53 S.W. 382 | Tex. App. | 1899
Lead Opinion
In August, 1887, J. E. Settle and wife, being the owners of 160 acres of land, in consideration of $1 and their interest in the cause of public education, conveyed a small portion thereof to the trustees and their successors in office of the east half of School District Fo. 73, of Cooke County, Texas, known as the Bear Head community, the deed concluding with the following clause: “To have and to hold unto the said trustees aforesaid so long as. said lands shall be used by said district for school purposes, together with all and singular the rights and improvements thereto belonging/’
Thereupon the public school trustees erected a schoolhouse upon the
The first contention raised by the assignments of error is to the effect that the injunction should have been dissolved upon the ground that sequestration was an adequate legal remedy; but we are of opinion that, under article 2789, subdivisions 1 and 2, Revised Statutes, express provision is made for the issuance of injunction in cases like this, which provision is of as high statutory authority as the provisions in the chapter regulating the remedy of sequestration. Besides, to prevent threatened waste injunction has long been a familiar remedy. See Hammond v. Martin, 15 Texas Civ. App., 570, cited by appellant.
Complaint is next made of the exclusion from the evidence of the declarations of I. D. Settle, made while he was in possession of the 160 acres tract of land under a conveyance from his father and mother, J. E. Settle and wife, and when he was about to convey the same to one Giddins, from whom the appellees deraigned title. These declarations were made before the trustees had abandoned the use of the premises, and were to the effect that when I. D. Settle sold the land to Giddins Settle stated to him that he claimed no interest in the schoolhouse, and that if the school community ever ceased to use the house for school purposes the land would revert to him, but the school building would not; that that belonged to the school community, and that he wanted Giddins to understand that when he bought the land he got no interest in the schoolhouse.
If the conveyance of the entire 160 acres to I. D. Settle passed to him the right to claim the reversion in case of condition broken, these declarations came clearly within the familiar rule which permits the introduction in evidence against subsequent vendees of the declarations in disparagement of title made by the vendor while in possession.
They were admissions against interest, and tended to support the contention of appellant that the schoolhouse had been built upon the land with the understanding between the original grantors^ J. E. Settle and wife, and the trusteejs that the same should remain the property of the school community and be removed from the land, the evidence being conflicting upon this issue. On the other hand, if the right to take advantage of the forfeiture did not pass by this deed to I. D. Settle, the appellees could not maintain this suit. The assignment of error
The charge is next complained of, as well as the court’s action in refusing certain special instructions requested by appellant. We are inclined to the opinion that the second special instruction should have been given, as the main charge seems, in view of some phases of the evidence, to have submitted the issue in too’ restricted a form. This suggestion is made with reference to another trial, without determining that the judgment should be reversed upon this ground.
There was error, we think, in permitting the jury, over the objection of appellant, to take into their consultation room the affidavit which had been read in evidence by agreement as the testimony of one of appellee’s witnesses, this practice being at least impliedly forbidden by statute. Rev. Stats., art. 1303. This affidavit was, within the meaning of the article cited, the deposition of the witness, and was perhaps the strongest evidence supporting the contention of the appellees upon the controverted issue.
But it is insisted on the part of the appellees, in support of their cross-assignment of error, that the judgment should be affirmed notwithstanding any errors in the proceedings, upon the ground that the language of the deed as above quoted itself had the effect of excluding any inquiry as to the understanding or oral agreement that the house should remain the property of the school community and be removed from the premises, the contention being that appellant sought by the issue made on the trial to vary by paroi the effect of this deed.
In support of this contention the case of Jungerman v. Bovee, 19 California, 364, is mainly relied on-. In that case, however, the lease contained an express stipulation for the delivery at the expiration of the term of the premises, including, as was said in the opinion, the buildings.
On the other hand, the Massachusetts cases cited by appellant strongly support the opposing contention, particularly the case of Ryder v. Baxan, 50 New England Reporter, 631, in which it was held that the lessee might show by paroi an agreement made when the lease was executed that the buildings to- be erected on the premises should remain the property of the lessee, though the lease contained the covenant that at the termination of the lease the lessee should deliver up the premises in as good order and condition as they then were, the contemplated building not yet having been erected.
. For an instructive discussion of the application of the rule in cases of this class, with a review of the authorities, see the earlier Massachusetts case of Dorkin v. Cobleigh, 30 New England Reporter, 474.
