Tilley v. Kangerga

83 S.W.2d 787, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 637
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 9, 1935
DocketNo. 1607.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 83 S.W.2d 787 (Tilley v. Kangerga) 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
Tilley v. Kangerga, 83 S.W.2d 787, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 637 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

GALLAGHER, Chief Justice.

Susan Lee Tilley, joined by her husband, Young Tilley, and her six children by her deceased husband, George Lee, with their respective husbands and wives, all plaintiffs in error herein, were plaintiffs in the court below, and M. Kangerga, Rade Kangerga, Mid-Kansas Oil & Gas Company, a corporation, and C. C. Graham, defendants in error herein, were defendants in the court below. Said parties will therefore be designated as in the trial court. Plaintiffs’ petition contained a count in trespass -to try title for the recovery of a certain tract of land containing 96⅝ acres out of the Peter Tipps survey in Rusk county. Paintiffs, by special pleas, sought to have various instruments purporting to affect the title to the land sued for and to divest them of any interest therein, declared invalid and of no effect in whole or in part.

Mrs. Susan A. Graham, on December 12, 1908, conveyed the tract of land here sued for to George Lee. Her title to the land at the time of such conveyance is conceded. The sole consideration therefor was a note bearing the same date, executed to her by the grantee, for the sum of $600, with interest from date at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum, and' payable in annual installments of $100 each, with accrued interest, beginning October 1, 1909. A vendor’s lien to secure the same was expressly retained in the *789 deed. George Lee entered into immediate possession of said tract of land and occupied the same as a home for himself and his family. He died January 29, 1909, without having paid anything on said note. He was survived by his wife, Susan Lee, and seven children, six of whom, with their 'respective husbands and wives, are parties plaintiff herein. The seventh child died intestate and unmarried prior to the institution of this suit. George Lee, at the time of his death, had no other property except five head of farm stock. Susan Lee, his surviving wife, with her children, continued to reside upon said land, and she, out of her own funds, paid the interest accruing -on said note to January 19, 1914. She, on that date, executed a deed conveying said land to Mrs. Graham. The consideration recited therein was “the cancellation, surrender and return to me of said note in full and complete satisfaction of same.” The facts concerning the conveyance of the land by Mrs. Graham to George Lee, the execution of said note to her by him as the entire purchase price thereof, and the" ownership at that time of said note by her, were all recited in said deed. Mrs. Graham, on the same day, conveyed the land ‘ to Susan Lee for the sole consideration of her note for $600, with 10 per cent. ■ .interest from • date, payable, in installments of $100, with accrued interest, on October 1, 1914, and annually thereafter.

Susan Lee, with her children, continued to reside on the land until November 18, 1916, when she married her present husband, Young Tilley.' Shortly after her marriage she and her family left the land and went to live with her husband on a place owned by him in another county. The next year, however, some of her children returned to the land in controversy and continued to work the same. Mrs. Graham, on December 7, 1917, by written instrument, assigned and transferred to M. Kangerga and his brother, Rade Kangerga, the vendor’s lien note executed to her for said land by Susan Lee as aforesaid, together with the superior title to said land. The Kangergas were merchants, and both Susan Lee Tilley and her children on the home place traded with them. Susan Lee Tilley thereafter paid to the Kangergas on the principal of said note the- sum of $170 and current interest thereon to December, 1919. Nothing was,-.paid on said note thereafter. On December 8, 1920, Susan Lee Tilley and her husband signed an acknowledgment that said note was just and that they renewed and promised to pay the same. Susan Lee Tilley, joined by her said husband, on April 24, 1923, conveyed said land by deed to Modessa Lee, her oldest son, who was then about twenty-three years of age. The consideration recited in said deed was a note for the sum of $700, executed by Modessa Lee and payable to M. Kangerga & Bro., which was the amount of principal and interest due on the original note from Susan Lee to Mrs. Graham, which had been assigned to the Kangergas as aforesaid, and taxes on the land remaining unpaid at the time. Said deed contained the following recital : “It being understood and agreed by us that said M. Kangerga & Bro. owns and holds our certain vendor’s lien note, given by Susan Lee and renewed by Susan Lee Tilley and her husband, Young Tilley, said note was made to Mrs. Susan Graham and transferred, to Mr. Kangerga & Bro., and the said M. Kangerga & Bro. hereby releasing us from any and all liability on said original vendor’s lien note.” The deed retained an express vendor’s lien to secure the payment of the new note. A certificate in statutory form showing the acknowledgment of said deed by the grantors therein before W. E. Wylie, a notary public of Rusk county, was indorsed on said deed. The validity of said acknowledgment was attacked by plaintiffs on various grounds. The facts on which such attack was based, so far as pertinent to the issues presented in this appeal, will be hereinafter recited.

Modessa Lee, after receiving said deed, rented the land, or a part thereof, to others from year to year. He explained that the house on the land was no longer suitable for occupancy as the reason why he did not return and live on it himself. He executed a renewal of said note on February 14, 1927, and on May 16, 1929, he and his wife executed a deed conveying the land to the Kangergas. On November 5, 1929, the Kangergas executed an oil and gas lease to O. M. Boren, which he shortly thereafter assigned to the defendant Mid-Kansas Oil & Gas Company. Oil was discovered in Rusk county September 5, 1930, and the value of this land was thereby greatly enhanced. This suit was filed December 29, 1931, and shortly thereafter the production and marketing of oil from said land was begun. Other facts *790 will be recited in connection with the issues of law hereinafter discussed. No issue between plaintiffs and defendant Graham is presented in this appeal and recital of the facts bearing on that phase of the case will be pretermitted.

The case was submitted on special issues, in response to which the jury returned findings in substance as follows:

(1) The deeds from Susan Lee to Susan Graham and from Susan Graham to Susan Lee, dated January 19, 1914, were not executed for the purpose of renewing the vendor’s lien then against the land.

(2) The plaintiffs, or one of them, on May 16, 1929, the date of the deed from Modessa Lee to the Kangergas, were indebted to the Kangergas for the purchase price of the land.

(3) The amount of such indebtedness was $700, plus interest from date.

(4) Susan Lee Tilley did appear before W. E. Wylie as a notary public on April 24, 1923, for the purpose of acknowledging the deed from herself and husband to Modessa Lee.

(5) Said Wylie did not fail to explain said deed to Susan Lee Tilley.

(6) Said Wylie did not fail to take the acknowledgment of said Susan Lee Tilley to said deed privily and apart from her husband.

(7) Said Wylie did not fail to ask said Susan Lee Tilley if she had willingly signed the deed for the purposes and consideration therein expressed.

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Bluebook (online)
83 S.W.2d 787, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tilley-v-kangerga-texapp-1935.