Tunnell v. Moore

53 S.W.2d 324
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 24, 1932
DocketNo. 11052.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 53 S.W.2d 324 (Tunnell v. Moore) 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
Tunnell v. Moore, 53 S.W.2d 324 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

JONES, C. J.

This suit was filed in the district court of Van Zandt county by a number of plaintiffs against a number of defendants in form of trespass to try title to thirty acres of land situated in said county, and described in the petition by metes and bounds. Appellants, H. B. Tunnell, W. W. Latham, and Dorothy Latham, minor daughter of W. B. Latham and suing through H. B. Tunnell ,as next friend, as alleged owners of a one-half interest in the land, filed a plea of intervention, also in form of trespass to try title. Appellants, as interveners, made the same parties defendant as the plaintiffs made in their petition. These parties, appellees herein, are: Otto Prassel, the Pure Oil Company, the Sun Oil Company, the East Texas Oil Corporation, and J. S. Kimbrough.

Each appellee, as defendant in the intervention filed by appellants, answered by a general demurrer, general denial, a plea of not guilty, a plea of the three, five, and ten year statutes of limitation, and a plea of innocent .purchaser.

The trial court, on a joint motion of the parties, entered an order of severance of the case, as made by plaintiffs, from the case, as made 'by interveners, and gave to the case made by plaintiffs a separate docket number from the original docket number. The two cases were set for trial on the same day, and an agreed judgment for money damages was entered • in favor of plaintiffs in their suit. After this agreed judgment was entered, appellants’ case went to trial to a jury on the petition of intervention of appellants and the respective answers of appellees.

*325 At the close of appellants’ testimony, ap-pellees filed a motion for an instructed verdict in their favor. Tliis motion was granted and, on tlie instructed verdict, a judgment was entered against appellants and in favor of appellees. From this judgment appellants have duly perfected an appeal to this court and duly raised hy proper assignments of error the questions herein discussed. The following are the facts:

Appellants’ evidence shows that J. M. Tun-nell acquired title to the land in controversy on September 29, 1896; that at this time J. M. Tunnell was a married man, and that the land was community property of himself and his wife; that in September, 1922, Mrs. J. M. Tunnell died, leaving as her only heirs at law the two children of her marriage, H. B. Tunnell and a daughter who married W. W. Latham; that the daughter, Mrs. W. W. Latham, died previous to the filing of this suit, leaving as her only heir at law a minor daughter, Dorothy Latham. The husband, J. M. Tunnell, is still living.

Appellees proved, on cross-examination of J. M. Tunnell, that in 1905 he had made an oral transfer of the land to J: J. Brawner, had received the purchase price, and' delivered possession of the land. In reference to the oral sale, this witness stated: “I have forgotten, but there was a cause, a reason why the deed was not made, I don’t know what, but there was a hitch, me and Jim Brawner agreed not to make any title at the present time. I wasn’t living on it at the time I sold •it to him. I had moved to Smith County.” This witness also testified that neither he nor his wife during her lifetime asserted any claim or title to the land after this oral sale. This witness further testified that: “I signed a deed to this property in 1927, and at the time my wife had been dead since 1922, and I have never signed any other deed to this land that I have any knowledge of.”

Appellants contend that, by this evidence, they made a prima facie case of their ownership of Mrs. J. M. Turinell’s community interest in the land, and that such prima face case was not overcome, as a matter of law, by appellees? attempted proof of an outstanding title in J. J. Brawner, either by the oral sale of the land, or by the fact that, in 1927, J. M. Tunnell signed a deed to the land in. question.

Appellees contend that, while the evidence does not show that all of the necessary elements "to consummate a valid parol sale is shown by the testimony, nevertheless, as appellants permitted evidence of a parol sale without objection, they cannot on appeal question the validity of such'sale; and they further contend that, in view of this parol sale and in view of the testimony that for some reason, not remembered by the witness, a deed was not executed at the time of the oral sale, it follows that the evidence of Tunnell that he signed a deed to the land must refer to the execution of a deed in conformity to the oral sale.

These two contentions present the one issue as to whether the evidence, as a matter of law, establishes an outstanding title to the land in Brawner. If the evidence does so establish this fact, then the court was warranted in giving peremptory instructions; if it does not, then the court committed reversible error in giving such instruction.

Our statute of conveyances is article 1288, R. O. S. 1925, and reads: “No éstate of inheritance or freehold, or for a term of more than one year, in lands and tenements, shall be conveyed from one to another, unless the conveyance be declared by an instrument in writing, subscribed and delivered by the party disposing of the same, or by his agent thereunto authorized by writing.”

Applying this statute to the instant case and excluding for the time being the evidence as to the signing of a deed to this land by H. B. Tunnell, twenty-two years after the oral sale, it is clear that the oral sale, though attended by the payment of the consideration and the surrender of possession of the land to the vendee, did not pass to such vendee title to the land, and that title remained in J. M. Tunnell. Courts of equity, however, have grafted onto this statute an exception and allow a valid oral sale of land under conditions, in which it is shown that an oral sale of land was made; that in pursuance of such sale the consideration was paid by the ven-dee to the vendor; that possession of the land was surrendered by the vendor to the vendee, and that such possession was followed by the making of valuable and permanent improvements by the vendee; or, in lieu of such improvements, other facts existed which would make the transaction a fraud on the vendee if the oral sale be not enforced. Hooks v. Bridgewater, 111 Tex. 122, 229 S. W. 1114, 1116, 15 A. L. R. 216; Bradley v. Owsley, 74 Tex. 71, 11 S. W. 1052; Robertson v. Simpkins, 61 Tex. 259; Cobb v. Johnson, 101 Tex. 440, 108 S. W. 811; Page v. Vaughan (Tex. Civ. App.) 173 S. W. 541; Wells v. Foreman (Tex. Civ. App.) 199 S. W. 1174; Bringhurst et al. v. Texas Co. et al., 39 Tex. Civ. App. 500, 87 S. W. 893.

While in the instant case the evidence shows an agreed oral sale, the payment of the consideration, and possession under such sale, it fails to show any valuable and permanent improvements made by the vendee -on the faith of the oral sale, and therefore falls short of showing a valid oral sale of the land. On this question, Chief Justice Phillips, speaking for the Supreme Court, in Hooks v. Bridgewater, supra, says: “From an early time it has been the rule of this court, stead- *326 íly adhered to, that to relieve a parol sale of land from the operation of the statute of frauds, three things were necessary: 1. Payment of the consideration, whether it fee in money or services. 2. Possession toy the ven-dee. And 3.

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