Williams v. Daniel

30 S.W.2d 711, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 762
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 21, 1930
DocketNo. 12243.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 30 S.W.2d 711 (Williams v. Daniel) 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
Williams v. Daniel, 30 S.W.2d 711, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 762 (Tex. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

This suit was instituted by Mrs. Ida Williams, joined pro forma by her husband, John T. Williams, against the appellee National Loan & Investment Company to set aside a conveyance by the plaintiffs to M. A. Daniel and to cancel a promissory note of said M. A. Daniel, payable to Williams and wife, purporting to be for par.t of the purchase money for the property conveyed, which had been purchased by the appellee loan company.

The suit was based upon allegations that the property described in the conveyance to M. A. Daniel was at the time the homestead of the plaintiffs and that the conveyance was a simulated one, made for the purpose of obtaining a loan, of all which the loan coin-pany had notice or knowledge of such facts as put it upon notice. The appellee loan company filed a general and special denial, specially denying notice, actual or implied, of the simulated sale to the Daniels, if it was such. The loan company also pleaded by way of cross-action that in its purchase of the note it had taken up and paid off certain tax and other liens on the property to which it desired to be subrogated in event the sale proceedings were set aside.

This is the second appeal in the case. The result of the former appeal is reported in 4 S.W.(2d) 189, where may be found a full history of the proceedings and evidence re- *712 1-ating thereto as it now appears before us, except such as we shall hereinafter detail, and which need not now he here repeated.

Among other' things, the plaintiffs alleged that J. L. Penry, Sr., and J. L. Penry, Jr., were agents or representatives of the loan company and that they knew or had knowledge of such facts as put them upon notice that the sale of their homestead to Daniel was a simulated* one.

The case was submitted to a jury on special issues. As submitted, the charge in effect assumed, as the evidence authorized, that the sale of the property in question was at the time of its conveyance to M. A. Daniel the homestead of the plaintiff Mrs. Ida Williams and her husband, John T. Williams. The issues submitted were therefore limited to the question of whether J. L. Penry, Sr., or J. L. Penry, Jr., had notice of the simulated character of the conveyance. In answer to question 1 the jury found that J. L. Penry, Sr., did not know that the transfer of the property was simulated for the purpose of obtaining a loan. In answer to issue 2 the jury found that J. L. Penry, Jr., did know prior to the closing of the loan in controversy and advancing the money to Williams that the deed from Williams and wife to M. A. Daniel was a simulated sale; that is, that it was merely a transfer of such property for the purpose of obtaining a loan and was not intended as a sale to Daniel. In answer to question 3 the jury found that J. D. Penry, Sr., was without notice of facts relating to the simulated sale which if pursued with reasonable diligence would have disclosed the real facts concerning the sale. In answer to question 4 the jury found that J. D. Penry, Jr., did have notice of facts relating to the simulated sale which would have put an ordinarily prudent person upon inquiry, which inquiry, if pursued with reasonable diligence, would have disclosed the real facts concerning the sale.

It was further found in answer to special issues that defendant the National Loan & Investment Company did not have any knowledge prior to or at the time the loan in question was made through any agent or officer that the property belonged to or was the homestead ;of the plaintiffs, and that neither J. L. Penry, Sr., or J. L. Penry, Jr., had “any authority to make loan contracts” for the defendant loan company.

In answer to special issues requested by the plaintiff and submitted, the jury found ■that both J. L. Penry, 'Sr., and J. L. Penry, Jr., had “apparent authority to make loan contracts for the National Loan & Investment Company, or to advise loan applicants upon matters of procedure and form notes and purchasing sale thereof.”

While the defendant loan company in its answer specifically denied that either J. L. Penry, Sr., or J. L. Penry, Jr., had authority to make loan contracts, it is to be noted from the issues submitted that the court assumed that they were agents for some purposes, doubtless because of the un contradictory character of the evidence, and the appellee loan company neither requested the submission of the issues as to the fact of agency, nor complained of the court’s charge because of having omitted them. Nor is tlie court’s charge objected to because of a failure to submit the issue of whether or not the property involved was the homestead of Mrs. Ida Williams and husband, John Williams, and, if so, whether or not the sale by them to Daniel was a simulated one. Nor has the appellee loan company- complained of the answers of the jury to issues 2 and 4 as unsupported by the evidence either in the trial court or here. These issues therefore, in so far as presented and controverted in the pleadings, must be held to have been waived by the appellee loan company in accord with the ruling in Ormsby v. Ratcliffe, 117 Tex. 242, 1 S.W.(2d) 1084.

In addition to this, J. L.- Penry, Jr., testified, in substance, among other things, that:

“I had some connection with his (J. T. Williams) procuring from the National Loan & Investment Company a loan of $3500 about that time '(-about October 1, 1924). I was not a representative of the National Loan & Investment Company at that time as an agent, but as a local representative or local correspondent, as I was called. Among the duties I had as such local correspondent, I made out applications where people would come up for loans and I inspected the property to see whether or not the security was all right and then I prepared the application and submitted that for the loan. I inspected the property as to its probable’value. I did not pass on the loan; I submitted the application to the office for the company’s approval, together with my idea of its value. I took the application in this case. Mr. Williams gave me the data by which I answered the several questions -that were later signed and sworn to by Mr. Daniel. As to the history of this loan, I will say that Mr. Williams came to the office and said that he was selling a piece of property and that he was selling it to Mr. Daniel, who, at that time, so he represented, was the manager or the relief manager of the Walk-Over Shoe Company and that his wife had looked at the property and selected it as their home — that is Mr. Daniel’s wife and that Mr. Daniel was buying it — was going to buy it as his home.
“After I had inspected the property, Mr. Williams brought the deed where they had conveyed the property to Mr. Daniel; he told me at the time that Mr.' Daniel could not be present and that he would have to *713 answer the questions as to describing the property and that he would have Mr. Daniel look it over and sign it if it was correct. The instrument now shown me is the application that I took at that time. The answers to these questions were furnished by Mr. Williams. I believe he said that Mr. Daniel was in Little Rock, but that he was coming here to take charge of the Walk-Over 'Shoe store. I never actually met Mr. Daniel.
“In addition to this application for a loan that I sent to the home office, I also answered certain questions on an additional report that the company required; Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.W.2d 711, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-daniel-texapp-1930.