Stone v. Light

228 S.W. 1108, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1268
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 24, 1920
DocketNo. 9519.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 228 S.W. 1108 (Stone v. Light) 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
Stone v. Light, 228 S.W. 1108, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1268 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

This is a suit in form of trespass. to try title to one-half undivided interest in the east one-half of the northwest one-fourth of section No. 5, block 4, Houston & Texas Central Railway Company survey, in Eastland county, instituted by the children of Mrs. Catherine Stone, deceased, former wife of M. T. Stone, against O. J. Light and *1109 wife, Mrs. Mattie Light, and the States Oil Corporation, in the district court of Eastland county. The Lights answered by plea of not guilty, a general denial, a plea of three-year limitation, a plea of purchase for a valuable consideration from the father of plaintiffs, who had qualified as community administrator of the estate of himself and his deceased wife, and also that the sale of the land by said M. T. Stone was in order to pay community debts. The States Oil Corporation adopted the answer of the Lights, and specially pleaded that it held an oil and gas lease on said land from its owners, the Lights. The cause was tried before a jury on special issues, and in answer to which the jury found:

(1) That the sale on or about January, 1909, of the land by M. T. Stone to his brother-in-law, W. N. Wells, was a Bona fide sale, and not one made for the purpose of obtaining a loan.

(2) That the transfer of the property by M. T. Stone to O. J. Light was made for the purpose of paying community debts of the said Stone and his deceased wife.

(3) That there existed a necessity for the sale of the land for the purpose of paying such community debts.

(4) That the recitation in the deed from W. N., Wells and wife to M. T. Stone that tlie consideration had been paid out of the separate estate of said M. T. Stone was not made for the purpose of placing the title to said property in the separate estate of M. T. Stone.

Upon this verdict the court entered judgment for the defendant, and the plaintiffs have appealed.

The evidence tends to show the following state of facts to wit: Mrs. Catherine Stone died June 25, 1908, leaving surviving her seven children, one of them having died shortly after the mother’s death. At the time of. her death the family occupied as a homestead 160 acres of land, being the northwest one-fourth of section No. 5, block No. 4, Houston & Texas Central Railway Company survey, the east one-half of which is in controversy. Prior to the death of Mrs. Stone Mr. Stone had bought the land from the railroad company, paying $106 in cash, and giving seven vendor’s lien notes for the balance of $640. He owed these notes at the time of his wife’s death, besides some $350 community debts to other parties. Stone was hard pressed financially after his wife’s death, and in January thereafter he sold the property to W. N. Wells, his wife’s brother and a single man, for a recited consideration of $1,800, of which $900 was recited to be paid in cash, and $900 evidenced by a note due one year from date. This deed was executed by Stone as community administrator, he having qualified as such prior thereto. On June 10, 1909, W. N. Wells recon-veyed the property to M. T. Stone for a recited consideration of $1,900, of which $1,-200 was recited to be paid in cash, and the assumption of a $700 incumbrance on the land due the Wl C. Belcher Land Mortgage Company. This deed was not put of record, and on May 8, 1913, Wells and his wife, he having married in the meantime, by another deed conveyed the same property to Stone for the 'same recited consideration. Wells never testified and Stone was the only one who testified as to the purpose of these deeds, one from Stone to Wells, the- other from Wells to Stone. He stated that it was for the purpose of getting a loan on the homestead; that his lawyer told him it would be necessary for him to leave the property and abandon it as a homestead, and that in compliance with this advice he took his children and left the county for some three months;' in the meantime Wells secured the loan from the Belcher Land Mortgage Company; that no consideration other than the notes was passed between the parties. The last deed from Wells to Stone recited that the consideration from Stone was paid out of the separate estate. The first deed from Wells to Stone was made to Stone “and his heirs.” At the time of the first conveyance from Wells to Stone the former paid the latter the $700 secured from the mortgage company, with which Stone paid at least $500 on community debts, and used the balance towards the support of his family.

On May 8, 1913, M. T. Stone conveyed to J. B. Cunningham the north one-half of his homestead for a cash recited consideration of $225 and the assumption of the $700 mort gage company note given on the entire tract. On May 12, 1914, Cunningham reconveyed this property to Stone. No cash consideration passed between the parties in either of these transactions. On March 22, 1915, M. T. Stone conveyed to O. J. Light the east one-half of the original 160 acres for a recited consideration of $230, to be paid in property, and the assumption by Light of the Belcher Land Mortgage Company note on the entire 160-acre tract, recited to be $1,000, Stone signing the deed individually, and not as community administrator. In reality Light paid and agreed to pay $990 for the land, including the note for $700 and interest thereon to the mortgage company. At the time of the purchase and for several years prior thereto Light lived with his father, a near neighbor to the Stones, and knew of the death of Mrs. Stone, the existence of children, and the qualification of Mr. Stone as community survivor. At the time Mr. Stone sold the land he told Light that he had to sell it in order to save his other land. He stated to Light that he was in hard circumstances and owed debts and could not borrow the money. Light paid the full market value of the land at the time.

[1-3] We think the evidence is ami>le to sustain the validity of the sale by Stone to *1110 Light upon either of two grounds, either as a sale by the surviving spouse to pay community debts or as a sale by the community administrator. The evidence shows that Stone had been owing ever since his wife’s death debts contracted during their marriage. The loan secured by Wells from the Belcher Land Mortgage Company was made apparently for the purpose of getting money to pay community debts then owing, and Stone never paid this loan so secured up to the time the land in controversy was purchased by Light. The surviving spouse is authorized by law to sell community property for the payment of debts, and the purchaser of such property so sold is not charged with the duty of seeing that the purchase money is applied to the payment of eommuni-t5 debts. Morse v. Nibbs, 150 S. W. 766, writ refused; Withrow v. Adams, 4 Tex. Civ. App. 438, 23 S. W. 437, writ refused; Ashe v. Yungst, 65 Tex. 631. The evidence in the instant case shows without contradiction that at the time Light bought this land Stone owed community debts. The fact that he had changed the form of the debt and the payee does not make the debts to the mortgage company any less a community debt. Moreover, Stone having qualified as a community administrator, he had authority to sell the community property without the existence of debts, and his failure to sign the deed as community administrator would not affect the validity thereof. Jones v. Jones’ Heirs, 15 Tex. 143, 65 Am. Dec. 174; Primm v. Barton, 18 Tex. 206; Dawson v. Holt, 44 Tex. 174, 178; Jones v. Harris, 139 S. W. 69.

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Bluebook (online)
228 S.W. 1108, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-v-light-texapp-1920.