Walling v. Harendt

37 S.W.2d 280, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 275
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 6, 1931
DocketNo. 815.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 37 S.W.2d 280 (Walling v. Harendt) 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
Walling v. Harendt, 37 S.W.2d 280, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 275 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

FUNDERBURK, J.

Ruth Harendt, Robert Harendt, Leona Harendt, and Beatrice Harendt, minors, as heirs of Mrs. Betty Harendt, and through the latter and her mother, Mrs. Ada Simpson, as heirs of Dr. J. H. Walling, brought this suit against J. R. Walling, Jr., Mrs. Tess'ie May Walling, a widow, Phillips Petroleum Company, Marland Production Company, and the Marland Oil Company of Texas, to cancel a certain deed and to recover a one thirty-sixth undivided interest in a 320-acre tract of land in Jones county. The deed sought to be canceled was dated April 26, 1917, and upon its face purported to be a conveyance by Betty Harendt, joined by her husband, Carl Har-endt, and by other parties of the grantors’ interests in said 320-acre tract of land, to Mrs. M. E. Walling, defendants’ grantor. The insanity of Betty Harendt (not previously adjudicated) was alleged as a ground for cancellation. Plaintiffs alleged, as an. offer to do equity, their willingness to repay the consideration received by Betty Harendt for making the conveyance, together with legal interest thereon from its date until final determination of the cause, such amount to be credited upon the amount also sought to be recovered for the alleged conversion by the defendants of oil produced from the land. The defendants’ pleadings alleged, among other things, that the deed sought to be canceled was made as a part of a partition proceeding between Mrs. M. E. Walling, the surviving widow of Dr. J. H. Walling, and the other heirs of said J. H. Walling, and that', as a part of such partition proceeding, said Mrs. M. E. Walling deeded to the other heirs, including Betty Harendt, land belonging to said estate situated in Fisher county. A jury to whom the issues were submitted found that Betty Harendt was mentally incompetent at the time she joined in the execution of the deed to Mrs. M. E. Walling, and at the time when subsequently -she, joined by her husband, conveyed the Fisher county land to J. W. Simpson, and at all times until her death, but further found that, in the division of the J. H. Walling estate the heirs, other than the widow, Mrs. M. E. Walling, received property of equal value with said Mrs. M. E. Walling. The court gave plaintiffs judgment canceling the deed in so far as it affected two-thirds of one thirty-sixth interest in the land, establishing plaintiffs’ title to such interest, and admitting them into the possession thereof. There was also adjudged to plaintiffs the sum of $382.95, representing the value of oil found to have been converted by the defendants, less the sum of $791.10, the amount of the consideration, with interest, which the court found that Betty Harendt had received for executing the deed so canceled. The limitation of the recovery to two-thirds of one thirty-sixth seems to have been upon the theory that Carl Harendt, the husband of Betty Harendt, by his warranty deed conveyed, by *282 estoppel, his after-acquired title, evidently assumed to be one-third of the one thirty-sixth. The defendants have appealed.

The record in this case very clearly shows that appellees sought to cancel the deed and recover the undivided one thirty-sixth interest in the land upon'the theory that such interest in the land had been conveyed by Betty Harendt, a non compos mentis, to Mrs. M. E. Walling, and that the consideration for such conveyance was the conveyance to Betty Harendt by Mrs. -M. E. Walling of an interest in the land situated in Eisher county. It was evidently assumed that the cancellation of said deed, in so far as it covered the one thirty-sixth interest, would have the effect of revesting that interest in appellees as the heirs of their mother.

If, upon that theory, appellees had a right of action, then the judgment is in the main, if not altogether, supported by the principles and authorities relied upon by them in answer to the assignments and propositions urged by appellants upon this appeal. If, in fact, by the deed sought to be canceled, Betty Harendt had conveyed to Mrs. M. E. Walling a one thirty-sixth interest in the Jones county land, the consideration for which being the conveyance by the latter to her of an interest in the Fisher county lands, and at the same time the grantor in the first mentioned deed was mentally incompetent, the appellees undoubtedly had the right, upon tendering bach the consideration, to have a cancellation of the conveyance. With the conveyance canceled, there would have been no obstacle to the recovery of the interest sued for, at least to the extent the judgment awarded recovery. In fact, a prima facie right of recovery would not have included a tender of the consideration. The obligation to repay all or a part of the consideration was dependent upon whether or not plaintiffs’ mother had same or had been benefited to an ascertainable extent, the burden of pleading and proof to show which would have been upon the defendants. Williams v. Sapieha, 94 Tex. 430, 61 S. W. 115. The continued insanity of Mrs. Harendt would have prevented the operation of an estoppel to avoid the conveyance.

The undisputed evidence, however, conclusively established the fact that the deed was given to effect a partition of lands by the joint owners thereof. The establishment of that fact produced important consequences. It conclusively showed that the deed sought to be canceled was not in any true sense a conveyance of an interest in land from Betty Harendt to Mrs. M. E. Walling, and that the consideration for same was not the conveyance by the latter of an interest in the land in Fisher county. “A partition between joint owners does not confer title upon either, but has the effect only to dissolve the tenancy in common, and leave the title as it was before, except to locate such rights as the parties may have, respectively, in the distinct parts of the premises, and to extinguish such rights in all other portions of that property.” Chace v. Gregg, 88 Tex. 552, 32 S. W. 520, 522; Davis v. Agnew, 67 Tex. 206, 2 S. W. 43, 376; Arnold v. Cauble, 49 Tex. 535. The effect of a partition is believed to be the same whether it be accomplished by parol agreement ; by a deed purporting to partition; by warranty deeds reciting money considerations; or by a judgment in a partition suit. In Davis v. Agnew, supra, the Supreme Court quotes with express approval Dawson v. Lawrence, 13 Ohio, 546, 42 Am. Dec. 210, to show that such is the effect of warranty deeds between cotenants such as involved in this case. In Aycock v. Kimbrough, 71 Tex. 333, 12 S. W. 71, 72, 10 Am. St. Rep. 745, a parol partition was referred to as “being a division, but in no sense a conveyance, of lands.” It logically follows that cancellation of a partition deed would not revest appellees with any title to the land. It is also certainly true that, if the deed of Mrs. M. E. Walling conveyed no land to Mrs. Harendt, which it did not, being a partition deed, it could not have been the consideration for the other deed. On the contrary, the transaction being merely a partition, the only consideration for each of the deeds was the advantage or supposed advantage accruing to each of the tenants in common of holding his or her interest in sev-eralty.

The partition was not void, but at most only voidable. Williams v. Sapieha, supra; Mitchell v. Inman (Tex. Civ. App.) 156 S. W. 290; Hancock v. Haile (Tex. Civ. App.) 171 S. W. 1053; Smith v. Thornhill (Tex. Com. App.) 25 S.W.(2d) 597.

Until avoided, it stands as an effectual bar against any right in the heirs of Betty Harendt to recover any interest in the land in controversy. It is apparent that ap-pellees have not, at least in any effective way, sought to avoid the partition.

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37 S.W.2d 280, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walling-v-harendt-texapp-1931.