Thornton v. Central Loan Co.

164 S.W.2d 248, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 457
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 1, 1942
DocketNo. 9110.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 164 S.W.2d 248 (Thornton v. Central Loan Co.) 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
Thornton v. Central Loan Co., 164 S.W.2d 248, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 457 (Tex. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

BLAIR, Justice.

Appellant, A. C. Thornton, sued appel-lees, Central National Bank of San Angelo, as administrator of the estate of E. E. Thornton, deceased, and Central Loan Company, in trespass to try title to 198 acres of land herein described as Block 36, in Tom Green County; and from an instructed verdict and an adverse judgment brings this appeal.

E. E. Thornton and Vinnie O. Thornton were husband and wife, and appellant was their only child. The wife died in September, 1931, leaving a will which was duly probated, and which devised all her property to her husband; the inventory showing Block 36 as community property. E. E. Thornton died in 1934, intestate, and appellant was appointed temporary administrator of his estate, and the inventory listed Block 36 as belonging to E. E. Thornton’s estate. Later appellee Central National Bank was made permanent administrator of the E. E. Thornton estate.

The claim of appellee Central Loan Company was upon a note and deed of trust lien on Block 36, executed by E. E. Thornton after his wife’s death, dated in December, 1931, and renewed in 1933;<which claim was duly filed with and approved by the administrator, and duly approved and allowed as a secured claim by the County Court in which the administration proceedings were pending. Neither the claim nor lien was protested, nor was there any'appeal from the final order approving and allowing them.

Appellant specially plead his title as follows :

• 1. That he and his father purchased the land in 1914 with partnership funds, one-third of which belonged to appellant and two-thirds to the father, and that the legal title was taken in the father’s name in trust as to the interest of appellant.

2. That during the lifetime of the father and mother they made a parol gift of their interest in the land to appellant prior to the execution of the purported lien under which appellees claim; and that acting under the parol gift and while in possession appellant made valuable and permanent improvements on the land.

Further, as against the claim of appel-lees as to the validity of the note and lien, appellant alleged that at the time E. E. Thornton executed the purported note and lien under which appellees claim,, he was mentally incapable of understanding the nature and result of the act.

The only attack made by appellant upon the note and lien, which he sought to establish by proof, was that E. E. Thornton was mentally incapable of executing them at the time of their execution. If he were mentally incapacitated at the time he executed the note and lien to appellee Central Loan Company, such note and lien were only voidable and not void. Free v. Owen, 131 Tex. 281, 113 S.W.2d 1221. This being true the order of the probate court approving and allowing the claim of appellee Central Loan Company as secured by a valid lien on Block 36, was a final judgment under our statute and decisions, and the only remedy against it was by appeal therefrom. Jones v. Wynne, 133 Tex. 436, 129 S.W.2d 279; Art. 3525, R.S.1925. And since the probate court approved the claim and lien of Central Loan Company against the estate of E. E. Thornton, deceased, as a secured claim, and since no appeal was taken from that order, appellant cannot in this collateral proceeding attack or set aside the judgment of the probate court approving and allowing said claim and lien.

Appellant further alleged in this connection that immediately after purchasing the land in 1914 with partnership funds, he and his father moved with their respective families on the land in suit and have continuously used and occupied it as homestead property; and that the order or judgment of the probate court approving and allowing the claim of appellees on the *250 note and lien against the homestead is not immune from collateral attack because the probate court had no jurisdiction over the homestead. Appellant makes the same contention here, citing the case of Cline v. Niblo, 117 Tex. 474, 8 S.W.2d 633, 66 A.L.R. 916, as authority for the contention. This contention is not sustained because the only claim of homestead involved in the probate proceeding was that of E. E. Thornton, and he had ho such claim as against the note and lien executed by him against the homestead after the death of his wife, there being no other constituent member of the family left after the death of the wife. That is, the constitutional limitation of the power to mortgage a homestead does not apply to a widower, Vernon’s Ann. St. Const, art. 16, § SO. Lacy v. Rollins, 74 Tex. 566, 12 S.W. 314; Watts v. Miller, 76 Tex. 13, 13 S.W. 16.

The trial court correctly held that the homestead claim of appellant in the land in controversy depended upon whether he showed such a title or interest in the land as would sustain the homestead claim against the claim of appellees on the note and lien. As to this issue we agree with the conclusion of the trial court that the evidence was insufficient as a matter of law to show notice to appellee Central Loan Company at the time E. E. Thornton executed the note and lien to it of the secret title or interest claimed by appellant in the land either under the equitable partnership claim or under the alleged parol gift of the land by the father and mother to appellant. The evidence was conclusive that the alleged parol gift of the land was invalid as being violative of the statute of frauds, and under the undisputed evidence appellant was estopped to set up his secret claim of title or interest as against the claim of appellees on the note and lien securing it and covering Block 36. Appellant conceded the note and lien to be valid as to Block 37.

At the time appellee Central Loan Company obtained the note and lien executed by E. E. Thornton in 1931 and renewed by him in 1933, the only possible notice of appellant’s secret claim of title or interest in the land was through his possession of it along with his father and mother, and after her death with the father until his death. The record title and appellant’s possession are as follows:

Appellant, A. C. Thornton, and his father purchased Block 36 in controversy and the adjacent Block 37 in 1914, with partnership funds, each block containing 198 acres. The property was conveyed to E. E. Thornton who in the same year conveyed it to his wife, Mrs. Vinnie 0. Thornton, as her separate property and estate. Both families immediately went into possession of the lands and placed the homestead improvements where the father lived upon Block 36, and placed some of both blocks in cultivation. In 1918 appellant left the premises with his family and moved to South Dakota, where he rented farm lands and lived with his family until January, 1929, when he returned to the land in question. There was testimony to the effect that while visiting his parents in 1926, who were then growing old and feeble, they requested him to return and take charge of the place, live with them, and that they would give him the property. A lost letter written by the mother, Mrs. Vinnie O. Thornton, to her son in 1927, was to the effect that the parents would give appellant the property immediately upon his returning and taking possession, for the purpose of caring for them in their old age.

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Bluebook (online)
164 S.W.2d 248, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thornton-v-central-loan-co-texapp-1942.