Zamora v. Vela

202 S.W. 215, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 269
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 27, 1918
DocketNo. 6004.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 202 S.W. 215 (Zamora v. Vela) 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
Zamora v. Vela, 202 S.W. 215, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 269 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

FLV, C. J.

This is a suit instituted by ap-pellees against Juan Vela Zamora and Antonio Rodriguez to cancel two certain deeds, one from appellees to Juan Vela Zamora, and the other by the last named to Antonio Rodriguez, thereby removing a cloud cast by the deeds on the title to lots 3 and 4, in block 234, in the eastern division of the city of Laredo, Tex. It was alleged in the petition that appellees bought lots 3, 4, and 5 in said block in Laredo from George W. Sprague, paying $75 in cash, and executing three notes for $50 each payable to the order of Sprague, a vendor’s lien being reserved on the land to secure the deferred payments; that appel-lees took immediate possession of the lots, fenced them, and constructed a residence on lot 5, and moved into it and-made it their home; that when all the notes were due the holder thereof desired payment of them and began to press appellees for the amount due; and that Nicolas Vela went to his cousin, Juan Vela Zamora, and arranged with him that enough money, about $114, be loaned to appellees to discharge the indebtedness on the land, the amount to be secured by the execution of a warranty deed to lots 3 and 4, “with the understanding then and there had between the parties that the plaintiffs were to have the right to pay off and discharge the said sum so loaned to them by the said defendant Zamora, and thereupon to require and demand from him a reconveyance back to them of the aforesaid two lots. They allege it was mutually understood and agreed between the parties that whilst said deed from them to the said Zamora was in form and on its face an absolute deed, yet in truth and in fact the same was only a mortgage and not in truth an absolute conveyance.” It was further alleged that in January, 1917, appellees found a purchaser who was willing to pay them $200 in cash for the two lots, “out of which they intended to pay off and discharge the debt so incurred to the said Juan Vela Zamora, the rest being a matter of profit to themselves.” It was alleged that Zamora refused to recognize anv right of appellees in and to the lots, but claimed ownership in himself, and he executed a deed to Antonio Rodriguez to the lots. Appellants claimed the deed was absolute and never intended as a mortgage, and Rodriguez claimed to be an innocent purchaser of the land. The cause was tried without' a jury, and judgment was rendered in favor of ap- *216 pellees as prayed for by them, and it was recited in the judgment that $124.48 had been deposited in the court for Zamora by appellees.

The statement of facts shows that on February 28, 1914, Sprague conyeyed lots 3, 4, and 5, in block 234, eastern division of the city of Laredo, to appellees, the consid: eration being $75 cash and three promissory notes for $50 each, due respectively in October, 1914, June 26, 1915, and February 26, 1916. On November 16, 1915, appellees executed a warranty deed to Juan Vela Zamora conveying to him lots 3 and 4 aforesaid. The deed was duly recorded. On January 19, 1917, Zamora conveyed the lots to Antonio Rodriguez. Zamora paid the amount due on the vendor’s lien notes.

[1] Nicolas Vela testified that Zamora, when the deed by him and his wife was executed, said:

“When you sell your property you will pay me my money and I will return you your deed.”

According to the testimony of Vela, Rodriguez was told by him before he bought from Zamora that the deed was merely a mortgage. On. cross-examination Vela swore that Zamora said:

“For this money you need not hurry about it, whenever you sell your property you pay me my money and I will return your property to you.”

The wife of Vela "testified that her husband told Rodriguez that he could not sell the lots because Zamora claimed them, and told Rodriguez that if Zamora sold the lots to him he would see what he could do to defend his property. Her understanding about the trade with Zamora was practically the same as that of her husband. The conversation with Rodriguez, as detailed by Mrs. Vela, was corroborated by Pedro and Ger-trudes Trevino.

Juan Vela Zamora testified that he paid off! the vendor’s lien notes and the deed to the two lots was made by appellees, and he told Nicolas Vela:

“Well, Nicolas, you know that I have got no interest in the house. If in one, two, three, four, five, or six months you have the money for it, if it takes you one, two, three, four, five, or six months, you can give me my money back and I will give you tko deed back and you will only have to make the expenses of making a new deed.”

Again he swore that after the deed was executed he told Nicolas:

“In one, two, three, four, five, or six months if you have the money, I will take the money and give you the deed on it.”

Zamora sold the lots to Rodriguez for $200. The vendor’s lien notes, executed by appellees, were given to Zamora when he paid the holder of the notes.

T. A. Bunn, who held the notes, and was a witness for appellants, testified that when Vela and Zamora came to him' to arrange the transfer of the lots Zamora said:

“I do not want Nicolas to get into trouble, so I am going to let him have the money, but of course I have got to protect my interest and I have got to have some protection and he has agreed to give me two lots that he has out there as security and we want you to make out the papers.”

1-Ie testified that Zamora further said:

“The understanding is that I am to let Nicolas have $150 and he is to give me two lots for security, with the understanding that if ho don’t pay me the money in six months” then the property became Zamora’s.

Zamora did not pay any money directly to Vela, and only paid off two notes for $50 each, with interest from February 28, 1914, to November 16, 1915, at 8 per cent, per an-num, which amounted to about $114. Zamora claimed, however, to have paid $150 on that debt. Bunn testified that the amount due on the notes and $1.50 for writing the deed were paid to him'.

We overrule the first and second assignments of error. We think the evidence sufficient to show that the deed was intended as a mortgage to secure the amount paid by Zamora on the two notes. The evidence of Zamora himself tends to show that the deed was in truth a mortgage rather than a conditional sale which he seeks to make it. 1-Ie stated that the deed was given as security for money loaned. The debt was not canceled by the execution, and Zamora, and not appellees, held the notes after the money was borrowed. The transaction had all the earmarks of a transfer by the holder of the notes to a purchaser of them, and a mortgage given by the maker of the notes to secure them. Why Zamora should have chosen this method of securing himself, we fail to understand, when the transfer of the notes and the superior title would have given him all the lots to secure him. I-Ie may have had the secret design to place appel-lees in a position where he could claim the two lots without litigation, and be saved the trouble and expense of a foreclosure of the vendor's lien. Had he denied the agreement to reconvey the two lots, the fact that he had better security without the deed than with it would be a potent circumstance to show that the deed was given in full payment of the debt.

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Bluebook (online)
202 S.W. 215, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zamora-v-vela-texapp-1918.