We have finally concluded that while the case at bar is almost within the rule which perforce of the written contract excludes a contemporaneous paroi agreement, it is not quite so>; but that the agreement or understanding, in effect, that the schoolhouse to be erected on the land donated should not become a part thereof, but should remain the property of the community building it, was collateral to and distinct from the conditional conveyance of the land as expressed in the deed, 'which did not purport on its face to do more than convey real estate, together with the rights and improvements (then) thereto belonging,” upon the condition named. It did not undertake to determine whether or not the schoolhouse then in contemplation should when built become a part of the realty. It was no part of the land when the deed was made, and hence was not covered by the terms of the conveyance. The purpose of the paroi testimony was to show that the schoolhouse never became a part of the land, and this was entirely consistent with the-deed.
The judgment is therefore reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
Rehearing
OX MOTION EOB REHEARING.
In the opinion already filed reversing the judgment in this case, wepretermitted any expression of opinion on the question of the right of the appellees, the vendees >of Settle and wife, to maintain this suit. It is now insisted that this may be taken upon another trial as an intimartion by this court prejudicial to- the appellees, and we are therefore requested to determine this question upon the authorities cited in the motion for rehearing, the contention being that the qualifying clause, “so long as said lands shall be used by said district for schotil purposes,” was but a conditional limitation and not a condition subsequent.
The authority cited to support this proposition (3 Washburn on Real Propertjr, pages 25, 26, 27,) seem to sustain it. Amongst other cases cited in the footnotes is that of Ashley v. Warner, 11 Gray, 43, in which the court used the following language: “Goodale declined to give the plaintiff a lease, but told him That so long as he kept a good school he might have his share of the building.’ This agreement of. Goodale gave the plaintiff a tenancy at will, but a tenancy with a conditional limitation. It was not on the eonditon of keeping a good school, but so long as he kept a good school. The distinction is nice and technical, but yet quite familiar law. If the tenancy were upon a condition and there
This view we are inclined to adopt. We are also of opinion that it to some extent fortifies the position taken in the original opinion in disposing of the cross-assignment of error.
The motion for rehearing will be overruled.
Overruled.
Lead Opinion
In August, 1887, J.E. Settle and wife, being the owners of 160 acres of land, in consideration of $1 and their interest in the cause of public education, conveyed a small portion thereof to the trustees and their successors in office of the east half of School District No. 73, of Cooke County, Texas, known as the Bear Head community, the deed concluding with the following clause: "To have and to hold unto the said trustees aforesaid so long as said lands shall be used by said district for school purposes, together with all and singular the rights and improvements thereto belonging."
Thereupon the public school trustees erected a schoolhouse upon the *602 land so conveyed, and continued to use the same for school purposes until a short time before the institution of this suit, when the same was abandoned and the schoolhouse sold, preparatory to the building of a new schoolhouse at another place, the appellant becoming the purchaser at this sale. His attempt to remove the house provoked this suit, which was brought to recover the land and to enjoin the removal of the house. The appellees, who are the remote vendees of J.E. Settle and wife, under deeds conveying the entire 160 acres of land, recovered judgment for the title and possession both of the land and the house, with a decree perpetually restraining appellant from entering upon the land and removing the house therefrom, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
The first contention raised by the assignments of error is to the effect that the injunction should have been dissolved upon the ground that sequestration was an adequate legal remedy; but we are of opinion that, under article 2789, subdivisions 1 and 2, Revised Statutes, express provision is made for the issuance of injunction in cases like this, which provision is of as high statutory authority as the provisions in the chapter regulating the remedy of sequestration. Besides, to prevent threatened waste injunction has long been a familiar remedy. See Hammond v. Martin, 15 Texas Civ. App. 570[
Complaint is next made of the exclusion from the evidence of the declarations of I.D. Settle, made while he was in possession of the 160 acres tract of land under a conveyance from his father and mother, J.E. Settle and wife, and when he was about to convey the same to one Giddins, from whom the appellees deraigned title. These declarations were made before the trustees had abandoned the use of the premises, and were to the effect that when I.D. Settle sold the land to Giddins Settle stated to him that he claimed no interest in the schoolhouse, and that if the school community ever ceased to use the house for school purposes the land would revert to him, but the school building would not; that that belonged to the school community, and that he wanted Giddins to understand that when he bought the land he got no interest in the schoolhouse.
If the conveyance of the entire 160 acres to I.D. Settle passed to him the right to claim the reversion in case of condition broken, these declarations came clearly within the familiar rule which permits the introduction in evidence against subsequent vendees of the declarations in disparagement of title made by the vendor while in possession.
