Trinity Fire Ins. Co. v. Solether
This text of 49 S.W.2d 940 (Trinity Fire Ins. Co. v. Solether) 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.
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This suit was brought by Nellie Wood Solether, joined by her husband, against the Trinity Eire Insurance Company, to remove the cloud from the title to real estate conveyed by Clell Solether to his wife, existing on account of the abstracting and recording of a certain judgment recovered by the Insurance Company against dell Solether. Plaintiff alleged that the property was the separate estate of Nellie Wood - Solether.
The Trinity Fire Insurance Company denied that the property was the separate estate of Nellie Wood Solether and filed a trial amendment in which it alleged that the property in question was the community property of Clell Solether and his wife, and asked for a foreclosure of its judgment lien against the property.
The case was tried by the court, without a jury, and judgment rendered declaring said property to be the separate estate of Nellie Wood Solether and removing the cloud from the title.
Plaintiff in error contends that the title to the property was in the name of Clell Sole-ther at the time the abstract of judgment was recorded, and that:
“The undisputed evidence showed that John M. Bennett by a deed which was dated *941 May 18th, 1926, but not acknowledged until July 21st, 1926, conveyed to Clell Solether 10.79 acres of land in Hidalgo County, Texas, for a consideration of $8,632.00 of which $4,316.00 was recited to have been paid in cash and $4,316.00 in vendor’s lien notes which were signed by said Olell Solether. Mrs. Solether did not sign the notes, and her name was not included in the deed. This land was subdivided by Olell Solether, without the joinder of his wife, into 63 lots known as the Mistletoe Park Addition to the City of Weslaco, Texas. Olell Solether, alone, made the dedication on the plat.
“At the time all this occurred, Mrs. Sole-ther was not in the State of Texas but was in Ohio. Mrs. Solether did not sign the vendor’s lien notes given to John M. Bennett as part of the purchase price. Clell Solether paid the $4,316.00 cash to John M. Bennett. He said that he paid this money out of Mrs. Solether’s funds which had been given her by her uncle.”
After the subdivision of the property, Clell Solether and his associates started to sell off lots, but Bennett, who held a vendor’s lien upon the property, refused to execute releases on the lots sold. Solether then borrowed $4,000 from Porter Doss, giving his unsecured note therefor, and paid Bennett’s vendor’s lien note and secured a release from him. As Mrs. Solether had not returned from her trip North, she knew nothing about the loan from Doss and did not sign the note.
In 1927 Solether signed a note to Jarratt Mortgage Company, which was reduced to judgment by its assignee, the Trinity Fire Insurance Company, and judgment duly abstracted on November 14, 1929. On December 7, 1929, Olell Solether conveyed the unsold lots to his wife, stating therein that the property was the separate property of bis wife.
Since the record title was in the name of her husband, the burden of proof was on Nellie Wood Solether to establish a resulting trust, which is not subject to the registration-laws, and will be decreed by a court of equity only if the facts warrant it. It must arise at the very time that the title is taken. Parker v. Coop, 60 Tex. 111; Addison v. Ball (Tex. Civ. App.) 262 S. W. 877, 881; Burns v. Veritas Oil Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 230 S. W. 440, 445; Pomeroy, Eq. vol. 3 (3d Ed.) pp. 1991, 1992; Perry, Trust & Trustees (7th Ed.) vol. 1, §§ 126 and 133.
The consideration paid for this property was $8,632, of which amount $4,316 was paid in cash, and $4,316 was paid by vendor’s lien notes executed by Olell Solether (and not by his wife). It is nowhere alleged nor attempted to be proven -that there was any kind of understanding with Bennett or qny one else that Mrs. Solether’s separate estate was pledged for the property,' but this does not affect the question if it can be shown that the property was purchased for her and to be paid for out of her separate estate.
The property was shown to be the separate property of Mrs. Solether, when it was purchased and at the time of the abstracting of the judgment, and at all times thereafter, the title being held by Clell Solether for' her benefit; and because of such fact the judgment lien did not attach thereto. The signing of the vendor’s lien note, evidencing a balance of the purchase price of the property, by Olell Solether, under the circumstances of this case, did not make the said property community property.
Mrs. Solether was to receive $7,000 from her uncle, which she wanted to invest. Her husband bought this property for her, one-half of the purchase price being paid out of the money given to her by her uncle, and the balance represented by a vendor’s lien note signed by her husband. It was the understanding that this property was to be her separate estate to be paid for by her out of her own money, and it was always regarded by her as her separate property. The title was placed in her husband’s name because he was to subdivide and sell the property for her, while she was away in the North.’ When the subdivision of this property got under way, it became necessary to have the vendor’s lien released, so Olell Sole-ther borrowed on his open note $4,000 of one Doss with which to discharge said lien. This money borrowed of Doss was repaid out of profits received by Mrs. Solether on sales of her subdivided property, and out of moneys received from her uncle, Mr. Fleck. Mrs. Solether, in this manner, paid the entire purchase price of said property out of her own money. Mr. Olell Solether testified: “The money that I paid for that property was my wife’s money. * * * It was my wife’s money that went into the payment of this property.”
There seems to be no dispute over the proposition that the wife may own separate property, title to which is held in her husband’s name, which is free from the lien of a judgment against the husband. However, on this proposition we cite the following authorities: Blankenship v. Douglas, 26 Tex. 225, 82 Am. Dec. 608; Parker v. Cook, 60 Tex. 111, 674; Sparks v. Taylor, 99 Tex. 411, 90 S. W. 485, 6 L. R. A. (N. S.) 381; Amend v. Jahns (Tex. Civ. App.) 184 S. W. 729; Penman v. Blount (Tex. Civ. App.) 264 S. W. 169.
In the Sparks Case, supra, the court said: “The fact of agreement that the notes should be paid by the separate funds of the wife fixed upon the land purchased the character of separate property, the controlling facts being the intention of the parties and the investment of the wife’s separate funds.”
*942 In the case of L. W. Levy & Co. v. Mitchell, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 189, 114 S. W. 172, 174, the court said: “We think the controlling question in this case is the effect to be given to the previous understanding between Mrs. Mitchell and her husband as to the purchase of these -lots with her separate means. * * * The agreement in this case between the husband and wife to purchase the land for the benefit of her separate estate, and the fact that the same was so purchased and paid for with her separate funds, we think, constitutes the lots in question her separate property, irrespective of the fact that the money was not paid at the time of the purchase, but subsequently.”
The following cases, cited by defendants in error, are to the same effect: Schuster et ux. v.
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49 S.W.2d 940, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trinity-fire-ins-co-v-solether-texapp-1932.