Walls v. Cruse

217 S.W. 240, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1248
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 17, 1919
DocketNo. 515.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 217 S.W. 240 (Walls v. Cruse) 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
Walls v. Cruse, 217 S.W. 240, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1248 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinions

BROOKE, J.

This case was tried upon plaintiffs’ second amended, original petition, containing the usual allegations of trespass to try title. In addition to such allegations, plaintiffs alleged that on June 9, 1883, Mary S. Cobb sold to their ancestor, Thomas Walls, the land sued for in consideration of $125 cash and $125 due January 1, 1884, bearing interest at 7 per cent, per annum; that prior to January 26, 1884, there was paid $114 on this note, leaving a balance of $11 with 7 per cent, interest thereon from that date, making now due $43.47.

Plaintiffs also allege an agreement to cut the timber .from the land and the consideration that was to be paid therefor and the amount that was to be deposited in the Tyler County Bank pending the suit. They also-tendered defendant $43.47 in their pleadings, being the balance which they alleged was now due. upon the vendor’s lien note mentioned in their pleadings.

The defendant filed a general demurrer and some special exceptions to plaintiffs’ petition, general denial, and plea of not guilty, and specially pleaded the two, four, and ten years’ statutes of limitation, and then made special answer to the following effect, to wit:

That in February, 1881, Mary S. Cobb owned 300 acres of the Lucas survey'which she mortgaged to John Cruse to secure a note for $177.18, bearing 12 per cent, interest, which mortgage was recorded in the deed of trust records of Tyler county, Tex., and was a valid lien on the land in 1883, when Mary S. Cobb made the deed to Thomas Walls conveying him a part of said tract. That the defendant R. A. Cruse purchased from tlV' said John Cruse the Mary S. Cobb note and lien, and, at or about the time of the sale from Mary S. Cobb to Thomas Walls,'Thomas Walls knew of this lien on the land, and he and Mary S. Cobb agreed that Mary S. Cobb would deliver to defendant the vendor’s lien note which Thomas Walls gave her, which defendant would hold as collateral security for the John Cruse note, and' as Thomas Walls paid the vendor’s lien note the amounts were to be credited on the John Cruse debt.

That subsequent to the execution of the-deed from Mary S. Cobb to Thomas Walls, Thomas Walls purchased from defendant ma *241 terial to build a bouse, and thereby became Indebted to defendant in an additional sum of -$818.22, evidenced by note dated March 28, 1885.

That in 1887, defendant desiring to collect the collateral note given him by Mary S. Cobb and also the note for $318.22, placed both notes in the hands of his attorneys for collection. That it was subsequently agreed .between Mary S. Cobb and Thomas Walls that for the purposes of settling the indebtedness due defendant the land would revert to Mary S. Cobb, and she could convey the same to defendant. That she was then the owner of the vendor’s lien note which Thomas Walls had given her, all of which had not been paid, which note she had left with defendant for collection. That, in pursuance with said agreement, Thomas Walls abandoned the land and Mary S. Cobb, who was then Mary S. Davis, conveyed the land to defendant. That Thomas Walls abandoned the land and his contract of purchase and permitted the same to be dealt with in pursuance with the agreement with Mary S. Cobb, and in carrying out said agreement defendant never further attempted to collect the balance of the vendor’s lien note, the balance due on the John Cruse note, nor the note for $318.22 which Thomas Walls had given him for lumber to erect improvements on said property. That Thomas Walls ceased to claim said land about 1889, and at that time the same was worth about $1 per acre, and since said time defendant has paid taxes on said land and has had possession of the same, and all of the indebtedness evidenced by each and all of the notes has 'long since become barred by limitation, and the said land has increased in value and is now worth considerably more than it was at the time of the transaction above mentioned. Defendant also alleged that the indebtedness evidenced by the John Cruse note and the note for $318.22, which were intended to be paid by said land being delivered to defendant, if not so paid, would now amount to about $950, which sum should be paid defendant by plaintiffs before being permitted to recover said land.

Plaintiffs filed their supplemental petition, excepting to practically each and all of the paragraphs of defendant’s answer, consisting of 19 exceptions.

The case was tried by the court without a jury, and judgment rendered for the defendant.

Plaintiffs offered in evidence deed from J. H. Frazier to Mary S. Cobb; deed from Mary S. Cobb to Thomas Walls; deed from Mary S. Davis, formerly Mary 8. Cobb, and husband, Munroe Davis, to R. A. Cruse; petition in suit of R. A. Cruse v. Thomas Walls; judgment of the court dismissing this suit; deed from Mary S. Cobb to Thomas Baker. They proved by the witness N. A. Cobb that Thomas Walls built a house on the middle ■100 acres of the Lucas league. Mrs. Luce testified that she was 27 years old; that Thomas Walls was her father; that he died March 19, 1911; that he was married twice; that both wives were dead; that her mother died April 30, 1901; that he had two children by his first wife and six by his second wife; and that Thomas Walls did not leave a will that she knew of. Miss Maggie Walls, another daughter of Thomas Walls, testified that she was 23 years of age, and substantially to the same facts as her sister.

The defendant, R. A. Cruse, testified that he was 70 years old and lived in Tyler county all of his life; that about 1883 he purchased from his father, John Cruse, a note for $177.18, executed by Mary S. Cobb and secured by a lien on 300 acres of the Lucas league in Tyler county, Tex.; that, at the time Mary S. Cobb sold her land to Thomas Walls and Baker, witness agreed with Miss Cobb to purchase the note for $177.18 from his father, and at that time he was not holding the vendor’s lien note which Walls gave Miss Cobb, but later took the vendor’s lien note for collection; that Miss Cobb and Walls came to him to get him to take up the John Cruse note and hold it against the land until it was paid; that when Walls paid the note for $125 which he gave Miss Cobb, which she left with the witness for collection, the proceeds were to be applied on the John Cruse note; and that he was a witness to such an agreement between Miss Cobb and Thomas Walls; that at the time witness filed the suit against Thomas Walls to collect the balance due on the $125 note which Walls gave Mary S. Cobb, and which she left with him for collection, he was trying to collect the balance due so as to apply the proceeds on the John Cruse debt; that Thomas Walls also gave him a note for $318.22, dated March 28, 1885, on the bottom of which is indorsed in pencil : ■' “Can take the land he purchased from Cruse for note.”

This witness further testified that there was an agreement between Miss Cobb and. Thomas Walls in which it was agreed that she had a perfect right to reeonvey the land to witness with the consent of Thomas Walls in lieu of foreclosure under the John Cruse deed of trust; that she did later reconvey the land to witness, as the pencil notation on the note for $318.22 shows; that from about the time of this notation there was an agreement between Mary S.

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Bluebook (online)
217 S.W. 240, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walls-v-cruse-texapp-1919.