Wilkins v. Dagle

265 S.W. 918
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 30, 1924
DocketNo. 1136.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 265 S.W. 918 (Wilkins v. Dagle) 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
Wilkins v. Dagle, 265 S.W. 918 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

This suit was instituted by appellees to reform and correct two deeds executed by them to appellants, one dated in February, 1919, and the other dated in March, 1919, the second executed as a correction of the first, and both describing the land conveyed as' “an undivided four and one-half acres interest of all that tract or parcel of land,” etc., giving a detailed description of the land. The deeds conveyed the land in fee simple and by general warranty. Appel-lees give in their brief the following statement of the nature of their petition:

“The appellees A. R. Dagle and Serena Dagle, husband and wife, by their first amended original petition, pleaded that on February 15, 1919, and for a long time prior thereto, they owned in fee simple a certain nine-acre tract of land in the west half of the Jesse Devore league, and that they and their family had for 20 years and more 'actually occupied, used, and enjoyed said land and premises as their homestead, and without interruption or cessation have continued to do so.’ That shortly before February 15, 1919, appellees negotiated with A. D. Wilkins, one of the appellants, relative to selling him ‘all the oil, gas. and other minerals in, upon, and under an undivided four and one-half acres in and to said nine-acre tract of land in the Devore league abové described, and plaintiffs and said defendant concluded an agreement whereby said defendant was to buy and plaintiffs were to sell him such oil, gas, and other minerals in, upon, and under the said undivided four and one-half acres in said nine-acre tract of land; and in pursuance of such agreement, and to complete same, plaintiffs did on the 15th day of February, 1919, execute a certain written instrument in which the defendant A. D. Wilkins is named as grantee, and which is of record in volume 78, page 330, Liberty County Deed Records, and in executing said document it was the intention of plaintiffs to sell and convey to said defendant only the oil, gas, and other minerals in, upon, and under the said undivided interest of four and one-half acres of land in said nine-acre tract, but the written instrument as signed purports to convey to said defendant A. D. Wilkins an undivided four and one-half acres in fee simple of the said nine-acre tract of land, which was contrary' to the purpose and intention of the plaintiffs in making and executing said instrument, and the said instrument, so now of record, as aforesaid, was incorrectly drawn up as a deed in fee simple by mistake, and it did not and does not express the mutual intent of the parties thereto, but was signed and executed by plaintiffs and acknowledged by -them and received by the said defendant under a mutual mistake of fact as to the effect and contents of the said written document.’ It was further alleged by appellees that they ‘agreed to sell and convey to said defendant Wilkins only all oil, gas, and other minerals in, upon, and under the undivided four and one-half acres in said nine-acre tract of land, and it was only such an interest in said land that the defendant had agreed to buy, and such interest only did he pay plaintiffs for, and the said written instrument should have been prepared and worded so as to convey to said Wilkins only that interest of the oil, gas, and other minerals in, upon, and under said land, and it was such a conveyance that plaintiffs in *920 tended to execute and .believed they were executing when they signed and acknowledged said written instrument of date February 15, 1919, and now of record in volume 78, page 330, Liberty County Heed Records,’ and ‘that after the execution of said written document, of date February 15, 1919, the defendant A. ,D. Wilkins requested of plaintiffs the execution of another document, representing that the same was needed to correct the habendum clause in the written document of date February 15, 1919, it being at this time represented to plaintiffs by said defendant that such one correction alone was necessary, and that otherwise the written document of date February 15, 1919, was worded so as to properly carry out the purpose and intention of the parties thereto, to wit, to convey to said Wilkins all oil, gas, and other minerals in, upon, and under an undivided interest of four and one-half acres in said nine-acre tract of land, and, believing that this second written instrument would make such a correction in the habendum clause only of the first document, the plaintiffs, executed another written instrument, of date March 21, 1919, and now of record in volume 85, page 368, Liberty County Deed Records, and this second written instrument is erroneous in the same respect as was the first instrument executed by plaintiffs, as above particularly alleged, and this incorrect wording and preparation of such second document was the result of the. same mutual mistake or fraud on the part of the said defendant Wilkins as is above particularly alleged in reference to the first written instrument signed by plaintiffs of date February 15, 1919.’ Appellees also pleaded in the alternative that the defendant Wilkins fraudulently procured the preparation and execution of said deed, but such issue of fraud was not raised by the evidence.”

The defendants answered by general demurrer, general denial, and plea of innocent purchaser, and for partition of the land. The plea of innocent purchaser was not raised by the evidence.

The case was submitted to the jury on the following questions:

“Question No. 1. At the time of the execution and delivery of the deed in evidence before you, of date February 15, 1919, did the plaintiffs Mr. and Mrs. Dagle intend to sell and convey only the oil, gas, and other minerals in, upon, and under an undivided interest of four and one-half acres in the nine-acre tract of land described in plaintiff’s petition?
“Question No. 2. At the time of the execution and delivery of the deed in evidence before you, of date February 15, 1919, did the defendant A. D. Wilkins intend to buy only the oil, gas, and other minerals in, upon, and under an undivided interest of four and one-half acres in the nine-acre tract of land described in plaintiffs’ petition?
' “Question No. '3. At the time of the execution and delivery of the deed in evidence before you, of date February 15, 1919, did the defendant A. D. Wilkins understand and intend to buy an undivided four and one-half acres in fee simple in the nine-acres of land described in plaintiffs’ petition?
“Question No. 4. At the time of the execution and delivery of the deed dated February 15„ 1919, did A. D. Palmer or A. R, Dagle understand that said deed conveyed the fee-simple title to the undivided interest of four and one-half acres in the nine-acre tract described in plaintiff’s petition ?”

The jury by its verdict answered “Yes” to said questions Nos 1 and 2, and answered “No” to questions Nos. 3 and 4.

Appellants’ assignment of error, and the first, second, and third propositions thereunder, are as follows:

Assignment of error: “The court erred in failing and refusing to charge the jury to return a verdict for the defendants in this case as requested by the defendants in their requested special charge No. 1, a part of the record herein; the evidence being insufficient to support a judgment in favor of plaintiffs or entitle them to the relief sought and granted by the judgment entered herein.”
Proposition No.

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Bluebook (online)
265 S.W. 918, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkins-v-dagle-texapp-1924.