270 S.W. 255 | Tex. App. | 1925
Brannon and wife answered by pleas of not guilty, general denial, and specially set up ownership in themselves of the land in controversy; that it was their homestead, used and occupied by them as such for many years prior to the conveyance to Gartman; that at the time of the conveyance of the land to Gartman, appellees, Brannon and wife, were indebted on notes not owned, but held, by Gartman, in the aggregate sum of about $5,500, and were indebted to W. B. Brannon for notes and money in an amount aggregating about $3,000, all of which amounts were long past due.
Appellees then allege, in effect, that Gartman proposed to them that they deed the land to him for the purpose of enabling him to take up their overdue obligations; that he had the money, and could carry them as long as they wanted him to carry them, and that by doing so it would enable them to sell other property and apply the proceeds to the debt to Gartman; that Gartman promised and pledged himself to reconvey the 213 acres of land to them and let them execute notes to him, which notes Gartman claimed he could handle; that the conveyance by them to Gartman of the land in controversy was made for the purpose of fixing a lien on said land to secure Gartman in the payment of said indebtedness, and was not intended as a bona fide sale of the land, all of which was thoroughly discussed and understood by all the parties to the transaction.
The pleadings and the uncontroverted evidence show that Gartman did not himself own any of the notes or obligations of appellees, and that on the execution and delivery of the deed in general warranty form, without any reservations to him, by appellees and W. B. Brannon, Gartman advanced the money and discharged all of the indebtedness, to the amount of $8,520, the consideration expressed in the deed.
The case was tried to a jury, and submitted upon the one issue, that, if the jury should find that it was intended by Gartman and the Brannons "to pass the title to the land in question to the plaintiff by the execution and delivery of the deed in question, and that there was no agreement or understanding between the parties that the said land was to be thereafter reconveyed by the plaintiff to the defendants," their verdict should be for the plaintiff, and submitted the converse of the proposition, that if the jury should find that it was the understanding of the parties that title was not to be passed to Gartman, but that it should thereafter be reconveyed by Gartman to the Brannons, their verdict would be for the defendants. The jury found for the Brannons upon the issue submitted and the judgment was so rendered.
"That was all of the indebtedness I believe we were owing at the time we sold out that Gartman held. The deed recites $8,520. The rest of that, after paying off those debts, whatever they were, the rest of that, $320, I believe, it was paid to me. That much was left after taking up all the outstanding indebtedness."
The fact is thus made clear by the evidence of appellee Mrs. Brannon that the old debts then owing by the appellees were paid off by appellant at the time of the conveyance, and a balance of $320 paid to Mrs. Brannon. Different courts have applied different tests in determining whether a transaction evidences a conditional sale or a mortgage. The difference is sometimes shadowy. The test as to whether a conveyance is a mortgage or a conditional sale, as applied in Ruffier v. Womack,
Miller v. Yturria,
In McCamant v. Roberts,
"In order to constitute a mortgage, there must be a debt to be secured, and while there may not be an express promise to pay, it must exist and the vendee must have a right to recover the same. Hubby v. Harris,
It was said in Berryman v. Schumaker,
In Rotan Grocery Co. v. Turner ex ux,
"An absolute deed delivered in payment of a debt is not converted into a mortgage merely because the grantee therein gives a contemporaneous stipulation binding him to reconvey, on being reimbursed within an agreed period, an amount equal to the debt and interest thereon. If the conveyance extinguishes the debt, and the parties so intended, so that a plea of payment would bar an action thereon, the transaction will be held an absolute or conditional sale, notwithstanding. And so, if there was in fact a sale, an agreement by the purchaser to resell the property within a limited time, at the same price, does not convert it into a mortgage. * * * The test, therefore, in cases of this sort, by which to determine whether the conveyance is a sale or a mortgage, is found in the question whether the debt is discharged or not by the conveyance."
We could add many other Texas cases, in effect the same as above.
The undisputed evidence in this case, in fact, the evidence of Mrs. Brannon herself, one of the appellees, brings the case clearly within the rules above stated, evidencing, as *257 we think, a sale of the property, rather then a mortgage to secure a debt. Here we have an absolute deed delivered by the grantors, with the agreement and understanding between the parties to the transaction that the grantee in the deed should marshal the outstanding past-due admitted obligations of the grantors, and use the consideration stated in the deed, furnished by the grantee, in paying off and discharging such obligations, all of which is admitted to have been done; the only defense suggested in the issues submitted being a promise of the grantee that he would resell the property to the grantors. Such promise, as held by the above authorities, does not have the effect to make the deed a mortgage. For reasons stated, the case is reversed, and, it appearing that the facts have been fully developed, judgment is here rendered for appellant.