White v. Love

174 S.W. 913, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 276
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 20, 1915
DocketNo. 8094.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 174 S.W. 913 (White v. Love) 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
White v. Love, 174 S.W. 913, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 276 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

On the 11th day of February, 1907, Mrs. Maggie Myrtle Love, joined by her husband, .W. M. Love, executed a power of attorney to J. G. Browning authorizing and empowering him to “sell, convey, or trade said property upon such terms for cash or credit or other property as to him may seem advisable, or as his judgment may dictate,” 200 acres of land situated in Caldwell county, which was claimed as the separate property of Mrs. Love. On July 15, 1909, Browning, purporting to act under that power of attorney, conveyed the land by deed to Attie *914 H. White, wife of Geo. E. White, in consideration for a conveyance of even date by Geo. E. White and Attie IT. White to Mrs. E. W. Browning, wife of said Browning, of certain lots and blocks of land in the Dixie Wagon Manufacturing Company’s addition to the city of Et. Worth. In the latter conveyance a vendor’s lien was retained upon the property therein conveyed- to secure the payment of promissory notes to Geo. E. White and At-tie H. White, aggregating the sum of $7,500, executed by the said J. G. Browning and wife, Mrs. E. W. Browning. Neither Mrs. Love nor her husband have ever received any consideration for said 200 acres of land. On May 11, 1910, Geo. E. and Attie H. White conveyed that land to G. M. Stewart for the sum of $2,500 cash, and G. M. Stewart was an innocent purchaser thereof.

This suit was instituted by Mrs. Love, joined by her husband, against Geo. E. White and wife, Mrs. E. W. Browning, and J. G. Browning, to recover the value of the Caldwell county land. J. G. Browning was alleged to be non compos mentis, and p. guardian ad litem was appointed to represent him.

The sale of the land to Stewart as an innocent purchaser was alleged in the petition, together with other facts recited above. It was further alleged that the conveyance by Browning to Mrs. Attie H. White was for the purpose of defrauding Mrs. Love of her said land; that Browning had no legal authority or right so to do, and the lack of such authority was well known to White and wife, who thereby became participants in the fraud practiced upon Mrs. Love by Browning. It was further alleged that an equitable lien existed in favor of.Mrs. Love upon the lots and blocks of land deeded by the Whites to Mrs. Browning, and plaintiffs prayed for a foreclosure of that lien for the satisfaction of their claim for the value of the land.

The suit was tried by the court without the aid of a jury upon an agreed statement of facts, and from a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs establishing their debt for $1,666.66 with a foreclosure of lien upon the lots and blocks last mentioned, and an order to sell the same to satisfy said debt, as against all the defendants, but with no personal judgment against any of the defendants for the amount of said debt, Geo. E. and Attie H. White have appealed.

[1] Two of the paragraphs in the agreed statement of facts read as follows:

“It is further agreed that in the making of the said trade and exchange of lands with the said Browning that the defendants George C. White and wife relied upon an abstract of the title to the Caldwell county lands furnished to them for examination by said Browning, and also the power of attorney, marked Exhibit A, and that said White and wife had the said titles examined by a competent attorney in Et. Worth, who approved of the said title and the said power of attorney before the passing of the deeds between the said Browning and the said Whites, and that in said transaction the said George E, White and wife acted in good faith and without any intention to defraud any party connected with this lawsuit.
“It is further agreed that at the date of the said transactions between the' defendants, George E. White and wife and the said James Gilford Browning and wife, that the said Browning was a lawyer in Et. Worth and a citizen of said town, and a man of reputation and standing, and had been county attorney of Tarrant county for a number of years, and at that time his mind was normal, and nothing the matter with it so far as the public or anybody knew, or so far as the defendant knew anything about it, and that he continued to transact Business and was apparently all right in his mental faculties for about three years aft'er the passing of the said deeds.”

Appellants insist that, as Browning was given the power to trade the Caldwell county lands upon such terms as might seem to him advisable, and as it was admitted by the appellees that appellants acted in good faith and without any intention to defraud appel-lees, the court erred in rendering judgment for the appellees.

It is well settled that one holding a power of attorney to sell property for another is not authorized to sell the same on a credit in the absence of a stipulation in the instrument giving that authority, nor for the benefit of some one other than the party who gives such power of attorney. As the Whites had full knowledge of the fact that Browning was acting beyond the scope of his authority, the fact that they acted in good faith, in the sense that they did not intend to defraud ap-pellees, amounted to no defense to plaintiffs’ suit. It is quite natural and probable that they believed that the advice given to him by their attorney who examined the title before the trade was closed was dependable, but it is too well settled by the authorities that the advice so given was erroneous, and it is too plain for argument that one cannot escape the legal consequences of a transaction simply upon the ground that he in good faith was acting upon the advice of a competent attorney. Hunter v. Eastham, 95 Tex. 648, 69 S. W. 66.

[2] Another paragraph of the statement of facts reads as follows:

“It is further agreed that, after said deed was executed by George E. White and wife to the said Mrs. E. W. Browning to the lands in Dixie Wagon Manufacturing Company’s addition to Ft. Worth, the said Browning and wife at different dates before the institution of this suit sold and conveyed various lands out of said addition, and received the proceeds thereof, «.mounting to as much as $2,000, and that these moneys have never_ been paid over to the defendants White and wife, or to the plaintiffs in the case.”

By another assignment of error appellants contend that the money so received by Browning and wife for the sale of equities in the lots transferred to Mrs. Browning should be charged against the plaintiffs. If the disposition of the land made by Browning was unauthorized, we fail to understand how it could be said that the mere fact that Browning and wife realized funds out of the transaction would destroy, or in any manner *915 change, plaintiffs’ cause of action, in the absence of any showing that they in any manner ratified the trade.

[3] Other paragraphs in the agreed statement of facts read as follows:

“It is further agreed that the value of the tract of land in Caldwell county above mentioned was, at the date of the deed from James Gil-ford Browning to Attie H. White, and at the dat'e of the deed from the Whites to G. M. Stewart, the sum of $2,500.

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Bluebook (online)
174 S.W. 913, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-love-texapp-1915.