Suda v. Vaughan

285 S.W.2d 837, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2308
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 15, 1955
DocketNo. 5098
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 285 S.W.2d 837 (Suda v. Vaughan) 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
Suda v. Vaughan, 285 S.W.2d 837, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2308 (Tex. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

R. L. MURRAY, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment in the district court of Houston County, transferred to this court from the Court of Civil Appeals for the First Supreme Judicial District, at Galveston, by an order of the Supreme Court.

Appellant Suda filed suit against appellee Vaughan in trespass to try title to 94.2 acres of land out of the James Patton Survey in Houston County. Appellee Vaughan, by his First Amended Original Answer and Original Cross-Action, filed plea of general denial and not guilty, ’ also pleaded facts which he alleged placed equitable title in him, subject to the payment by him of certain money to appellant Mrs. D. W. Penner. He also filed a cross-action against both appellants, Suda and Mrs. Penner, alleging facts which he alleged showed that he had equitable title to the land sued for. Mrs. Penner filed a general denial and plea of not guilty to this cross-action. Suda filed no answer to it.

The case was tried to the court without a jury, and judgment, was rendered in favor of appellee for title and possession of the land. The judgment further decreed that appellee’s judgment was subject to the payment of $220 by him, with interest at the rate of six per cent from February 1, 1954. This sum was ordered paid into the registry of the court for the joint benefit of appellants. The decree recited that such payment into the registry of the court had been made.

The original petition filed by the appellant Suda against the appellee Vaughan contained the customary pleas in trespass to try title and in addition thereto pleaded the statutes of limitation of 3, 5, 10, and 25 years. The appellee’s First Amended Original Answer and Cross-Action, in addition to the general denial and plea of not guilty, alleged the following:

That in 1942 appellee was living in Houston, Texas, and his sister, Mrs. D. W. Pen-ner, oije of the appellants, was also living in Houston and their mother and father were living in Houston County, Texas; he returned to Houston County to visit his parents and while there he inquired of one Euclid M. Smith about the sale by Smith to him of the land in suit; Smith offered to sell him the land for $550 cash; he returned to Houston, Texas shortly after the Christmas holidays and there notified his sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Penner, and told them that he could buy the land for $550 and that he would like to do so and move on the land and farm it, but Smith demanded cash and appellee did not have the cash; that Mr. Penner offered to let him have the money to buy the property and said that appellee could pay him back as it was convenient for him; shortly thereafter appellee, with Mr. and Mrs. Penner, went to Crockett in Houston County and appellee again asked Smith about purchasing the land and demanded an abstract of title but Smith declined to provide an abstract but agreed to sell the land for $520 cash without an abstract and ap-pellee accepted such offer and arranged a meeting with Smith the following Monday in a lawyer’s office to close the deal; that [839]*839he then informed Mr. and Mrs. Penner of what had been done and the following Monday the three of them went to the office of a law firm in Crockett to consummate the transaction; that while waiting in the office Mr. Penner suggested that the deed be made to him instead of having a deed to appellee with notes and that at any time appellee paid the $520 Penner would give him a warranty deed to the land, and ap-pellee agreed to such a plan; that the transaction thus set out resulted in the creation of a trust in D. W. Penner for the use and benefit of the appellee, whereby he acquired equitable title in said land, subject only to payment of the said $520 paid by D. W. Penner for appellee’s benefit; that after the above transactions were completed the Penners returned to their home in Houston, Texas and appellee actually moved on the land about February 2, 1943, and has resided thereon continuously- since that time as his own property; that in the spring of 1944 appellee arranged to sell the standing .pine timber on the land for $300 and after receiving said sum for the timber he paid it to the said Mrs. Penner on the debt of $520, leaving a balance due of $220; that in the fall of 1944, after crops were gathered, he offered to pay Mrs. Penner the balance due on the land, together with interest, but she failed to come to an agreement with appellee on the exact amount then owed, but she did not then nor for many years thereafter revoke or threaten to revoke or repudiate said trust; that a part of the taxes on the land have been paid by appellee and a part by Mrs. Penner and that he actually owes on said land the sum of $220, plus what amount has been paid by Mrs. Penner for taxes; that he has at all times been willing and is now willing to pay such amount due and owed by him as may be determined by the court; that on January 18, 1952 the said Mrs. Penner did not own the land in suit but owned a debt against the appellee and a lien on the land to secure payment thereof, but on January 18, 1952 she delivered to appellant Suda a deed with a vendor’s lien reserved, for a recited consideration of $10 cash and a note in the amount of $2,250, bearing interest at 5 per cent per annum and payable in installments of $250 per year.

In his cross-action he made the appellant Mrs. Penner a party as a cross-defendant with appellant Suda, and pleaded in trespass to try title as to the both of them, and also pleaded the execution and delivery of the- warranty deed and vendor’s lien described in the above answer; he also pleaded that he had- been in possession of the premises as the fee simple owner subject to the payment of the balance of $220 and taxes and tendered by his pleadings all sums he owed in full satisfaction of such claims; he also alleged that the vendor’s lien retained by Mrs. Penner and the warranty deed held by Suda constituted clouds upon his title, and having prevailed as a defendant in the original cause he alleged that he was entitled as a cross-plaintiff to have such clouds removed and have his title quieted.

The answer of appellant Mrs. D. W. Penner, which recited that she was a widow, consisted of a general denial and a plea of not guilty.

The appellants bring their appeal under five points of error. By their first point they contend that the evidence is not clear, satisfactory and convincing that a parol trust was created. By their second point they say that there is no consideration for the alleged agreement between appellee Vaughan and D. W. Penner, deceased, and hence the agreement is not enforceable. By their third point they say that the appellee failed to allege or prove that he bound himself to purchase the land from Mr. Penner and that under the statutes of frauds and the Texas Trust Act, an oral express agreement is not enforceable. By their fourth point they contend that appellee failed to allege or prove the tendered purchase price after Mr. Penner’s death. By their fifth point they contend that judgment was erroneous because appellee’s pleadings and evidence that his alleged agreement with Mr. Penner was that he was to, pay Mr. Penner the purchase price of the land when convenient for appellee to do so and' such an agreement is within the rule of per-[840]*840petuities and therefore void and unenforceable.

The evidence shows that the appellee Robert Vaughan is the brother of Mrs. Penner, one of the appellants, and that she is the widow and heir of D. W. Penner, deceased. Mr. and Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
285 S.W.2d 837, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/suda-v-vaughan-texapp-1955.