58 S.W. 951 | Tex. | 1900
Thomas Gonzales and Edith Boyer Gonzales were husband and wife on and prior to the 13th day of June, 1886, at which time the land in controversy was conveyed to Thomas Gonzales for the expressed consideration of $8500. Soon after the conveyance, Thomas Gonzales, with his family, moved upon and improved the property and continued to reside upon it as a homestead until his death. On the 25th day of April, 1890, Thomas Gonzales signed a deed, which, by its terms, conveyed the property in litigation to his wife, Edith Boyer Gonzales, expressing in the deed a consideration of $6500. The deed was acknowledged by Thomas Gonzales before a notary public on May 24, 1890, but was not recorded until after his death, which occurred *123 December 31, 1896. Edith Boyer Gonzales died on the 31st of January, 1895. There was evidence to show that in her lifetime Edith Boyer Gonzales had possession of the deed and kept it in an iron box with some private papers, and that after her death and after the death of Thomas Gonzales the deed was found in that box. There was no proof of the payment of any consideration by Edith Gonzales to her husband.
Thomas and Edith Boyer Gonzales left three children surviving them, to wit, Boyer and Julian C. Gonzales and Frances C. Stanwood. Mrs. Gonzales died intestate, but Thomas Gonzales at his death left a will by which he appointed his two sons, Boyer and Julian C., his executors. In the course of the administration upon his estate the property in question was not placed upon the inventory. Adoue Lobit presented to the executors a claim against the estate of Thomas Gonzales, duly proved, for the sum of $4248.80, which was allowed by the executors and approved by the County Court.
Adoue Lobit instituted this suit in the District Court of Galveston County to establish the claim of the estate of Thomas Gonzales to the property in question and to compel the executors to place it upon their inventory as a part of the estate. The executors, as well as the heirs of the testator and of the deceased mother, were made parties defendant. The suit is based upon the theory that the property in controversy was the homestead of Thomas Gonzales and his wife, and that at the time of its designation as a homestead it exceeded in value the sum of $5000, over and above all improvements upon it, and the plaintiffs seek to subject the excess in the value of the property at the time the home was established upon it to the payment of the debts of Thomas Gonzales. The deed from Thomas Gonzales to his wife is attacked upon the grounds (1) that it was made without consideration, was voluntary, and that at the time it was executed Thomas Gonzales did not have other property sufficient to pay his debts, and that the debt of the plaintiff existed at the time the deed was made; (2) that the deed was never delivered to Edith Boyer Gonzales.
Thomas Gonzales was a cotton buyer in the city of Galveston for many years and did his business with the defendants in error, a banking firm. He bought cotton and drew upon the bank for its payment, selling the cotton and depositing the money, which went to his credit in satisfaction of his account. At the time the deed was made there stood upon the books of the banking firm a charge against Thomas Gonzales of $11,586.47 for money that he had drawn for the purchase of cotton, and which cotton he at the time held and soon thereafter sold for $12,000 and deposited the proceeds with the bank, which more than paid the charge that stood against him at the date of the deed. Subsequently to this date, Gonzales continued for a number of years to do a cotton business with Adoue Lobit, drawing money and giving checks therefor, buying cotton, selling it, and depositing the proceeds; and at several times between that date and his death the firm was in his debt, as shown by its books. In the course of time Gonzales ceased to pay *124 his checks at the bank and there accumulated against him an indebtedness, for which, with interest, the account was presented to the executors and approved, as before stated.
The case is presented in this court upon many grounds of objection to the judgment of the court below, but we find only two points that we think it necessary to discuss: (1) The trial court permitted the defendants in error to prove the existence of debts against Thomas Gonzales after the date when the conveyance was made, to which exception was taken and the ruling is brought under review in this court; (2) the court gave two charges bearing upon the subject of the delivery and taking effect of the deed from Thomas Gonzales to his wife, which were excepted to and are here presented for revision.
For a number of years Thomas Gonzales did a business with the firm of Adoue Lobit, drawing his checks upon the firm in payment for cotton purchased by him for shipment and sale. When the cotton was sold, the proceeds were deposited in the bank to the credit of Gonzales in liquidation of the account created in the purchase of it. Adoue Lobit trusted Gonzales upon their faith that he would deposit the proceeds of the cotton when sold. At the time the deed was made from Thomas Gonzales to his wife, the books of Adoue Lobit showed an indebtedness on the part of Gonzales in the sum of $11,586.47, created in the usual way of purchasing cotton then held by Gonzales and subsequently sold for $12,000, which was deposited with Adoue Lobit, thereby more than liquidating the sum charged against him.
No part of the indebtedness that existed at the time the deed was made is included in the claim sought to be enforced in this action, but the defendants in error insist that because the cotton business of Gonzales was continued with the defendants in error for years subsequently to the conveyance of this property to the wife, the indebtedness falls in the class termed in law "acontinuing debt." Where a debt exists at the time a voluntary conveyance is made by the debtor and subsequently the debtor gives a note for an account or in lieu of a note, the original debt still continues and will hold preference over the voluntary conveyance as if no change in the debt had been made. Bump on Fraud. Conv., sec. 103; Brown v. McDonald, 1 Hill's Ch. Rep. (S.C.), 304. But the authorities are uniform to the effect that where the debt existing at the making of the voluntary conveyance is in fact paid by the debtor, no debt subsequently created between the same parties, although in the transaction of the same character of business, will be considered as a debt existing at the date of the conveyance. Willis Bro. v. McIntyre,
At the request of the defendants in error, the trial court gave the following charge: "And I further instruct you that even if such was Thomas Gonzales' intention (that the deed should take effect) the deed *125
would still not be valid until delivered to grantee and accepted by her; and the burden of proof is upon the defendants to show by a preponderance of evidence that Thomas Gonzales actually intended the deed to become operative as a conveyance, that it was delivered to the grantee and accepted by her." (The words in parenthesis are inserted by the writer.) The effect of this charge was to inform the jury that if they believed from the evidence that Thomas Gonzales intended by the deed to convey the property to his wife, still they could not find for the defendants in the case, unless it was proved that the wife accepted the deed which was delivered to her and that the delivery was made by Thomas Gonzales with the intent that it should take effect and pass title to her. In other words, the burden was imposed upon the defendants in the case to prove that the grantor intended to do what he did by the terms of his deed and that the grantee accepted that which she received and retained. The correctness of such a proposition can not be maintained and is not seriously asserted in this court, but it is claimed by the defendants in error that this should not cause a reversal of the judgment, because the court, at the request of the defendants below, gave to the jury the following instruction: "If you believe from the evidence that the deed dated April 25, 1890, from Thomas Gonzales to his wife, was in her iron box containing her private papers during her lifetime, and if you further believe from the evidence that the said Thomas Gonzales was, at the date of said deed, possessed of sufficient property, exclusive of the northeast quarter of outlot number sixty-two (62), in Galveston, to meet his obligations then existing at the time, you will find your verdict for defendant." This charge, in effect, told the jury that if they believed the deed was found in Mrs. Gonzales' iron box, they would find for defendant without other proof of the intent of the grantor or of acceptance by the grantee. When a court has committed error by giving a charge, it can not be corrected by giving a correct charge without referring to that which is erroneous. Baker v. Ashe,
The judgments of the District Court and of the Court of Civil Appeals are reversed and this cause is remanded for further trial.
Reversed and remanded.