Swink v. City of Dallas

19 S.W.2d 601, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 857
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 20, 1929
DocketNo. 10149.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 S.W.2d 601 (Swink v. City of Dallas) 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
Swink v. City of Dallas, 19 S.W.2d 601, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 857 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

LOONEY, J.

Rebecca Z. Swink sued the city of Dallas to recover an acre of land, part of the site upon which the city maintains Cedar Lawn School, and prosecutes this appeal from an adverse judgment.

The material facts are these: On October 28, 1879, G. M. Swink, deceased husband of plaintiff, conveyed the land in controversy, by warranty deed, to R. E. Burke, county judge of Dallas county, and his successors in office. The conveyance was made “in consideration * * * of the land being used for *602 school purposes by R. E. Burke, County Judge, and his successors in office, of the County of Dallas.” Following the description of the land, this language was also used: “In the event that the above described land should cease to be used for school purposes, then this conveyance to be void and the land, with the improvements thereon, to revert back to the said G. M. Swink.”

On October 15, 1879, John J. Eakins and wife conveyed to same grantee for the same purpose, in similar form, and under almost identical provisions, an acre of land adjoining the land conveyed by Swink. These tracts together constituted a school site of two acres, upon which a public school was maintained by the county of Dallas,, or under its jurisdic- _ tion, until April 5, 188¿, when the territory,’ including the school site, was by ordinance legally incorporated into, and became a part of, the city , of Dallas, and, since its admission, the city has maintained a school there as a part of its public school system, and, as the necessity has arisen, expended for additional improvements between $25,000 and $30,000; that the city’s use of the premises for school purposes was open, adverse, and unchallenged from the year 1888 down to the institution of this suit. The school maintained by the city was the regular elementary school for grades one to seven and the kindergarten, until, beginning with the session of 1926-1927, all children, except the unusual and subnormal, were sent to Colonial Hill and Fair Park, adjoining schools, and the premises have been since the beginning of that term, and now are used as a concentration point for children that need special attention and education, such as the unusual and subnormal.

G. M. Swink, husband of plaintiff, died testate in the year 1905, leaving his property to plaintiff, and appointing her independent executrix.

On September 26, 1918, plaintiff personally and as independent executrix conveyed by general warranty deed the land in controversy to the city, in consideration of $1,000. On November 11, 1924, the board of education of the city accepted an offer from E. W. Morton of $50,000 for the school site in question, but the sale was never consummated, and the contract, it seems, has been abandoned on account of the pendency of this litigation.

Plaintiff sought to have the deed from her to thé city rescinded on the ground that its execution was procured by fraud, that at the time she was mentally incapacitated to understand the nature of the transaction and to recover the land under the residuary clause in the deed from her husband to the county judge of Dallas county, her insistence being that, when the county, in 1888, ceased to use the land for school purposes, title reverted immediately to the grantor, that the city took possession without authority, and has used the property as a tenant at will or sufferance of the owner; but, if it be true that the city succeeded legally to the rights granted R. E. Burke, county judge, and successors, by reason of the land having been incorporated into and becoming a part of, the school system of the city, that nevertheless it was later abandoned by the city, and title reverted when the city contracted to sell to Morton.

The city answered by general denial, urged four years’ limitation to plaintiff’s attempt to rescind her deed to the city; pleaded ten years’ limitation to her suit for the recovery of the land under the reversionary clause of the deed; alleged that, at the time the deed to the county judge was executed, plaintiff and her husband owned a large area adjoining the land conveyed, that the consideration for the conveyance was the resultant benefit to the remaining land from the maintenance of a school at the place, and that, after the location of the school there, plaintiff and her husband conveyed to others all lands owned by them in the vicinity, and were as a consequence no longer interested in the maintenance of the school, therefore the condition of the deed had been fully satisfied; and answered further that the deed to the county judge was a conveyance of the land in fee simple to the public school systém of Texas, subject only to a condition subsequent, to the legal effect that, if the land should cease to be used for school purposes during the life of G. M. Swink, title should revert to him, exclusively; if therefore on his death in 1995 any right existed under the reverter provision of the deed, the same terminated.

The parties have exhaustively and ably briefed and argued their respective contentions, but, under our view of the case, it is only necessary to notice one question, that is, defendant’s plea of four years’ limitation to plaintiff’s suit to rescind her deed to the city, for, if this cause of action is barred, the deed stands, all interests she had in the land passed to the city on September 26, 1918, and other questions presented become immaterial.

Plaintiff’s cause of action for rescission, if any she had, arose when the alleged fraud that induced her to execute the deed was discovered, or by the use of reasonable diligence under the facts and circumstances could have been discovered.

Mrs. Buckingham, plaintiff’s daughter, present at the interviews between her mother and Mr. Ethridge, who conducted negotiations on behalf of the school board, gave testimony bearing on this issue, as follows: That during the time Mr. Ethridge was negotiating for the deed her mother was over 80 years of age, was in bad health, and confined to her room and bed most of the time. Eth-ridge said there existed a cloud on the title to the acre of land, and desired the signature of her mother to remove it. He offered her at first $200, which was rejected. Dater he came back, made a similar statement in regard to the status of the title, that is, that it was school property, belonging to *603 the city for such purpose, and would always be school property, but the city was willing to pay her something to clear the title, and offered $300 and $500, but these offers were not accepted. Nothing more was said for several months, and then her mother was offered $1,000, and witness said: “We accepted that offer and received the money.” She further testified that her mother understood when the deed was executed that she was signing the same to clear the cloud from the title to the land, and signed because she thought she was clearing the title; that her mother was sick and in feeble health at the time, and witness made a full explanation of the matter to her, and she understood that. Ethridge said the land would belong to the city; that her mother’s signature not being on the original deed caused a ’little cloud, and they desired her signature; that whether she signed or not made but little difference, but they would like to have her signature, and would pay her for it.

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Related

Swink v. City of Dallas
36 S.W.2d 222 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 S.W.2d 601, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 857, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swink-v-city-of-dallas-texapp-1929.