Wiseman v. Priboth

310 S.W.2d 600, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 120, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 1796
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 17, 1958
DocketNo. 6745
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 310 S.W.2d 600 (Wiseman v. Priboth) 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
Wiseman v. Priboth, 310 S.W.2d 600, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 120, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 1796 (Tex. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

PITTS, Chief Justice.

This suit was filed by appellee, G. G. Priboth, against appellants, Buddy Joe Wiseman and his father, Charles W. Wise-man, seeking to recover damages in the sum of $2,655 by reason of alleged breach of warranty contained in each of two certain deeds executed separately by appellants, but covering the same land, to different grantees on different dates. The damages sought were based upon ½ of the value of the minerals in and under Labor No. 2, League 685, Lamb County, Texas. The record reflects and it is admitted by all parties that appellant, Charles W. Wise-man, acquired title to the said land, along with Labor No. 1 in the same League, from J. N. Walker and wife, Ida V. Walker, on September 13, 1949; that Charles W. Wise-man and wife conveyed the said land to appellant, Buddy Joe Wiseman, on March 20, 1951; that Buddy Joe Wiseman and wife conveyed the same land to appellee, G. G. Priboth, on July 2, 1955; and that in each of the three deeds the land being conveyed was described as follows:

“Labors Numbers One (1), and Two (2) of League Number Six Hundred Eighty-Five (685), State Capitol Lands in Lamb County, Texas, save and except One-Half of the minerals in and to Labor Number One (1), League Number 685, which has heretofore been reserved by other grantors.”

The record further reflects and it is also admitted by all parties that prior to the execution of any of the three deeds previously mentioned and on May 11, 1945, J. N. Walker and wife, Ida V. Walker, then the owners of the land in question, executed a mineral deed conveying to one Park T. Grimes an undivided ½ interest in all the oil, gas and other mineral rights in and under all of Labor No. 2 in State Capitol [602]*602League No. 685 in Lamb County, Texas, and that the said mineral deed was recorded in the Lamb County Clerk’s office on June 2, 1945, but no mention was made of this latter mentioned conveyance in either of the three deeds subsequently executed. Consequently, appellee claimed damages for the value of an undivided ½ interest in all the minerals in and under Labor No. 2 in Lamb County which allegedly had been deeded to him by Buddy Joe Wiseman and wife on July 2, 1955, and such had been previously deeded to Buddy Joe Wiseman on March 20, 1951, by his father, Charles W. Wiseman, when neither of them owned such mineral interest because such had been previously deeded to Park T. Grimes by J. N. Walker and wife, Ida V. Walker, on May 11, 1945. With this admitted background in view, appellants in this action pleaded a general denial, the 4-year Statute of Limitation on behalf of Charles W. Wiseman, defenses of waiver, estoppel, and mutual mistake of both parties in the execution of the last deed mentioned by Buddy Joe Wiseman and wife to appellee, G. G. Priboth, on July 2, 1955, for which alleged reasons appellants also sought by a cross action duly filed to have the last deed mentioned of date July 2, 1955, reformed by a proper adjudication so as to have it speak the truth and the real intentions of the parties at the time it was erroneously drawn so as to reserve ½ of the minerals in and under Labor No. 2. In a brief supplemental petition filed by appel-lee, he denied the defenses pleaded by appellants.

The case was tried to a jury on February 7, 1957, upon two special issues submitted to it inquiring first as to the market value of an undivided ½ interest in the minerals in and under Labor No. 2 on July 2, 1955, which the jury found to be $10 per acre or a total of $1,771. The jury further found in answer to Special Issue No. 2 that there existed a mutual mistake of both ap-pellee, G. G. Priboth, and appellant, Buddy Joe Wiseman, when the last deed of date July 2, 1955, was executed by omitting a provision that would have reserved ½ of the minerals in question in and under Labor No. 2. Thereafter on February 15, 1957, and before judgment had been entered, ap-pellee filed motion for judgment and asked the trial court to set aside and disregard the jury’s second finding to the effect that there existed a mutual mistake of the parties when the last deed was executed, as previously stated, upon the alleged grounds that the said jury finding had no support in the evidence, that there was no evidence to raise such an issue and no evidence to support such a finding made by the jury but that the uncontradicted and undisputed evidence was that there was not a mutual mistake of the parties. Such motion was resisted by appellants. The record reveals that Special Issue No. 2 and the jury’s answer thereto were expressed in the following language:

“Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that omitting a provision in the deed of July 2, 1955, excepting and reserving one-half the minerals under Labor 2, was through a mutual mistake of both G. G. Priboth and Buddy Joe Wiseman?
“You will answer ‘Yes’ or ‘No.’
“Answer: Yes.’”

On March 23, 1957, the trial court duly heard the said motion and considered the same until April 24, 1957, when such motion was sustained with a finding and conclusion made by the trial court to the effect that there had been no evidence to raise the issue of mutual mistake and that the said jury finding has no support in the evidence,, as a result of which the said jury finding was set aside and disregarded by the trial court and judgment was rendered for appellee, G. G. Priboth, against both appellants, Charles W. Wiseman and Buddy Joe Wise-man, jointly and severally, for his damages in the sum of $1,771 and the court decreed further that appellants take nothing upon their cross action.

As a result of the judgment, appellants perfected an appeal and have presented five points of error. In their first point appellants charge error was committed by the [603]*603trial court in sustaining appellee’s motion to set aside and disregard the answer of the jury to Special Issue No. 2 in which the jury found there existed a mutual mistake of the parties as previously herein stated and in rendering judgment as a result thereof for appellee when there was a sufficiency of clear, satisfactory and convincing evidence to support the jury finding.

Appellants pleaded mutual mistake and were permitted to offer evidence in support thereof. They pleaded that appellant, Buddy Joe Wiseman, and appellee, G. G. Priboth, negotiated the sale of the land months before a contract was written and the sale was consummated; that the parties had many conversations about the land, which was farm land, during which time Buddy Joe Wiseman told Priboth several times that he owned only ½ of the minerals which would be conveyed to appellee and that Priboth was well aware that Buddy Joe Wiseman owned no more than ½ of the minerals and could not sell him any more and Priboth seemed more interested then in the farm land and its possibilities for irrigation than he was in minerals; that both parties well understood all phases of the agreement and especially that only 1,4 of the minerals could and would be conveyed by Buddy Joe Wiseman to G. G. Priboth when they went to a lawyer’s office in Muleshoe, Texas, to have the papers drawn to close the trade but unfortunately the lawyer who prepared the papers made a mistake in describing the land in the instruments prepared by failing to make them show an undivided ½ of the minerals reserved in both Labors; that the intention and agreement between the parties was to reserve ½ of the minerals in and under both Labors of the land while the attorney, in drawing the papers, reserved ½ of the minerals in Labor No.

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Bluebook (online)
310 S.W.2d 600, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 120, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 1796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiseman-v-priboth-texapp-1958.