Young v. Blain

231 S.W. 851, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 458
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 1, 1921
DocketNo. 666.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 231 S.W. 851 (Young v. Blain) 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
Young v. Blain, 231 S.W. 851, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 458 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

O’QUINN, J.

This is a suit in trespass to try title to a lot of land in the city of Beaumont, brought by appellee against appellants. Appellants answered by general demurrer, general denial', plea of not guilty, and specially that the lot was, at the time of the execution of the deed in question, part of the homestead of appellant Mrs. Annie E. Ypung (then Mrs. Annie Sawyer), and that the deed challenged was, in fact, a mortgage.

At the conclusion of the testimony, the court instructed the jury to return a verdict for the plaintiff, upon which judgment was rendered. Appellants filed motion for new trial, which being overruled, they have brought the case here for review.

[1, 2] Appellants’ first assignment of error is as follows:

“The court erred to the prejudice of appellants in giving a peremptory instruction to the jury to find for' the appellee, and in overruling and denying appellants’ exception to the peremptory instruction given by the court to the jury to find a verdict for appellee, for the reason that there was ample and sufficient evidence produced in the trial of said cause rais *852 ing the issue as to whether or not the deed executed by the appellant Annie E. Young and her husband, Walter Sawyer, and appellee, W. R. Blain, to C. W. Howth, said deed bearing date September IT, 1013, recorded in volume 137, p. 582, of the Deed Records of Jefferson county, Tex., was, in fact, a mortgage.”

—which said assignment is submitted as a propositipn. The evidence sho.ws that appellant Ánnie E. Young was, prior to 1911, Annie E. Pipe, wife of E. W. Pipe; that after being divorced from E. W. Pipe, she married Walter Sawyer, and was his wife on September 17, 1913, when the deed in question was executed; that after the death of Walter Sawyer, she married John Blease; that after having been divorced from Blease, she married Walter Young, one of the appellants herein.

Appellee offered in evidence: (1) A deed from J. D. Bendette, Jr., to Mrs. E. W. Pipe to the land in question, dated July 20, 1907; (2) decree of court divorcing Annie E. Pipe from E. W. Pipe; (3) decree of court partitioning the community property of Annie E. Pipe and E. W. Pipe, giving to Annie E. Pipe the land in controversy; (4) deed from Annie E. Pipe to W. R. Blain (appellee), dated August 16, 1912, conveying, among other things, the lot in question; (5) deed from Annie Sawyer and her husband, Walter Sawyer, and W. R. Blain, to O. W. Howth, dated September 17, 1913, conveying the lot in controversy; and (6) deed from O. W. Howth to W. R. Blain, dated December 18, 1914, conveying said lot to appellee.

It also appears from the evidence that in the partition suit between Mrs. Annie Pipe and her divorced husband, E. W. Pipe, she agreed to pay him $300, and the judgment was so entered, and she did not have the money, and that in order to get same she executed a deed to'W. R. Blain (appellee), of date August 16, 1912, conveying to him the three lots decreed to her in said partition suit, one of which was the lot here in question, the deed reciting a consideration of $750, $400 cash and one vendor’s lien note for $350, payable one year after date. It is not questioned but that this conveyance was simulated, being merely for the purpose of negotiating the note to enable Mrs. Pipe to get the money with .which to pay the $300 awarded to E. W. Pipe in said partition suit, and that when the note for the $350 was paid off by Mrs. Pipe, Blain reconveyed all of said property back to her except the lot .involved here. It Is also shown by the evidence that before said note was discharged by Mrs. Pipe, and before Blain reconveyed said property back to Mrs. Pipe, her then husband, Walter Sawyer, was indicted for felony theft, and that in negotiating relative to said charge with W. R. Blain, appel-lee, the apparent title to said lot then being in said Blain, she, Mrs. Sawyer, her husband, the said Walter Sawyer, defendant in said felony theft case, and said W. R. Blain, executed a deed to 0. W. Plowth, to said lot in question, dated September 17, 1913. This is the deed that appellants, in their answer, specially assert was a mortgage, and which appellee contends was executed as an absolute conveyance of the lot for the purpose of paying the $200 fee charged to defend said Walter Sawyer in said felony case.

Appellant Annie E. Young, with reference to the deed referred to in appellants’ answer as a mortgage, testified as follows:

“Q. Now, Mrs. Pipe, there is in evidence a deed introduced by plaintiff, a deed from you and Walter Sawyer and W. R. Blain to O. W. Howth, that deed being dated September 13, 1917, and reading as follows: ‘That Annie Sawyer, joined by her husband, Walter Sawyer, and W. R. .Blain, of the county of Jefferson, state of Texas, for and in consideration of the sum of $200 to us in hand paid by O. W. Howth, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, have granted, sold and conveyed, and by these presents to grant, sell and convey to the said O. W. Howth of the county of Jefferson, state of Texas, all that certain lot, tract or parcel of land,’ etc. Now I will ask you if you ever received that $200 which is recited as having been paid by Mr. Howth? A. Mr. Howth will tell you that he never paid me a thing. Mr. Howth didn’t pay me a nickel in God’s world, and I will take a dying oath that I never received a dime from him. I can’t explain to the court how come to execute that deed, because I never executed nothing but this bond for Sawyer. That is all that I ever signed is that one paper. I signed a bond for Sawyer, because he got into some trouble. He was my husband at that time. Mr. Sawyer told me to go and get Mr. Blain, when he was arrested. He was arrested as he was going to get on the car at the post office, and he said, ‘Go to Mr. Blain,’ and I went up to Mr. Blain’s office and told him that he was arrested, and he said, ‘Do you want me to defend him?’ and I said, ‘How much will you charge?’ and he said ‘$20 to plead his case,’ and I had $10 in my pocket and I went up to John Ryan in the money order department and I got another $10, and I paid him his fee, and I said, ‘Ain’t you going to give me a receipt?’ and he said, ‘You know I am all right.’ I certainly paid him cash, and he knows it too. He knows it, too, that I gave him $20, and Mr. Howth will be a witness for that, too. I gave him the $20 and he was in jail about two days. That was on the 8th day of August, 1913, that he was arrested, and it was between-that and the 12th day I paid him the money,- and' he got him out of jail. He said to me, ‘Are you going to let him stay in jail?’ and I said, ‘I don’t know nothing about it,’ and he said, ‘Why don’t you get a bond?’ and he said, T will go his bond if you will deed me a lot,’ and I said, T don’t want to deed any lot over to you,’ and he said, ‘You will get it back again,’ and he got me to sign the bond. Of course, I couldn’t read- it myself, and I just took what they read to me. I wasn’t able to read it myself. If the deed that they have introduced dated the 17th of September, 1913, from W. Sawyer et al. to O. W. Howth, is claimed by Mr. Blain to be a deed *853 that we executed to secure them on Mr. Sawyer’s bond, I will state that I know nothing of that. They told me that it was a bond that I was signing, and that is all that X know.”

On cross-examination she further testified:

“At the time myself and Mr. Blain made that deed to Mr.

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Related

Watson v. Beall
279 S.W. 543 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1925)
Young v. Blain
245 S.W. 65 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
231 S.W. 851, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-blain-texapp-1921.