Twohig v. Brown

19 S.W. 768, 85 Tex. 51, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 813
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1892
DocketNo. 7318.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 19 S.W. 768 (Twohig v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Twohig v. Brown, 19 S.W. 768, 85 Tex. 51, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 813 (Tex. 1892).

Opinion

HOBBY, Presiding Judge,

Section A.—This suit was brought October 14, 1885, by John Twohig against David Brown and Dan and Anton Oppenlieimer, on a promissory note executed by said Brown to Margaret and P. J. Maloney and Annie Woods, of New Orleans, Louisiana, in the sum of 8500, and also on another note, executed by him to the same parties, for $476. They were executed on June 20, 1882. These notes recite, that they were given for the purchase money of a tract of land in Atascosa County, Texas, being abstract number 149, survey 832, in the name of Thomas.Cannon, containing 1476 acres. The Maloneys and Annie Woods endorsed said notes to appellant, who brought this suit to recover the amount of said notes, principal and interest, and asking for a foreclosure of the vendors’ lien on the land. Dan and Anton Oppenlieimer were in possession of the land at the time suit was brought. William Cassin intervened and claimed an undivided one-half of the land.

The defendants pleaded a general denial, and alleged a tender of $238 in full payment of said notes; and further, pleaded a part failure of consideration, alleging that by the fraudulent, etc., statements of the agent of vendors, defendants were induced to give said notes, believing that they were getting a good title to the entire tract of land (1476 acres) for which the notes were executed, and that the title to one-half of said land had failed; that plaintiff had notice of such failure of title when he purchased the notes, etc.

*53 The cause was tried by a jury, and a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff (appellant) for the sum of $238, on which judgment was entered. No lien was found by the verdict, and none was foreclosed, the $238 being in court. The plaintiff has appealed from this judgment.

Plaintiff introduced in evidence the two notes sued on, reciting the lien on the land. These notes were endorsed by the payees to plaintiff “without recourse.”

The deed was also introduced from Margaret Delap Maloney, P. J. Maloney, and Annie Woods to Brown, reciting the payment of 8500 and the execution of the two notes. It conveyed the entire tract of 1476 acres, known as survey 832, abstract number 149, in the name of Thomas Cannon, patented September 29, 1847.

The patent in evidence, introduced by the defendant, was to Delap & McHugh, assignees of Thomas Cannon, etc. The transfer of the certificate from the original grantee to Delap & McHugh was shown.

It was admitted that the vendors of Brown and the payees of the note were the sole heirs of Delap, one of the patentees, but were not the heirs of McHugh, the remaining patentee, and did not in the suit below claim to be such heirs.

The defendants Brown and Anton Oppenheimer testified, in substance, that the agent of the vendors informed Brown that the title to the entire tract of land (1476 acres) was good, and was in the Maloneys and Annie Woods. Upon this statement Brown claims to have made the purchase of the tract at $1 per acre, and executed the notes. He paid $500 in cash, which was advanced by Oppenheimer, and the notes were for the balance of the price agreed on for the whole tract. He testified that he had not been evicted from the land. The plaintiff’s evidence in rebuttal was to the effect, that Brown knew that his vendors owned only one-half of the land when he purchased.

As the first, second, and third assignments have reference to the court’s refusal to give certain special charges requested by the plaintiff, they may be considered properly together.

It is claimed that the court erred in refusing to give the following instructions:

First. “ Notes payable to bearer or payable to order, and endorsed in blank, or to the party to whom they are delivered, are negotiable instruments. ’ ’

Second. “If you believe that at the time John Twohig purchased the notes sued on he had no notice of an outstanding title, you will find for plaintiff.”

Third. “A purchaser who receives a deed with general warranty of title, having at the time knowledge of a defect of title, can not resist the payment of the purchase money on the ground that said defect existed.”

*54 Fourth. “ Unless the defendants have been evicted from the land for which the notes sued on were given, they can not resist the payment of the notes; that proof of a valid outstanding title is not a good defense.”

If these instructions were substantially embodied in the general charge of the court, the appellant has no cause to complain that the court refused a repetition of them, which would have been the result had they been given as requested.

Looking to the court’s charge, then, with a view to the ascertainment of this fact, we find that the jury were told, “ with respect to the defendants’ plea of partial failure of consideration,” that “Brown acquired a good title only to one-half of the 1476 acres described in the deed to him, because the land was patented subsequent to the transfer of the certificate to both Delap and McHugh, thereby vesting the title to one-half of the land in each, and Brown’s vendors are shown to be the heirs of Delap only.”

In this connection, the charge continues in the following language:

“ But while this is true, if, however, defendant Brown knew of this defect in the title at the time he purchased said tract of land, and notwithstanding purchased the whole tract of 1476 acres, and executed the notes sued on therefor, then he can not resist the payment thereof, but would be responsible for the full amount thereof, as he would also be bound to do, notwithstanding such failure of title and his ignorance thereof (if he was ignorant), if the plaintiff Twohig purchased, said notes for a valuable consideration before their maturity and without actual notice on his part of such defect of title, because said notes are what the law terms negotiable instruments, and purport a consideration until the contrary is proven, and to the knowledge of the purchaser for value before maturity prior to his purchase.”

The court further instructed the jury, that if the agents of the vendors represented to Brown that the said vendors owned the entire tract of land, and thereby “ induced him (Brown) to believe, and that he did believe, that he was obtaining a good title to the entire tract of land by his said purchase and deed, then if plaintiff had notice of the defect of title when he bought the notes, then the jury should deduct from the amount of the notes the value of one-half of the land, as valued by the parties at the time of sale, and find for the plaintiff the balance due on the notes after such deduction,” etc. * * *

“ If Brown knew, or was informed by the agents, of the defect in the title, or that he was obtaining a good title to only one-half, and he there upon purchased the land at his own risk as to the defect, or was willing to take such title only as the vendors could give; and if the plaintiff bought the notes for value before maturity, the jury should find for the plaintiff the full amount of the notes sued on, notwithstanding the defect in the title to one-half of the land.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 S.W. 768, 85 Tex. 51, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/twohig-v-brown-tex-1892.