Stout v. Sommers

28 S.W.2d 247, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 489
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 7, 1930
DocketNo. 8438.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 28 S.W.2d 247 (Stout v. Sommers) 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
Stout v. Sommers, 28 S.W.2d 247, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 489 (Tex. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

PLY, J.

Appellant instituted this action against Jake W. Sommers and Grace Sommers, his wife, appellees herein, to secure the appointment of a receiver for certain improvements, and the land on which they are situated, in the city of San Antonio, during pendency of the suit, and for judgment for his debt as evidenced by a certain note for $3,200, executed to Chas. H. Baxter, and to foreclose a mechanic’s lien on the premises. Appellees answered setting up homestead rights in the land and filed a cross-action against appellant, Charles H. Baxter and Ray W. Marshall, for cancellation of the note given by them to said Baxter and by him assigned to appellant, and it was alleged that Ray Marshall was made a party to the cross-action by reason of his being the trustee in a deed of trust given by appellees to Charles H. Baxter to secure the debt evidenced by the promissory note. In the alternative appellees prayed for a judgment against Baxter in any sum recovered against them by appellant. The cause was submitted to a jury on special issues and on the responses thereto judgment was rendered that the note for $3,200 be canceled, that the cloud cast upon the title to ap-pellees’ property by the execution and filing of the mechanic’s lien and deed of trust be removed, and appellant divested of all right, title, interest, or claim arising from the execution and filing of said instruments. Charles H. Baxter, not having been cited, was by agreement of all the parties dismissed from the suit. It is also recited in the judgment that appellees at the request of Charles H. Baxter had conveyed to Eva Baxter lot 37, block 6, section A., Temple Hill addition which was accepted by said Charles H. Baxter as the equivalent of $1,000 in cash to be applied on the contract for the erection of the improvements described in the petition, .and the court established an equitable titlé in the improvements erected on the property described in the petition, and that by reason of the failure of Charles H. Baxter to erect the improvements provided for in the contract, appellees are entitled to said lien for $1,000, and the lien was foreclosed on the improvements and a sale of the improvements was provided for.

The jury answered that the lot on which the improvements were made was at the time of the execution and delivery of the note, mechanic’s lien contract and deed of trust in favor of Charles H. Baxter, the homestead of Jake W. Sommers and Grace Sommers, and that Baxter did not erect the improvements provided for in the building contract. These answers were all that were made by the jury.

The evidence shows that Baxter entered into a contract with appellees whereby he agreed, for a consideration of $4,200, of which $1,000 was considered a cash payment, and a note for $3,200, which was to be paid in monthly installments, to erect certain improvements on a certain tract or parcel of land in Bexar county, being a part of 943 acres out of original survey 22, in the name of Aseensio Estrada, near San Antonio, and to secure the note a mechanic’s lien was given on the property and a building contract was entered into between appellees and Baxter, and a deed of trust on the land was also given by appellees to secure the payment of the note, Ray Marshall being the trustee. Baxter built the residence on the land and after an inspection of the house appellees moved into it. Baxter testified that defects pointed out by appellees were rectified by him and accepted by appellees, they denied this.

Mrs. Sommers swore that she and her husband made the building contract and executed the mechanic’s lien and deed of trust on the lot described to secure the contract price for the improvements. They were living in their home on Montrose avenue in Temple Hill addition. That property was their homestead when they executed the instruments, but they expected to live in the new house when completed as their home. She swore that the house was not completed according to the plans and specifications. The front floor was not thirty inches from the ground, but only twenty-six inches. The floors were sandpapered and the sawdust flew over the paint; the fireplace had cracks in it so you could *249 put your fingers between the bricks and a two by four piece of lumber was put in tbe arcb which prevented a fire being built in the fireplace. The buffet was, not built in the place where she wanted it and there was no mirror in it. ' One of the doors did not fit, being even with the floor when shut and leaving a space between it and the floor when open. Some of the boards on the kitchen floor were higher than others and cut the linoleum. The wall paper was not matched and did not come to the edges of the window sills or the door 'facings. The baseboard in the children’s room is not matched properly, and it is patched and there is a raw edge that shows from the front door. The windows rattle when the wind blows and they do not fit properly. The doors were rough and splintered. The breakfast nook was too small and there was a board in the wall of the dining room with a knothole in it. There was no pantry. There is a rotten rafter in back of the house. The French doors would not close. The weather boarding curves in and the floors shake when you walk over them. The $1,000 cash payment was the equity held by appellees in the old home, which was not paid for, only to the extent of $1,700; the sum of $4,326.79 being still due on the purchase money. Contemporaneously with the execution of the building contract and the liens herein mentioned, appellees sold and conveyed to Eva Baxter the old home on which they had paid $1,700 and owed $4,400 more. On March 29, 1927, Eva Baxter conveyed the land to Adolph Wagner who held the vendor’s lien for the purchase money not paid by appellees. She had nothing to sell except the $1,700 equity sold to her by ap-pellees.

We believe the jury correctly found that at the time the instruments were executed by appellees the premises upon which the improvements were to be erected was their homestead. On the same date appellees entered into the contract to build the improvements on the lot on which they were after-wards erected, appellees conveyed to Eva Baxter the home in which they were living and at once began paying rent in the sum of $40 per month, or continued to pay interest to Wagner their vendor. They swore, and were not contradicted, that they intended to make the new place their home. It is claimed by appellant that the deed was not executed until August 10,1926, but the record shows it was executed on August 4,1926, was acknowledged on August 10, and filed for record on February 16, 1927. The old homestead was abandoned on August 4, 1926, contemporaneously with the execution of the 'note, mechanic’s lien, and deed of trust. The circumstances of the note, building contract, and deed of trust being executed by appellees were sufficient to put appellant upon inquiry as to. that the house was intended to be used as a home. He had constructive notice that ap-pellees had only a small equity in the place where they resided as compared with the purchase price. By simply asking appellees he could have ascertained their intention to use the new house as their home.

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.W.2d 247, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stout-v-sommers-texapp-1930.