Walker v. Erwin

106 S.W. 164, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 637, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 568
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 28, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 106 S.W. 164 (Walker v. Erwin) 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
Walker v. Erwin, 106 S.W. 164, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 637, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 568 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

WILLSON, Chief Justice.

—The suit was brought by appellant against appellee to try the title to 36 2-3 acres of land, part of the M. Click survey, in Lamar County. Appellant’s petition contained the allegations usually made in the statutory suit of trespass to try title. Appellee’s answer was a general demurrer, a plea of not guilty and a general denial of the truth of the allegations in the petition. On a trial had in the District Court of Lamar County, at appellee’s instance, the jury was peremptorily instructed to return a verdict in his favor. In accordance with such a verdict, on January 2, 1907, a judgment was rendered against appellant.

By an instrument in writing dated November 1, 1897, Mrs. E. A. Walker, a widow, divided into two parts a tract of land then owned by her, and conveyed to her daughter Effie, who afterwards, in 1899 or 1900, married E. T. Nix, one of the parts; and to her son (appellant) the other part, which included the land in controversy. By the terms of the instrument the estate thereby passed to her children in the land was not to commence until Mrs. Walker’s death, she reserving to herself the use of the land during her life. The execution of the document was duly acknowledged by Mrs." Walker; and after executing it she wrapped it in a cloth and placed it in a trunk kept at her home. About 1900, because of some difference between her and her son-in-law Nix, she took the instrument from the trunk, carried it to the home of one of her neighbors and there by burning destroyed it. Afterwards, but when does not appear from the record, she conveyed the" land to J. W. Walker, another son, whom, on February 16, 1904, she joined in a deed conveying same to B. E. Wood, who, by a deed dated February 27, 1904, conveyed same to appellee. Mrs. Walker died May 27, 1904, being then 72 years of age. This suit was instituted June 8, 1904.

By his fifth assignment of error appellant complains of the action of the court in peremptorily instructing the jury to return a verdict for appellee. This assignment should be overruled if it appears from the evidence in the record that ordinary minds reasonably could have reached no other conclusion than that the instrument executed by Mrs. Walker in 1897, never became effective as a conveyance because not a deed; or if a deed, because never delivered to and accepted by appellee. (Lord v. New York Life Ins. Co., 95 Texas, 216.)

At the time the trial was had the instrument referred to had been destroyed. The evidence in the record as to its form and contents is meagre, but sufficient, we think, prima facie, to establish it as in *640 form, and, if delivered, in its effect a deed. We therefore shall so treat and designate it. (Martin v. Faries, 22 Texas Civ. App., 539; Jenkins v. Adcock, 5 Texas Civ. App., 466; Griffis v. Payne, 92 Texas, 293; Griffis v. Payne, 22 Texas Civ. App., 519; Matthews v. Moses, 21 Texas Civ. App., 494; Bombarger v. Morrow, 61 Texas, 417; Chrisman v. Wyatt, 7 Texas Civ. App., 40; Lockridge v. McCommon, 90 Texas, 234.)

The question then follows: Did the evidence present an issue as to the delivery of the deed, which it was the duty ef the court to submit to the jury?

Briefly stated, the evidence in the record bearing on the issue as to whether the deed was delivered to and accepted by appellant was as follows:

Prior to the time Mrs. Walker executed the deed she had frequently talked with appellant about conveying the land to him and to his sister Effie. In 1894, when appellant, after an absence of several weeks, visited his mother at her home, she stated to him that she would make him a deed to the land, if he would remain with her long enough. Appellee, in reply to this offer, stated that he could not stay—that he had to leave the next morning—and then suggested to her that, if she wished to do so, she could make the deed after he left and turn it over to his sister Effie, as such an arrangement would be all right with him. Her reply was that she would do so. Appellant left his mother’s home the morning following this conversation with her, and did not know until about 1900 that his mother had made the deed. He learned of it then-in connection with information conveyed to him to the effect that his mother, after executing the deed, had destroyed it, and in connection with an invitation from his sister, Mrs. Nix, to join her in a suit she contemplated bringing to establish the deed. On November 1, 1897, at "the time she executed the deed, Mrs. Walker stated to the notary engaged by her to prepare it that she wanted appellant and her daughter Effie to have - the land, and wished the deed to be executed by her so written as at her death to vest title in them to the respective parts of the tract to be -conveyed to them by her. The notary prepared the deed accordingly. After executing it, she asked the notary “what was the best thing to do with it,” and he suggested to her to take it and lock it up in her trunk, and let it remain there until her death, when the parties interested would find it. She told him that she worild do so. In accordance with the advice given her by the notary, Mrs. Walker did place the deed in a trunk, which during her lifetime had belonged to a deceased daughter, and which was equally accessible to Mrs. Walker and to her daughter Effie. In a conversation had with Mrs. Holcomb, in 1898, Mrs. Walker declared that she had given the land to appellant and to her daughter Effie, and that the latter had the deed upstairs in a trunk, and could have it recorded when she wished to. In this conversation she explained to Mrs. Holcomb that she had made a deed instead of a will, because a will “could be destroyed, and that a deed could not be.” On an occasion when Mrs. Walker and her daughter Effie were starting to town the latter asked her if she would take the deed and have it recorded. Mrs. Walker replied that she would take it some other time for that purpose. At *641 the time she destroyed the deed Mrs. Walker stated to her neighbor that no one had ever seen it except herself and the notary who wrote it. Mrs. Mix testified that she had read it and seen it frequently in the trunk. After Mrs. Walker destroyed the deed, her daughter, Mrs. Mix, brought suit to establish it, or to recover-the title to and possession of the land, which does not clearly appear from the record. A trial of the daughter’s suit was had id October, 1900. Appellant was not a party to that suit—having declined to join his sister in its institution—but was present at the trial and testified as a witness for his mother. On this trial Mrs. Walker testified that she had never delivered the deed to any one, that she had never given any person the right to take it out of her trunk, and that she had a right to burn it as she had done. On the same trial appellant testified that he knew his mother had burned the deed—that he did not and had not questioned her right to do so—that he had not repudiated her action in burning it—that he did not know whether he had recognized her right to burn it or not, etc. He also testified at the trial of that suit, according to the testimony of witnesses in this one, that he did not el aim the land under the deed; and, according to the testimony of E. E. Wood, to whom the land was conveyed by J. W. Walker, as before stated, made a similar statement to him.

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Bluebook (online)
106 S.W. 164, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 637, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-erwin-texapp-1907.