Watson v. Toler

153 S.W.2d 506, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 693
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 2, 1941
DocketNo. 11249
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 153 S.W.2d 506 (Watson v. Toler) 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. Toler, 153 S.W.2d 506, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 693 (Tex. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

This appeal is from a judgment of the 80th District Court of Harris County — in a trespass to try title suit by appellants against the appellee for the title to property they were then living in as their homestead on Lot 35 in Block 209 in Houston Heights Addition in Harris County, he having, in turn, by cross-action, sought a like recovery from them — disposing of the cause as follows:

“The Court having heard the evidence, pleadings, and argument of counsel, and having determined that there were no issues of fact to be submitted to the jury, discharged said jury, and it appearing to the court that the law and facts are with the defendant, H. 0. Toler, in the original suit, it is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that plaintiffs, James W. Watson and wife, Mary Watson, take nothing by [507]*507their suit against the defendant, H. O. Toler, and that said defendant do have and recover of and from said plaintiffs all costs in this behalf incurred; and it further appearing to the court that the law and facts are with the cross-plaintiff, H. O. Toler, and against cross-defendants, James W. Watson and wife, Mary Watson, and finds that cross-plaintiff, H. O. Toler, has title to the hereinafter described property and is entitled to possession of said property.

“It is therefore considered, ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that cross-plaintiff, H. O. Toler, recover of cross-defendants, James W. Watson and wife, Mary Watson, the title and possession of the premises.”

Through a number of assignments appellants challenge that judgment, the most material of which are thus stated by them:

“(a) That there was ample evidence introduced before the jury authorizing the trial court to submit the issue as to whether or not the instrument in form of a deed which was attacked by the appellants was understood by the parties to be a mortgage.
“(b) The error of the trial court in permitting two instruments affecting title to land to be offered in evidence by the appel-lee as recorded instruments without having first filed the same among the papers of the case and giving three days’ notice, required by law, that such instruments would be offered in evidence.
* * * * *
“(d) Impeaching testimony of the appellants that the wife, who signed the instrument covering a purported conveyance ■of her homestead, was not examined privily and apart from her husband, and such instrument had not been fully explained to her by the notary public and she had not stated that she did not wish to retract it, was sufficient to take such issue to the jury even though the notarial certificate was in proper form under the facts of this case.”

After careful examination of the record, this court agrees with appellants that, in the circumstances conclusively appearing, issues of fact were raised, which rendered the withdrawal of the cause from the jury improvident, and that prejudicial error was committed in the admission of the 'two challenged instruments affecting the title to the land, without their having first been filed for three days prior to the trial, with notice of such filing to themselves.

Appellants’ suit, while, as indicated, a formal one in trespass to try title for the land, had as its main objective establishment of the alleged fact that the instrument they, as husband and wife, had executed and delivered to the appellee, conveying such property to him, on January 31 of 1937, while in the regular form upon its face of a deed, was, in fact, and had been so intended and agreed upon by the parties to be a mortgage only to secure the appellee for his having assumed the then outstanding deed of trust debt and lien against such property, which was held by the Home Owners Loan Corporation; this was the main bone of contention of the whole controversy, the appellants having specifically pled that such instrument had been obtained from them through the fraud of the appellee, acting through his attorney, in inducing them to so execute that instrument, whereas, they and he had expressly agreed that if he would so assume the balance of their outstanding debt to the Loan Corporation, they would execute a mortgage against their property, which at all times they were living in and claiming as their homestead, to secure him in so taking up that obligation, for the amount of which assumption they were later to reimburse him.

It is true the acknowledgments of both appellants upon such instruments were in statutory form, and that its recitations of a consideration were these: “* * * for and in consideration of the sum of Twenty ($20.00) Dollars, cash, to us in hand paid by H. O. Toler, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, and in consideration of the assumption by the said H. O. Toler of the balance due on that certain note dated February 3, 1935, executed by J. W. Watson and wife, Mary Watson, to Home Owners Loan Corporation in the original principal sum of Six Hundred & Eighty Five ($685.00) Dollars, said note being fully described in and secured by that certain Deed of Trust of even date therewith on the hereinafter described property, executed by the said J. W. Watson and wife, Mary Watson, to B. W. Steele, Trustee, for the use of the Home Owners Loan Corporation.”

But there was ample testimony from the appellants and on their behalf to raise issues of fact — notwithstanding such form and recitation in the instrument itself— over whether or not it had been agreed upon and was intended to be a mere mort[508]*508gage as between the parties thereto, as well -as whether its execution and delivery to the appellee by appellants had been secured from them by fraud upon his part. They directly testified that such had been the agreement between the parties, as well as their own understanding of it, and that, being ignorant negroes, they had no idea at the time that they were executing an instrument in the form of a deed to their homestead, but were told by the appellee, as well as his attorney who presented it to them and took their acknowledgments thereto, that it was a mortgage, or contract, to secure him for assuming their debt to the Loan Corporation.

Moreover, there was like testimony from both of them to the effect that the wife had not been examined by the notary, who so took their acknowledgments to such instrument, privily and apart from her husband, nor had he explained it to her as being a deed at that time; but, on the contrary, that he had told her it was a mortgage or contract only, and that she had never been out of the presence of her husband during the whole time the notary was taking their acknowledgments.

In these circumstances, it was not competent for the trial court to itself pass upon the weight and credibility of this testimony, that having rather been the exclusive province of a jury; Article 660S, R.S.; Stephenson v. Arcenaux, Tex.Civ.App., 227 S.W. 729; Young v. Blain, Tex.Civ.App., 245 S.W. 65; Loving v. Milliken, 59 Tex. 423.

Neither, under the cited authorities, is it an answer to suggest, as the ap-pellee in reply does, that, since the recited consideration was the assumption of a valid outstanding mortgage against the property, the court was compelled to construe the instrument to be a deed under such authorities as Mann v. Wright, Tex.Civ.App., 269 S.W. 222; Matheson v. C-B Live Stock Co., Tex.Civ.App., 176 S.W. 734; Pridgen v. Furnish, Tex.Civ.App., 11 S.W.2d 844

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Bluebook (online)
153 S.W.2d 506, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 693, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-toler-texapp-1941.