This suit for divorce and partition of community property was instituted by ap-pellee against appellant. Appellant filed her cross action seeking divorce against appel-lee and for partition or other disposition of the property of the parties “according to the court’s instructions.” By supplemental petition, appellee alleged that certain real and personal property was his in his separate right and prayed that it be set aside to him.
The cause was tried by the court and judgment was rendered granting appellant a divorce and partitioning certain personal community property. The court also awarded to appellee, as his separate property, the home of the parties consisting of about 18 acres of land and dwelling thereon near Livingston in Polk County, and a vendor’s lien note representing the balance owing on the sale of appellee’s 425 acre ranch in Austin County.
Appellant asserts that the trial court erred in holding that the homestead of the parties was appellee’s separate property, and in holding that the balance owing on the vendor’s lien note on the 425 acre tract was his separate property.
The facts as to these two items of property follow. The parties married in 1956. At this time appellee owned the 425 acre ranch and a small herd of cattle thereon. They lived on this ranch from time of marriage for about 17 months. On September 12, 1957, this ranch was sold by the parties to W. O. Huggins, Jr. for $50,000.00, of which sum $16,275.00 was cash and the balance of $33,725.00 was represented by a vendor’s lien note, payable in 10 yearly installments, the first of which became due September 12, 1958. This note bears interest at the rate of 5% per annum payable annually in addition to principal installment. Included in the sale was the herd of cattle.
Appellant claims that in the first 17 months of their marriage calves were born to the cows in the herd on the ranch and that improvements were made upon the place and, therefore, the note was their community property. The trial court filed findings of fact and among these was the
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finding that a few calves were born to the cows owned by appellee prior to the marriage, but the exact number and approximate value at the time of sale of the ranch was not established in the evidence. He further found that no material improvements were placed upon the ranch which enhanced the value of the property, and that the improvements were in the nature of general maintenance. In view of these findings, we hold the trial court was correct in awarding appellee the vendor’s lien note upon the ground that it was his separate property. Norris v. Vaughan,
Upon the day that the ranch was sold and the note above described executed, appellee obtained a loan in the amount of $15,000 from the Austin County State Bank. This loan was represented by a note executed by appellee and appellant, and was payable to the bank in six annual installments of $2,500.00 each which would make the installments fall due on the same day and month of each year for six years as the installments on the vendor’s lien note for the sale of the ranch fell due. It was shown that the bank required appellant’s signature on the note and that the Huggins vendor’s lien note was assigned by appel-lee to the bank as collateral security for the payment of the $15,000 note.
With $9,000.00 of the $16,275.00 cash consideration paid appellee for the farm, and the $15,000 borrowed from the bank, the home consisting of some 18 acres of land near Livingston was bought by appel-lee and appellant. The deed recited a cash consideration paid by them and was made to them as grantees.
Since this 18 acre tract was conveyed to the parties during marriage, it is presumptively community property. However, $9,000.00 of the consideration paid for the property was appellee’s separate property. His separate estate, therefore, owns a ¾⅛⅛ interest therein. Appellant insists that at least x%4ths of the purchase price of the Polk County home is community property. This, because her signature was required on the note and because there was no agreement existing between the Austin County Bank and the makers of the note that the money loaned was to be the separate property of appellee, and that the bank would look to appellee’s separate estate for payment of the note. The trial court has found that while the community estate was secondarily liable for payment of the note, there was no reasonable possibility that a resort to the community estate of the parties would ever have been necessary to obtain repayment of the loan. We hold that this is not equivalent to the requirement that in order that the title represented by the money borrowed from the bank would constitute the separate estate of appellee, that it was agreed at the time that such title would be his separate property, and that the bank would look
only
to his separate estate for satisfaction of the deferred payments. This is the test, as we understand it, set out in Gleich v. Bongio,
Appellee relies upon Sparks v. Taylor,
Appellee insists, in any event, that the trial court’s action awarding appellee the homeplace should be upheld because of the late holding of our Supreme Court in Reardon v. Reardon, Tex.,
While the ranch note was assigned to the bank as security for the $15,000 note, it was agreed that appellee should collect the yearly installments on this note and from these installments pay the yearly installments to the bank on its note. Appellant says that since she and appellee would go to this bank and deposit the installment collected on the Huggins ranch note in their joint account and at the same time give a check on this account to this bank for the $2,500.00 due the bank for the yearly installments on the $15,000 note that the depositing of the money in the bank commingled appellee’s separate funds so collected with the community funds, and thus the payments on the $15,000 note were from the community. At the time the money was borrowed from the bank, the court found that, “it was then agreed, that the- proceeds collected each year on- the note from W. O. Huggins, Jr., would'be paid to the Austin County State Bank for credit on the $15,000 note executed in exchange for a part of the consideration paid for the purchase of the Polk County property. * * * and it was the understanding of all parties that these payments would be made from and out of funds collected by Arthur H. Beeler on the note executed to his order by W. O. Huggins, Jr., in partial payment for the Austin County acreage sold to him by Arthur H. Beeler.” The trial court found that the payments made by Huggins to appellee upon the vendor’s lien note were used by appellee in paying the annual installments due September 12, of the years 1958-1960 on the $15,000 note, and' that it was not the intention of the parties to commingle such funds with the community funds of the parties. Thé bank made an unusual arrangement for collection on the Huggins note with appellee and appellant. While holding the note as collateral with the right to--collect its proceeds, it was agreed- that appellee would do so and use same to pay the yearly installments on the bank’s note. In view of this agreement, which appears to have been strictly complied with, the fact that the sum of $2,500.00, plus interest on the Huggins note was momentarily deposited in the joint bank account of the appellee and appellant, and thereupon withdrawn to pay the bank, cannot convert such $2,500 plus interest to community funds. Such sum, in each instance, was, in effect, earmarked a trust fund, in equity already belonging to the bank from the moment collected by appel-lee. Driskill v. Boyd, Tex.Civ.App.,
Appellant attacks numerous findings of the court. This is done in only one point of most general nature. Appellee contends the point is so multifarious, unique and
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uncertain we should not consider it. .Ap-pellee’s contention is sustained. Johnson-Sampson Cont. Co. v. W. & W. Waterproofing Co., Tex.Civ.App.,
We have been concerned as to the proper judgment to render herein. ' No attack or complaint has been made with reference to the granting of the divorce or the disposition of the personal property between the parties, except as to the Huggins note. The questions here have been the title to the home place of 18 acres and said note. The right of reimbursement from the community estate to appellee’s separate estate for the deferred payments on this home place is an equity and mathematical certainty in a judgment disposing of such question is not required. Dakan v. Dakan,
