Wilson v. McLemore

242 S.W.2d 791, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 1656
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 21, 1951
Docket14380
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 242 S.W.2d 791 (Wilson v. McLemore) 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
Wilson v. McLemore, 242 S.W.2d 791, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 1656 (Tex. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

CRAMER, Justice.

This proceeding is in trespass to try title, for -cancellation of certain instruments, to review a judgment, etc., and for $75,000 damages, costs, etc., filed originally by plaintiffs Henry Wilson and wife against Joe Lee McLemore, Clark A. Findley and George D. Blaylock. Later, by amendment, M. C. Smith, Meta R. Meyer, Catherine A. Meyer, Edward Folmer and wife Edna Folmer (nee Edna Meyer), Isaac Story, individually and as administrator of the estate of Shelton A. Story, deceased,J. R.. Story, Samuel J. Story, Launa- Herman and Ada Tillery were added as defendants. The parties will be referred to as in the trial court. Plaintiffs, in addition •to the trespass to try title count, plead an oral gift to them by Shelton A. Story in February 1933 of the 73½ acres of lánd involved; also title under the ten-year statute of limitation; also affirmatively sought cancellation of their warranty deed to Joe Lee McLemore, trustee, dated June 27, 1948,' filed for record October 31, 1950 and recorded in Deed Records of Dallas County, Texas, in Vol. 2745 at page 28; for cancellation of a judgment in cause No. 18,-690-E, styled Henry Wilson v. Joe Lee McLemore, said judgment being in- favor of McLemore and against the Wilsons for the land involved; cancellation of a deed dated January 27, 1946, executed by Joe Lee McLemore and other defendants to defendants Findley and Blaylock; cancellation of a deed dated January 12, 1949 from Blaylock to defendant M. C. Smith, covering 35 acres out of the 73½ acre tract; and judgment against all defendants for rents, damages, etc.

On a trial to the merits, the trial court, at the end of plaintiffs’ evidence, after proper motion, instructed a verdict in favor of defendants. From the judgment on such verdict plaintiffs have duly perfected this appeal.

Plaintiffs’ first' point attacks the trial court’s instructed verdict against them.

As a preface to a discussion of this point, the following undisputed facts are showri by the record in date order:

Shelton A. Story acquired title to the land by deed dated August 27, 1935 (over one year, nine months after October 12, 1933, the date of the claimed oral gift).

Isaac B. Story was appointed administrator of the estate of Shelton A. Story, then deceased, on July 1, 1942.

A special warranty deed was executed by the plaintiffs Henry Wilson and wife to defendant Joe Lee McLemore as attorney in fact for Meta R. Meyer, Catherine A. Meyer, Edna Folmer (nee Meyer), and Isaac B. Story, administrator of the estate of Shelton A. Story, on June 27, 1946; a farm lease covering the property was exe *793 cuted June 27, 1946 by Meta R. Meyer and other grantees under Wilson et ux. special warranty deed, to plaintiffs Henry Wilson and wife for a period covering the balance of the year 1946 and all of the year 1947.

On July IS, 1946, orders were entered by the County Court of Dallas County in the estate of Shelton A. Story, deceased, based upon proper preliminaries authorizing a sale of the property involved to Catherine A. Meyer, Meta R. Meyer and Edna Fol-mer, and thereafter proper conveyances were made and proper orders entered confirming such sale.

Catherine A. Meyer, Meta R. Meyer, Edna Folmer and husband, by their attorney in fact, conveyed the property in question to Tommie P. Cláxton on. October 2, 1946 and on the same date the property was conveyed by Claxton to Joe Lee Me-' Lemore.

Cause No. 18,690-E was filed January 27, 1948 by Henry Wilson against Joe Lee McLemore in trespass to try title to the land involved and a judgment was entered therein on February 28, 1948 against Wilson and in favor of McLemore.

A deed was executed May 28, 1948 by Catherine A. Meyer, Meta R. Meyer, Edna Folmer et vir, by their attorney in fact, Joe Lee McLemore, to defendants Clark A. Findley and George D. Blaylock, and on the same date a 60-day lease was executed by Findley and Blaylock covering a part of the land here involved to Henry Wilson; also on the same date Henry Wilson made an affidavit before a notary public that he (Wilson) fully understood the lease he had signed and that his asserted limitation title ended by his conveying the land to Joe Lee McLemore, trustee, by special warranty deed dated June 27, 1946.

Findley thereafter on January 7, 1949 conveyed his interest in the land to Blay-lock.

Blaylock on January 12, 1949 conveyed his interest in the land to W. C. Smith.

Plaintiffs Henry Wilson and wife have lived on the land at all times since October 12, 1933.

Plaintiffs in their brief assert they made out a prima facie case for the jury on issues of fact as follows: (a) Title under the ten-year statute of limitation; (b) right to cancel judgment in cause No. 18,690-E, supra; (c) right to cancel deed from plaintiffs to Joe Lee McLemore; (d) title under their claim of oral gift from Shelton A. Story. In order to pass upon these contentions it will be necessary to review the material testimony.

Appellants testified they went into possession of the land in 1933 and have held possession of such land since that time; also claimed title thereto as against all persons since 1933. On such testimony they made an issue of fact under the ten-year statute of limitation, if it is not defeated by their deeds hereinabove set out. With reference to such deeds, they testified that they executed the special warranty deed to the land above set out, dated June 27, 1946, to Joe Lee McLemore, attorney in fact, and Henry Wilson later OK’d (and that their attorney agreed to the entry of) the judgment in the trespass to try title suit involving the land in question, in favor of defendant McLemore.

Henry Wilson testified on the trial that in 1946 Joe Lee McLemore told him (Wilson) that he (McLemore) owned the property and that he (McLemore) wanted it and for him (Wilson) to get off of it within ten days. He further testified that he told McLemore that he was there and was, going to stay there; that it was as much his as it was McLemore’s. Thereafter Wilson employed an attorney to represent him and to defend him so that he might “stay on the place.’’ He testified that he and his wife went back to his lawyer’s office about a year later; that at such time he (Wilson) and his wife, his lawyer and another lawyer who officed with -his attorney, his lawyer’s stenographer and a notary public were present; that the deed in question was drawn up by his lawyer, typed by his lawyer’s stenographer, and that his lawyer told the stenographer “what to write in it”; that he and his wife signed the deed, he by his mark and his wife by writing her name. He further testified that he did not know the kind of instrument he was signing and if he had known the deed was to all of his land, for $10 and other good and valuable *794 considerations, he would not -have signed it. He also testified that he was not paid the $10 recited in the deed; that the deed was left -by him in his lawyer’s office. He further testified that he did . not remember when he learned -he had signed a deed until Joe Lee McLemore came by his house about two years later to take possession of the property which he claimed as his property under the deed; that he then refused to deliver the property to McLemore.

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Bluebook (online)
242 S.W.2d 791, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 1656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-mclemore-texapp-1951.