acre farm and personal property. The widow ■ immediately sold the personal property and moved with her children to Lane City, Texas, and on January 25, 1919, deposited the proceeds in the sum of $1,347’ in the Wharton bank. Other deposits were shortly made, in the sum of approximately $600 representing the sale of an automobile which belonged to T. F. Carlton and rents from the farm.

It is agreed that under the applicable provisions of the Oklahoma law the children of T. F. Carlton inherited an undivided two-thirds interest in the real and personal property owned by him, and his surviving widow a one-third interest. On March 25, 1920, Mrs. Carlton, for a consideration of $500 drawn from this account in the Wharton bank, purchased Lot 3-B as a home for her and her children and took the title in her name. The property has been continuously used as a homestead since that time. On December 27, 1921, Mrs. Ruth Carlton married A. A. Seiba.

On March 25, 1948, Mrs. Seiba, joined ■by her husband, executed an oil and gas lease to Frank Power, Jr., on this lot, purporting to cover the full leasehold interest in the property.

On February 13, 1949, Merle Jurek and H. M. Carlton executed a lease on the same property to one Hinchcliffe and others. The lease executed by Mrs. Seiba was transferred and assigned to appellants, Sohio Petroleum 'Company and The Chicago Corporation. The contention of ap-pellees is that having inherited an undivided two-thirds interest in all the property left by their father, and the $500 purchase price for Lot 3-B having been paid out of the proceeds of the sale of their father’s property, they owned the equitable title to two-thirds of the lot.

Appellants complain that the evidence is insufficient to show that the equitable title to an undivided two-thirds interest in Lot 3-B ever vested in Merle Jurek and H. M. Carlton, and that the evidence was further insufficient to support any ultimate issue necessary to sustain the judgment rendered in this cause. The transcript of the record of Mrs:. Sciba’s account with the Wharton ibank is in evidence, which was closed on December 13, 1920. All of the money that was ever deposited in this account came from the estate of T. F. Carlton, and all seems to have been used ultimately to defray living expenses of the family, except the $500 which went for the purchase of the lot. It would seem, therefore, without any contrary intention being manifested, that the funds are traced with sufficient certainty, and that as two-thirds of the $500 purchase price belonged to these minors, an implied trust in the lot was created for their benefit. Brod v. First National Bank of Cameron, Tex.Civ.App., 91 S.W.2d 772; Spencer v. Pettit, Tex.Com.App., 2 S.W. 422.

The jury found in answer to the first special issue that the $500 used by Mrs. Seiba to purchase Lot 3-B was derived from the proceeds of the sale of personal property left by T. F. Carlton at his death. This issue is complained of as being evi-dentiary and it may well be, but no harm results, as in our opinion the fact is established beyond question by the bank records and other documentary evidence.

Appellants, having plead the ten and twenty-five year statutes of limitations, complain that the court refused to instruct the jury to find for the defendants on that count or to submit appropriate special issues to the jury.

The testimony indicates that these children had made no demand on their mother for an accounting nor • had she ever repudiated nor denied their interest in the property or refused to account to them. They had lived with her on the premises during the greater period of their minority and had hardly known any other home until they left to earn their own living. *297 The evidence, which appellants say raises the fact issue of adverse possession on the part of Mrs. Seiba, consists solely of two circumstances. (1) She took title to the property in her own name and it so remained since that time. (2) She and her husband paid the taxes and rendered the property in the name of “A. A. Seiba and wife”. The payment of the taxes during the childhood of appellees would seem to be a part of her obligation to support and maintain them. -Carrying the property in the name of A. A. Seiba and wife would hardly evidence a claim to the lot as her separate property. Admittedly, Mr. Seiba claimed no interest in the property, either separate or community. In addition, the tax rolls show that Lot 4, owned by Mrs. Seiba -as her separate property and paid for with funds inherited from her parents, was rendered at the same time and in the same way. Appellants further say that Mrs. Seiba testified “that she thought she was the owner of the property”. We do not interpret it as being her testimony. When asked, “What was your idea as to who was the owner of that”, she replied, “Well, I thought I was because I was guardian for the children, or felt like I was.” In answer to another question which followed almost immediately, she replied that the children’s part of the lot was “two-thirds”.

On the contrary, there is the express testimony on the part of Mrs. Seiba that she never laid any claim to more than one-third, and that several times during the minority of the children she refused to assent to the desire of her husband to sell the property, asserting that two-thirds belonged to the children. Also, there is her testimony and that of -the attesting notary to the effect that she made a similar statement to the lessee, Powell, at the time she executed the lease. The testimony of a party in interest may be disbelieved by the jury and standing alone would not support a directed verdict. Sigmond Rothschild Co. v. Moore, Tex.Com.App., 37 S.W. 2d 121. Nevertheless the rule does not apply where an uncontradicted witness is not -adverse. Freudenstein v. Valley State Bank, Tex.Civ.App., 68 S.W.2d 567, error refused. While Mrs. Seiba testified favorably for her children, and such testimony would be calculated to result in a slight gain to the family as a unit, actually Mrs. Seiba was testifying against her own interest and denying tha-t she owned more than a one-third of the lot. We hardly think she was such an interested witness as would authorize the jury to- disbelieve her positive and direct testimony.

Much space is devoted in the briefs of both appellants and appellees to' a discussion of the doctrine of trusts. Appellants maintain that if a trust was created it was a constructive trust and limitations began to run at the time the cestui que trust could have taken action to enforce their equitable rights. Lang v. Shell Petroleum Corporation, Tex.Civ.App., 141 S. W,2d 667.

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Bluebook (online)
248 S.W.2d 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sohio-petroleum-co-v-jurek-texapp-1952.