Stewart v. Whitworth

453 S.W.2d 875, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2674
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 23, 1970
Docket15611
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 453 S.W.2d 875 (Stewart v. Whitworth) 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
Stewart v. Whitworth, 453 S.W.2d 875, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2674 (Tex. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

PEDEN, Justice.

Veinte matter. Plaintiff, Mrs. Stewart, appeals from the trial court’s granting of a plea of privilege filed by one of the defendants, Mr. B. F. Whitworth, severing her cause of action against him and transferring it to Jasper County, the county of his residence. Venue as to the plaintiff’s suit against the other parties defendant, Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Hull and Mrs. C. O. Bracey, was retained in Waller County.

Mr. Whitworth, the appellee, was first made a party defendant in plaintiff’s first amended petition; it was filed bn April 25, 1969. In that petition the plaintiff alleged that in the summer of 1962 the Hulls and Mrs. Bracey, who will be called the “Hull defendants”, represented to the plaintiff, a woman then in her seventies and in an uncertain state of health, that they would respond to her need to have someone living in her house with her on the property in question in Waller County, caring for her and providing companionship, assistance and aid for the rest of her life. That they falsely promised to provide these services and thus wrongfully induced her to pay $5,000. to Mrs. Hull and to execute, acknowledge and deliver a deed to the property in question to her attorney, the appellee, in trust on January 12, 1963, containing a recital that Mr. Whitworth should “carry out the purposes for which this deed is made, such purposes being known to him and in accordance with instructions I have given him.”

Such petition further alleged that the terms and conditions of the conveyance in trust to Mr. Whitworth were that if the Hull defendants fully performed all their promises to the plaintiff for the remainder of her life, the appellee was to deed the property in question to Mrs. Hull. That the purposes of the deed in trust had failed, so the plaintiff was entitled to have it cancelled and nullified. Further, that a purported deed bearing the date December 3, 1964 and purporting to be a conveyance of the real property in question from the plaintiff to Mrs. Hull has been recorded in the Deed Records of Waller County. That the plaintiff was entitled to recover from the Hull defendants the reasonable value of their occupancy of the property in question from June 1, 1962 to the present time less the reasonable value of the services they rendered from June 1, 1962 to April 1, 1965.

In this first amended petition the plaintiff then alleged, in the alternative, that in the event it should be determined that she was not entitled to have the two deeds in question cancelled and all clouds cast on her title to the lands removed, and should it be found that she executed and delivered *877 the deed dated December 3, 1964, then she should recover damages from Mr. Whit-worth, alleging that as her attorney he had not properly protected her interests in her dealings with Mrs. Hull.

On June 25, 1969, Defendant Whitworth filed a plea of privilege to be sued in Jasper County. The other parties defendant have not filed pleas of privilege.

The plaintiff filed an amended controverting plea on July 24, 1969, in which she referred to her first amended petition and alleged that the provisions of Subdivisions 14 and 29a of Art. 1995, Vernon’s Ann.Civ. St., govern venue in this case. Further, that the Hull defendants claimed and asserted some interest in the Waller County lands in question under the deed to Whit-worth given in trust on January 12, 1963, and that Whitworth is still holding such title or interest conveyed by said deed in trust, if any. That Whitworth is a necessary party.

The appellee concedes that the plaintiff’s first amended petition, not all of which is here noticed, contained allegations of sufficient facts to bring this suit within the provisions of Subdivision 14 of Article 1995, Vernon’s Civil Statutes, as to all defendants. Subdivision 14 provides: “Lands. — Suits for recovery of lands or damages thereto, or to remove incum-brances upon the title to land, or to quiet the title to land, or to prevent or stay waste on lands, must be brought in the county in which the land, or a part thereof, may lie.”

On July 29, 1969 the appellee filed, subject to his plea of privilege, a pleading styled “Defendant’s Disclaimer and Answer,” the first paragraph of which stated:

“Defendant, B. F. Whitworth would show the Court that the deed dated January 12, 1963, in which he is named grantee, in trust, was never delivered in manner to make it effective as conveyance, but was delivered conditionally, to be effective under circumstances which
can now never occur, to wit, that the plaintiff herein should become incapacitated or die, without having first executed a general warranty deed to the property sued for herein naming therein Helen Bracey Hull as grantee. The general warranty deed has been executed by Mrs. Stewart, has been delivered to Mrs. Hull and has been placed of record. The deed in trust has not been recorded and operated to pass no title to me in any capacity, I herewith enter my disclaimer of any interest in the subject property in any capacity, whether by and through such deed in trust or any other circumstance of whatsoever nature, saying that I have and claim utterly no interest in said property.”

The plaintiff filed her third amended petition on September 19, 1969. In it she alleged that B. F. Whitworth has failed and refused to reconvey to the plaintiff the title to plaintiff’s land received by him through the deed in trust dated January 12, 1963 and has abandoned or repudiated his trusteeship. She alleged that such deed in trust casts a cloud on her legal title to the lands in question and asked that the deed in trust be cancelled and nullified or that Defendant Whitworth be required to reconvey to her all right, title and interest he may have acquired by reason of the deed in trust. She alleged, in the alternative, that she is entitled to recover $36,720. in damages from defendant Whitworth for his alleged failure to properly protect her interests from the other defendants.

At the venue hearing the parties stipulated that the land in question was situated in Waller County and that the plaintiff acquired the title to it in 1955.

The plaintiff offered in evidence her first amended petition. The appellee objected to encumbering the record by pleadings, because all of them were before the court. The trial judge sustained the objection to the first amended petition and stated that he would decide the case on the current pleadings, not considering any *878 which had been amended or abandoned. He also excluded the plaintiff’s original and her amended controverting pleas. The three excluded pleadings are before us in bills of exception. The plaintiff then rested.

Appellee then called the trial court’s attention to his disclaimer, stated that the other defendants have, in response to interrogatories, said they claim no title under the trustee deed, stated that the plaintiff offered no proof in support of her assertion that Subdivision 29a was applicable, asked that the court take judicial knowledge of its records and stated that those records show that there is no controversy between the plaintiff and Whitworth in that Whit-worth agrees that the plaintiff is entitled to the land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
453 S.W.2d 875, 1970 Tex. App. LEXIS 2674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-whitworth-texapp-1970.