White v. Tegnell

206 S.W. 213, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 835
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 22, 1918
DocketNo. 368.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 206 S.W. 213 (White v. Tegnell) 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. Tegnell, 206 S.W. 213, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 835 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, C. J.

This was a suit by J. E. Broussard, plaintiff, against the appellants here, who are J. T. White, R. M. White, Josephine Connerly, and F. T. Connerly, and also against C. A. Elmen, C. Glenn Nichols, M. W. Witham, and Gilbert Griffey, all of whom were made defendants below. The ap-pellees here, who are G. N. Tegnell and his wife, intervened in the suit.

On the 1st day of April, 1913, the above-named appellants, J. T. White, R. M. White, Josephine Connerly, and her husband, J. T. Connerly, conveyed to C. A. Elmen and C. Glenn Nichols a tract of land in Chambers *214 county, containing 640 acres, for the total consideration of $10,880, $2,000 of which amount was paid in cash at the date of thei execution of the deed, and the balance of the purchase money was evidenced by four notes, each for the sum of $2,220, which notes were made due and payable one, two, three, and four years thereafter, and numbered Nos. 1, 2, 3, and 4, and the vendor’s lien was expressly retained in both the deed and notes to secure the balance of the unpaid purchase money.

The deed from appellants to Elmen and Nichols contained this provision:

“The said 0. A. Elmen and O. Glenn Nichols, tljeir heirs and assigns, shall have the right to demand releases of the above-described vendor’s lien as to any and all forty (40) acres or larger tracts of the above-described property upon payment of the pro rata amount (to be determined by acreage alone) of the indebtedness secured by the lien herein retained and reserved, constituting a lien against such tract or tracts; and the said J. T. White, R. M. White, Josephine Connerly and husband, E. T. Connerly, for themselves, their heirs, executors, and administrators, expressly covenant and agree to promptly execute and deliver any and all such releases upon such payments and demand, it being understood that the amount or amounts of all such payments are to be credited upon whichever one of the above-described notes shall fall due next after such payments.”

It appears from the record that Elmen and Nichols made 13 separate conveyances of the above-mentioned -tract of land, by which title to separate tracts thereof passed to that number of different purchasers under them; and, finally, as appears from the record, the defendants Witham and Griffey acquired the title to said survey by purchase from all of the 13 different persons to whom Elmen and Nichols had conveyed the same, subject, of course, to the vendor’s lien retained by appellants.

When note No. 1, for the sum of $2,220, as above mentioned, became due or within a very few days after it was due, the full amount thereof was paid to appellants, who at that time still owned and. held all four of said purchase-money notes, and said note No. 1 was marked paid in full and delivered by appellants to the persons by whom the same was paid. Thereafter appellants transferred and assigned to the plaintiff, J. E. Broussard, said notes Nos. 2, 3, and 4, and the said Broussard brought this suit seeking a judgment thereon against Elmen and Nichols as makers of said notes, and also against appellants for the full amount thereof, and also prayed for foreclosure of the vendor’s lien upon said entire tract of land as against all of the defendants. After the suit was filed by Broussard the defendants Wit-ham and Griffey, then holding the title to the entire tract of land in question subject to the vendor’s lien retained in the deed from appellants to Elmen and Nichols, conveyed all of their right, title, and interest to the entire 640-acre tract of land to Mrs. Jennie B. Tegnell, who, joined by her husband, G. N. Tegnell, thereafter intervened, and claimed that interveners were entitled to a judgment for an undivided 240 acres of said 640-acre tract, as against the defendants, by reason of the release clause contained in said deed from appellants to Elmen and Nichols, here-inabove quoted.

To this plea of intervention on the part of appellees the appellants, R. M. White, J. T. White, Mrs. Josephine Connerly, and F. T. Connerly, answered by general denial, and specially alleged that interveners were not entitled to have released any part of said survey of land from the vendor’s lien reserved in the deed from appellants to Elmen and Nichols, for the reason that, when the several subsequent vendees through whom interveners claim we|re deeded, separate tracts out of said survey, no demand was made for a release of any of said separate tracts, nor were appellants paid any part of the purchase money which said subsequent vendees paid to the original vendees, Elmen and Nichols; and, further, that by the release clause contained in the deed to Elmen and Nichols it was the intention and agreement of all the parties thereto that, as the vendees might make sales of any tract of 40 acres or more, then thei vendees, on, demand, should have the right to a release of the tracts so sold, provided appellants were then paid a sufficient sum to complete the full purchase price of the tract or tracts thus being sold by the original vendees, such price to be computed on an acreage basis; that, when said several sales were made by Elmen and Nichols, no part of the purchase money paid by such subsequent vendees or any of them was ever paid to appellants, and no demand was ever made for a release of the several particular tracts sold by the original vendees, as above stated. Appellants also pleaded that, after their vendees executed such deeds for said 13 separate tracts of land, they failed to pay notes Nos. 2 and 3 as they matured, but defaulted in their contract, and thereby lost whatever right they might have had by virtue of said release clause in the deed from appellants to Elmen and Nichols.

The case was tried before the court without a jury, and judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, Broussard, against the appellants and Elmen and Nichols for the amount of the three notes sued upon, and for. foreclosure of the vendor’s lieni upon an undivided three-fourths of said 640 acres of land as against all of the defendants and the interveners, but, upon their plea of intervention, judgment was rendered against the plaintiff and all the defendants in favor of the interveners for tíre recovery of the title and possession of an undivided one-fourtli, or 160 acres of said survey.

We find ini appellants’ brief three assignments of error. The first and second assignments are grouped, and are, substantially, as follows:

By the first assignment it is contended that the trial court erred in holding that the ven *215 dor’s lien retained in the deed from appellants to Elmen and Nichols should be foreclosed only to the extent of threei-fourths of the land by. the deed conveyed, and in refusing to hold that the vendor’s lien should be foreclosed upon, the entire survey. And by the second assignment it is contended that the court should not have rendered judgment in favor of the interveners for an undivided one-fourth of said survey, and thereby entirely free and release 160 acres of the same from the vendor’s lien, as expressly reserved in the deed from appellants to Elmen and Nichols. The two assignments really constitute but one, and will be so treated.

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Bluebook (online)
206 S.W. 213, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-tegnell-texapp-1918.