Whittenburg v. Miller

164 S.W.2d 497, 139 Tex. 586
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 22, 1942
DocketNo. 7822.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 164 S.W.2d 497 (Whittenburg v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whittenburg v. Miller, 164 S.W.2d 497, 139 Tex. 586 (Tex. 1942).

Opinion

*588 Mr. Judge Slatton,

of the Commission of Appeals delivered the opinion for the Court.

B. G. Miller brought this suit in the district court of Yoakum County, Texas, against J. A. Whittenburg, Jr., and Roy Whittenburg, individually and as executors of the estate of J. A. Whittenburg, deceased, and others interested in said estate, to recover title and possession of three sections of land situated in Yoakum County and described as follows: Survey No. 831, Block D, Certificate 132, original grantee John H. Gibson; Survey No. 863, Block D, Certificate 148 original grantee John H. Gibson, and Survey No. 830, Block D, Certificate 131, original grantee John H. Gibson. One theory of recovery of the land was that J. A. Whittenburg had purchased the land at a, void foreclosure sale, in which suit J. A. Whittenburg had foreclosed against B. G. Miller in the district court of Potter County, Texas.

The second theory of recovery was that Miller asserted title to one-half of the oil and gas royalty in said land in virtue of an alleged parol agreement by and between J. A. Whittenburg and B. G. Miller, said to have been made during the month of November, 1931.

It was averred that in 1929 Miller procured J. A. Whittenburg to purchase a series of vendor’s lien notes which Miller had theretofore given Edward Randal et al as a part of the purchase price for the three sections of land. J. A. Whittenburg purchased the vendor’s lien notes and then took Miller’s note for $5,500.00, the amount due upon the notes purchased, and further secured the payment of said vendor’s lien note by the execution and delivery of a deed of trust on the lands. Miller, in November, 1931, was in default on said note and was negotiating a trade of the lands to Panhandle Lumber Company. J. A. Whittenburg agreed with Miller that if Miller would not make the land trade with said lumber company and let Whittenburg have the land, Whittenburg would thereafter hold in trust for Miller one-half of the oil and gas royalty.

It was alleged that J. A. Whittenburg in 1932 foreclosed his lien without resistance from Miller and purchased the land at foreclosure sale without any competitive bidding. It was averred by trial amendment that Miller tendered a deed to the land through a bank in Amarillo, Texas, to Whittenburg, but the same was rejected; after the death of J. A. Whittenburg the land, in 1937 was leased for oil and gas, and that oil was discovered and produced in paying quantities.

*589 The Whittenburgs et al answered by general demurrer, special exceptions, general denials, the statute of frauds and conveyances, two and four year statutes of limitation, three and five year statutes of limitation, by adverse possession, stale demand, want of consideration, failure of consideration, res adjudicata, and that as to Section 830 under the Relinquishment Act the alleged trust could not operate.

The jury found in answer to special issues as follows:

(1) That J. A. Whittenburg, in November, 1931, agreed with B. G. Miller that if Miller would let Whittenburg have the three sections of land Whittenburg would allow Miller one-half of the oil and gas royalty from said land.

(2) That such agreement was supported by a valuable consideration.

(3) That B. G. Miller performed this agreement.

(4) That the sheriff sold the land at the judicial sale prior to 10 A. M. solar time April 5, 1932.

(5) That defendants and those under whom they claim held peaceable and adverse possession of the lands in suit for three years prior to November 23, 1938.

(6) That defendants held adverse possession of the land for five years prior to November 23, 1938.

(7) That the cash market value of the land on April 5, 1932, was $6.00 per acre.

(8) That the estate of J. A. Whittenburg had received the sum of $2,650.00 in payment of oil and gas royalty produced from the land during the month of May, 1939.

(9) That J. A. Whittenburg, in 1931 or 1932, breached the agreement with B. G. Miller.

The trial court rendered judgment in favor of Whittenburg et al and against B. G. Miller.

B. G. Miller appealed to the Court of Civil Appeals at Amarillo. The Court of Civil Appeals sustained Miller’s appeal to his claim for one-half royalty under the three sections of land, together with a money judgment for one-half the royalty produced and costs of suit.

*590 B. G. Miller and Whittenburgs et al filed motions for rehearing. The Court of Civil Appeals amended its judgment to provide for a recovery of one-half royalty by B. G. Miller under two sections of land, towit, sections Nos. 831 and 863, and reduced the money judgment to $14,337.38, being one-half of the royalty collected from said two sections and for costs.

The amended judgment of the court was based upon a remittitur filed by B. G. Miller to the effect that the state of the law relating to his claimed interest in the oil royalty from section 830, which is a state school section, not having been patented and other conditions, he was willing to remit his claim to the royalties and all of his claim to that section. The opinions of the Court of Civil Appeals are reported in Volume 144 S. W. (2d) page 381. The Whittenburgs et al applied to. this court for a writ of error.

B. G. Miller introduced two witnesses to establish the alleged parol trust agreement. His son, Ben Miller, testified to a conversation between J. A. Whittenburg and B. G. Miller which was said to have occurred at the Miller ranch in the first part of November, 1931, in the presence of J. A. Whittenburg (who died in October, 1936) and his son George A. Whittenburg (who died in September, 1934), the witness Ben Miller, his father B. G. Miller, and G. M. Hamilton, a neighbor, which conversation was substantially as follows:

“Mr. Whittenburg, I have been on a trade for these houses up here, we wanted to get to talk with him about it and extending the notes and paying some cash that he was to receive from the Panhandle Lumber Company. * * * Mr. Whittenburg said he probably wouldn’t make any money out of them old houses or they wouldn’t want to trade them, and they will take them away from you sooner or later, and you know I never sold any land, if you will let me take this land over half the royalty is yours. * * * Dad said, ‘well, it seems like about as good a thing as he could do, he would just go ahead and let him take it.’ * * * That is the best I can remember.”

G. M. Hamilton testified with regard to the conversation as follows:

“I remember in the conversation they said something about some houses that Mr. Miller was going to trade for or might trade for. * * * It seems to me like he (Whittenburg) said *591 that to let them houses go, they were worthless, or ^something or other to that effect. * * * Mr. Whittenburg told Mr. Miller that he would let him have the land and handle that land— handle that land as it was he would give him half royalty. * * * Mr. Miller told him he would do that. * * * I don’t remember whether they said anything about any notes or not.

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Bluebook (online)
164 S.W.2d 497, 139 Tex. 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whittenburg-v-miller-tex-1942.