Watson v. Druid Hills Company

355 S.W.2d 65, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2248
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 19, 1962
Docket15948
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 355 S.W.2d 65 (Watson v. Druid Hills Company) 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
Watson v. Druid Hills Company, 355 S.W.2d 65, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2248 (Tex. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

DIXON, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a summary judgment in favor of Druid Hills Company, a corporation, appellee here and plaintiff in the trial court, in a suit in trespass to try title concerning Lot No. 8 in Kiestview Addition in Dallas, Texas.

Appellants, Raymond D. Watson and wife Corrinne A. Watson, claimants of title, and Oak Cliff Savings & Loan Association, claimant of a first lien, made no serious effort to dispute appellee’s legal title to the property in question. However, they did plead and now urge several alleged equitable grounds for judgment in their favor based on an oral agreement of sale between appellee and one Perry Greenspan, Jr.

In reply to appellants’ answer appellee filed a supplemental petition in which it pled the Statute of Frauds, Art. 3995, § 4, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St., and the Statute of Conveyances, Art. 1288, V.A.C.S.

Greenspan, a building contractor, was also a party defendant, but he did not file an answer and has not appealed from the judgment in favor of appellee.

The Watsons in addition to their plea of not guilty and their equitable defenses, implead Jesse V. Ambler and wife, Janet Ambler, praying in the alternative for judgment over against the Amblers based on a warranty deed from the Amblers to the Watsons. This cross-action was severed from appellee’s suit by authority of Rule 174(b), Texas Rules Civil Proc., and was given a separate number and docketed as a separate suit. Therefore we are concerned on this appeal only with the judgment in favor of appellee in its suit in trespass to try title.

FACTS

Some time in 1958 Perry Greenspan, Jr., a building contractor, entered into an oral agreement with A. B. McDaniel, President of appellee corporation, for the purchase by Greenspan of five lots in Kiestview Addition, a sub-division developed by Druid *67 Hills Company. He agreed to pay $3,500 for one lot, and $3,100 for each of the other four lots.

Appellants do not dispute the fact that at the time of the oral agreement between appellee and Greenspan appellee had title to the five lots, including Lot No. 8, the subject of this controversy. Appellee’s title is evidenced by warranty deeds to certain acreage out of which was carved Kiestview Addition. Greenspan did not obtain a deed or any other memorandum in writing signed by appellee or any of its officers or agents evidencing the sale of any of the five lots.

However, he did cause a title company to prepare five sets of papers, one set for each lot as follows: (1) a note covering the purchase price; (2) a deed of trust securing payment of the note; (3) a warranty deed from appellee to Greenspan; and (4) an agreement subordinating appel-lee’s note to a construction loan which Greenspan expected to obtain to enable him to build a house on each lot. Greenspan signed each of the notes, and each deed of trust. The title company, according to the affidavit of one of its employees, then mailed the five notes, the five warranty deeds and the five subordination agreements to appellee. The title company retained possession of the deeds of trust. They were never filed for record.

There is no evidence that the warranty deeds and subordination agreements forwarded by the title company were ever signed by appellee, or anyone authorized to sign in its behalf. A. B. McDaniel, ap-pellee’s president, testified in a deposition that he did not remember appellee’s ever receiving the instruments, but that if they were received at appellee’s office they were either returned or thrown away. He was positive they were not signed by appellee.

Though he had not obtained warranty deeds or any other memorandum of title to the five lots, Greenspan proceeded to build houses on them. He then sold three of the houses and lots in connection with these sales he'paid the purchase price of each of the three lots to appellee and appellee, by warranty deeds, conveyed title to these three lots to Greenspan.

After completing houses on the other two lots, Greenspan sold them to certain purchasers, but appellee refused to execute warranty deeds to Greenspan or his purchasers, the two lots being Lot No. 6 and Lot No. 8, of Kiestview Addition. It is only the title to Lot No. 8 that is the subject matter of this appeal.

In a deposition A. B. McDaniel, President of Druid Hills Company, explained why his company refused to execute a warranty deed to Greenspan or his purchasers for Lots Nos. 6 and 8. Sometime prior to the present controversy Greenspan had purchased four lots in another addition developed by appellee, the said development being known as Druid Hills Addition. Greenspan had executed deed of trust notes for the purchase price of these four lots. The deeds of trust were not recorded. Greenspan built houses on these four lots. Later he sold them, but he did not pay the four notes held by appellee.

According to McDaniel in June of 1959 Greenspan started construction of the house on Lot No. 8. That same month McDaniel in a telephone conversation informed Greenspan that appellee company would not sign a warranty deed to Lot No. 8 unless the four notes on the four lots in Druid Hills Addition were paid. Greenspan then assured McDaniel that he would pay the four notes out of funds to be derived from the sale of Lots Nos. 6 and 8 and the houses he was constructing on them. Greenspan thereafter continued construction of the two houses — a fact which was known to McDaniel. McDaniel testified he did not protest the continued construction of the two houses because of Greenspan’s promise to pay the four past due notes on the Druid Hills Addition Lots out of the proceeds of the sale of the houses and Lots Nos. 6 and 8 in the Kiestview Addition.

*68 Subsequent to the giving of the above testimony by McDaniel, Greenspan made an affidavit concerning the transactions here involved. He did not deny or contradict the testimony of McDaniel as above set out.

It is undisputed that Greenspan, though he had no deed to Lot No. 8, executed and delivered a warranty deed to the property to Jesse V. Ambler and wife Janet Ambler. In his affidavit Greenspan says that he gave the deed to Ambler and wife “in order to pay the construction loan on Lot 8.” The Amblers thereafter executed a note for $16,300 dated June 29, 1959 payable to Oak Cliff Savings & Loan Association and secured purportedly by a vendor’s lien and deed of trust lien. The Amblers later executed and delivered a warranty deed purportedly conveying the property to appellants Raymond D. Watson and wife Cor-rinne A. Watson.

Greenspan has not paid the four past due notes owed by him as the purchase price of the four lots in Druid Hills Addition. He has not paid the purchase price of Lots 6 and 8 in Kiestview Addition.

After learning that Greenspan had never obtained a deed to Lot No. 8 from appellee the Watsons made a tender of $3,100 to appellee in consideration of the execution and delivery by appellee of a warranty deed to the property. This offer has been renewed in the answer of the Watsons to ap-pellee’s suit. Appellee has rejected said tender.

OPINION

In an effort- to controvert appellee’s motion for summary judgment appellants rely on the deposition of A. B. McDaniel and the affidavits of Raymond D. Watson, Perry Greenspan, Jr., and Winnie B.

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Bluebook (online)
355 S.W.2d 65, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-druid-hills-company-texapp-1962.