Tucker v. Dodson

245 S.W. 728, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 269
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 11, 1922
DocketNo. 8711.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 245 S.W. 728 (Tucker v. Dodson) 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
Tucker v. Dodson, 245 S.W. 728, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 269 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinions

This was a partition suit filed by appellee and others against appellant and others for the purpose of effecting a partition of 173 acres of land in Rockwall county, Tex.

The following agreed facts were submitted in the trial court:

"That the defendant, W. H. Tucker, inherited a one-twentieth undivided interest in and to the 173 acres of land described in the original petition filed herein, and was the owner thereof in the year 1909.

"That William Tucker died in January, 1920, and at the time of his death, and for more than 20 years prior thereto, lived upon said 173-acre tract as a homestead; that defendants were living on the land in the years 1908, 1909, 1910, and until now.

"In the year 1909, in a certain suit in the county court of Rockwall county, styled W. P. West v. W. H. Tucker, the plaintiff, S. P. West, obtained a foreclosure of an attachment lien against the said one-twentieth undivided interest of the said W. H. Tucker; and thereafter said one-twentieth interest was sold by the sheriff of Rockwall county to W. P. West, and a sheriff's deed was duly executed and delivered to said W. P. West for said onetwentieth interest; and thereafter said W. P. West sold and conveyed, by deed duly executed, the said one-twentieth interest to the plaintiff, J. B. Dodson. Mrs. W. H. Tucker was not a party to the suit.

"It is agreed that the only issue between the parties herein is whether the said W. H. Tucker and his wife, or either of them, had a homestead interest in said 173 acres of land at the time of the levy of said writ of attachment and the foreclosure of the attachment lien in the county court aforesaid, such as would render said foreclosure and the sheriff's deed thereunder inoperative. This agreement shall in no wise affect the homestead rights and claim of defendants." *Page 729

Appellant's wife testified as follows:

"My name is Mrs. W. H. Tucker. The defendant, William Tucker, is my husband; he is the son of W. H. Tucker, deceased. I believe that it was in the year 1907 that my husband and I moved on the 173-acre tract. I recall the suit between my husband and Mr. West in the county court. I was picking cotton in the field when they came and attached the land. We were living on the land at that time. My husband's mother was dead when we moved on the land. In 1907, prior to the West lawsuit, we were living about a mile this side of Royse, just across the road from the old Tucker homestead; the public road divided it. We never did measure the land across the road from the homestead; I suppose it was three or four acres; we just had around the house and the pasture there, that Will's father gave us to build on and improve. We did improve the little piece of ground and we built upon it. We never did pay any rent on that 3 or 4 acre tract. My husband and I have three children. We had three at the time we moved on this land. That was all the land we owned then, and is all we own now. We lived on that land 14 or 15 years, or until it was divided in the district court and this tract was set aside to abide the decision in this case. When we first went there, my husband worked 50 acres of the 173-acre tract, and within about 2 years we worked about 80 acres, besides what we had there around the house that we called our home place. My husband did not pay his father any rent on the one-twentieth interest. In 1908 or 1909 when they attached the one-twentieth, I was not made a party to the suit; I didn't know anything about it; I was in the field when they came out there. At that time we were living on the 3 or 4 acre tract of land and cultivating the other land. Will's father had told us to stay there, that he intended for me to have it some day, and I stayed there so we could take care of him. We were living in almost no house at all, and he told us to build, and we went ahead and built with our own money. Will's father said it would be mine some day; he intended for that to be mine, and that is the reason we stayed there and made those improvements. We claimed what Will would get at his father's death of his mother's part. His mother was dead when we married, and we lived in Hunt county, and we moved there with the understanding that we would take care of Will's father and help him. Will's father gave us the 3 or 4 acres to get us to stay there — I didn't want to stay. We built a house, cistern, barn, garage, henhouse, and covered the smokehouse on the land he gave us. I do not remember how much money we spent on improvements; it was something like a thousand dollars, I guess.

"Cross-examination: W. H. Tucker, my husband's father, died January 16th, a year ago. When we first moved on the Tucker place, my husband's father was living in town in a house they had bought there; he moved back to the farm the year after we moved there. There are three residences on the 173-acre tract. W. H. Tucker, Sr., occupied one of those residences, my husband and I occupied another and Ollie Tucker, my husband's brother, occupied the third house. Ollie Tucker was renting from his father, and we were renting part of the land we worked. We paid rent on part of the land we worked. My husband's mother was dead when we moved there, and my husband claimed that he inherited a onetwentieth interest from his mother; that was the division that was had at the former term of this court. My husband had nine brothers and sisters — there were ten of the first wife's children. They inherited half of the property, and Mr. Tucker, Sr., owned the other half. I told Mr. Tucker, Sr., I wouldn't stay there if he didn't fix up for us, and he told me for us to go ahead and fix ourselves, that it would be ours, and that's the way we did it, and that's the only reason we stayed there. My husband and his father had that conversation about giving us the land."

Appellant testified as follows:

"My name is W. H. Tucker. I am defendant in this cause. This 173-acre tract out of which the 9-acre tract was taken, was the land formerly owned by my father and mother, and at my mother's death I and nine other children inherited her interest in the property. The suit in district court in which my father was awarded this land as a homestead was had before I moved here from Hunt county. I was not a party to that suit, but I helped pay the costs incurred. I think that suit came up about a couple of years before the suit between myself and W. P. West. My brother Ollie lived on the south end of the 173-acre tract, and I lived on the road near the old homestead house. My father and his second wife and children were living in town and Ollie, Chas. Allen, and I lived on the 173-acre tract. Chas. Allen, Ollie, and I were all renting from my father when this writ of attachment was levied. My father was living on the 173-acre tract when he died in January, a year ago. My father lived in the town of Royse two or three years.

"Cross-examination: The partition suit was brought before I moved out on my father's farm. I moved out there the same year the suit was brought. I had been living in Hunt county, and I moved back to help take care of my father and the place, at my father's request. He was living in Royse at that time. When I first moved there, I lived on the south side of the road and just had a one-room house with an L to it, and we lived in it a couple of years, and my father told us to go ahead and improve it and improve the place and it would be ours. We never paid any rent on that 3 or 4 acres. I was renting some 40 or 50 acres of land from my father besides the 3 or 4 acres on which I did not pay rent. I was in possession of and living on the S or 4 acres at the time the writ of attachment was levied. I was living on that land with my family and was claiming it as my homestead.

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Bluebook (online)
245 S.W. 728, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tucker-v-dodson-texapp-1922.