Tompkins v. American Republics Corp.

248 S.W.2d 1001, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2133
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 24, 1952
Docket4748
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 248 S.W.2d 1001 (Tompkins v. American Republics Corp.) 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
Tompkins v. American Republics Corp., 248 S.W.2d 1001, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2133 (Tex. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

COE, Chief Justice.

This was a suit in trespass to try title brought by appellants against the appellees involving a 40 acre tract of land out of the league and labor of land in Hardin County granted to the heirs of George Brown. At the close of all of the evidence, appellees filed a motion for an instructed verdict, such motion was granted and the jury returned a verdict in favor of the appellees and judgment was rendered that appellants take and recover nothing; From this judgment the appellants, who were the plaintiffs in the trial court, have perfected their appeal.

The 40 acre tract of land here involved is the north 40 acres of a tract of 160 acres once owned by Jack and Mary Toushake (sometimes spelled Touchette). The 40 acre tract is 350 vrs. wide east and west and 645.1 vrs. long north and south. On June 17, 1910, Jack and Mary Toushake conveyed to their son Joe Toushake and his wife, Bettie, a tract beginning at the northwest corner of the 40 acre tract and running east 175 vrs.; thence south 645.1 vrs.; thence west 175 vrs.; and thence north 645.1 vrs. to the place of beginning. This description covered the West 20 acres of the west half of the 40 acre tract. A few months thereafter Jack and Mary Tou-shake conveyed to Joe and Bettie Toushake, by field note description, the east 20 acres or the east half of the 40 acre tract. In 1913 Joe and Bettie Toushake conveyed to E. Williford and A. J. DuBose the same tract of land as was conveyed to Joe and Bettie Toushake by the deed from Jack and Mary dated June 17, 1910, using the same field note description as was used in such deed, which described the west half of the 40 acre tract. Such west half was subsequently conveyed to Mrs. A. J. (Stella) *1003 DuBose, the wife of Dr. A. J. DuBose as her separate property. On January. 22, 1915, Mrs. DuBose made an attempted conveyance of such west half to Mrs. Hettie Belle Tompkins (now Mrs. Westerterp, one of the plaintiffs). Dr. DuBose is not a party to this instrument and did not join in it. The Notary’s certificate with respect to the acknowledgment of Mrs. DuBose was not in compliance with the statute relating to the acknowledgment of a married woman. Mrs. DuBose undertook to reserve a vendor’s lien to secure the payment of a note given as part of the consideration. On Febraury 24, 1921, Mrs. DuBose and her husband signed an instrument attempting to release the vendor’s lien above mentioned. Dr. DuBose is not named as a party to the said instrument in the body thereof and the acknowledgment of Mrs. DuBose thereto is not in compliance with the statute relating to the acknowledgment of a married woman. On January 22, 1915, the date of the execution of the above deed and on February 24, 1921, the date of the instrument undertaking to release a vendor’s lien, Hettie Belle Tompkins was the wife of Richard Tompkins, now deceased. The' plaintiffs in this suit, other than the Westerterps and Mevo Oil Company, are the children of Richard Tompkins and claimed through him. Hettie Belle and Richard Tompkins were divorced in 1923 and she married J. N. Tompkins, Richard’s half-brother, in 1925 and they were husband and wife until they were divorced in 1934. By deed dated 'July 12, 1928, A. J. DuBose and Mrs. Stella DuBose conveyed such west half of the 40 acre tract to Hettie Belle Tompkins, and on August 4, 1928, Hettie Belle Tompkins and husband, J. N. Tompkins, conveyed such west half to Mrs. Bertie Mary Robinson, the deed containing recitals constituting all such land as the separate property and the estate of Mrs. Robinson. This deed is attacked by appellants as not having been properly acknowledged by Mrs. Tompkins as a married woman, and will be referred to further on in the opinion.

It is the appellants’ contention and was so alleged by them, and certain evidence offered to support such allegations, that it was the intention of Joe and Bettie Tou-shake to convey, and the intention of E. Williford and A. J. DuBose to acquire by the deed of 1913 the entire 40 acres instead of only the west 20 acres or the west half which was described in and conveyed by the deed. They further contend that such intention existed in the various transactions down to the deed from A. J. DuBose and wife to Hettie Belle Tompkins in 1928. They do not, however, seek a reformation of any of the deeds. They obtained and attempted to introduce in evidence certain deeds referred to as correction deeds from the widow and heirs of E. Williford and from the sole heir of Dr. and Mrs. Du-Bose, purported to correct prior deeds so as to convey the entire 40 acres. Those instruments are dated in December, 1949. Appellants also contend that the inception of and title to the land involved was by force of the deed from Mrs. DuBose of January 22, 1915, and that the deed of 1928, executed by Dr. A. J. DuBose and wife, Stella, was only a confirmation of the former deed and therefore such property constituted the community property of the appellant Mrs. Westerterp and Richard Tompkins, who was her husband on the date of the first deed, and being community property upon his death one-half interest thereto passed to and became vested in his children who are among the appellants heretofore referred to.

It is the contention of the appellees, defendants below, that no title whatsoever, either equitable or legal, passed out of Mrs. A. J. DuBose until July 12, 1928, and that no title of any character vested in Mrs. Tompkins until such date and that therefore Richard Tompkins had no title to nor any interest in said lands for the reason that on that date she was the wife of J. N. Tompkins. Further, that by the deed from Hettie Belle Tompkins and husband, J. N. Tompkins,, to Mrs. Bertie Mary Robinson, the title to the west half vested in Mrs. Robinson. No conveyance is shown out of Joe and Bettie Toushake to the east half of the 40 acre tract until July 15, 1933. On such date Joe Toushake executed and delivered to Mrs. Bertie Mary Robinson a quitclaim deed covering the *1004 entire 40, acre tract, such deed containing recitáis constituting the land separate property and estate of Mrs. Robinson. By instrument dated March 24, 1949, Bettie Toushake ratified and confirmed the deed of Joe and adopted it as her act and deed. It is the contention of the appellees that the deed of Joe Toushake vested title to the east half in Mrs. Robinson and that the instrument executed by Bettie effected no change in the status of the title, because the land was the community property of Joe and Bettie, was not their homestead on the date of said deed and that he, as head of the community estate, conveyed the title of the community property by his deed even though it be a quitclaim deed. It is also the contention of the appellees that appellants had no title to the east half of the land in controversy and that the so-called correction deeds and evidence of the intention of the parties to the deeds covering the west half are all inadmissible, because such deeds are plain and unambiguous and the intention of the parties thereto cannot change the legal effect of the plain and unambiguous terms and provisions thereof, including the description of the land conveyed thereby in the absence of the reformation of said déeds'and instruments, and reformation is not sought by this suit.

The appellants have grouped in tiieir brief Points Nos. 1, 10, 10½ and -10¾ in which they complain of the action of the trial court in excluding from the evidence the deed proffered by them from Mrs. A. J.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
248 S.W.2d 1001, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 2133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tompkins-v-american-republics-corp-texapp-1952.