They were admissions against interest, and tended to support the contention of appellant that the schoolhouse had been built upon the land with the understanding between the original grantors, J.E. Settle and wife, and the trustees that the same should remain the property of the school community and be removed from the land, the evidence being conflicting upon this issue. On the other hand, if the right to take advantage of the forfeiture did not pass by this deed to I.D. Settle, the appellees could not maintain this suit. The assignment of error *603 complaining of this ruling is therefore sustained. We express no opinion on the question as to whether the vendees of J.E. Settle and wife could avail themselves of the abandonment and forfeiture, as the question has not been briefed. But see 2 Washburn on Real Property, fifth edition, pages 2, 3, 14-18, for the mode of taking advantage of a breach of condition working a forfeiture of an estate at common law. How far this has been modified in Texas we do not stop to inquire.
The charge is next complained of, as well as the court's action in refusing certain special instructions requested by appellant. We are inclined to the opinion that the second special instruction should have been given, as the main charge seems, in view of some phases of the evidence, to have submitted the issue in too restricted a form. This suggestion is made with reference to another trial, without determining that the judgment should be reversed upon this ground.
There was error, we think, in permitting the jury, over the objection of appellant, to take into their consultation room the affidavit which had been read in evidence by agreement as the testimony of one of appellee's witnesses, this practice being at least impliedly forbidden by statute. Rev. Stats., art. 1303. This affidavit was, within the meaning of the article cited, the deposition of the witness, and was perhaps the strongest evidence supporting the contention of the appellees upon the controverted issue.
But it is insisted on the part of the appellees, in support of their cross-assignment of error, that the judgment should be affirmed notwithstanding any errors in the proceedings, upon the ground that the language of the deed as above quoted itself had the effect of excluding any inquiry as to the understanding or oral agreement that the house should remain the property of the school community and be removed from the premises, the contention being that appellant sought by the issue made on the trial to vary by parol the effect of this deed.
In support of this contention the case of Jungerman v. Bovee, 19 California, 364, is mainly relied on. In that case, however, the lease contained an express stipulation for the delivery at the expiration of the term of the premises, including, as was said in the opinion, the buildings.
On the other hand, the Massachusetts cases cited by appellant strongly support the opposing contention, particularly the case of Ryder v. Faxan, 50 New England Reporter, 631, in which it was held that the lessee might show by parol an agreement made when the lease was executed that the buildings to be erected on the premises should remain the property of the lessee, though the lease contained the covenant that at the termination of the lease the lessee should deliver up the premises in as good order and condition as they then were, the contemplated building not yet having been erected.
For an instructive discussion of the application of the rule in cases of this class, with a review of the authorities, see the earlier Massachusetts case of Dorkin v. Cobleigh, 30 New England Reporter, 474. *604
See also the following cases cited by appellant, which are more or less in point: Thomas v. Hammond,
We have finally concluded that while the case at bar is almost within the rule which perforce of the written contract excludes a contemporaneous parol agreement, it is not quite so; but that the agreement or understanding, in effect, that the schoolhouse to be erected on the land donated should not become a part thereof, but should remain the property of the community building it, was collateral to and distinct from the conditional conveyance of the land as expressed in the deed, which did not purport on its face to do more than convey real estate, together with the rights and improvements (then) thereto belonging," upon the condition named. It did not undertake to determine whether or not the schoolhouse then in contemplation should when built become a part of the realty. It was no part of the land when the deed was made, and hence was not covered by the terms of the conveyance. The purpose of the parol testimony was to show that the schoolhouse never became a part of the land, and this was entirely consistent with the deed.
The judgment is therefore reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
The authority cited to support this proposition (2 Washburn on Real Property, pages 25, 26, 27,) seem to sustain it. Amongst other cases cited in the footnotes is that of Ashley v. Warner, 11 Gray, 43, in which the court used the following language: "Goodale declined to give the plaintiff a lease, but told him `that so long as he kept a good school he might have his share of the building.' This agreement of Goodale gave the plaintiff a tenancy at will, but a tenancy with a conditional limitation. It was not on the condition of keeping a good school, but so long as he kept a good school. The distinction is nice and technical, but yet quite familiar law. If the tenancy were upon a condition and there *605 were a breach, the estate would not determine but upon the entry of the lessor after such breach. Being a conditional limitation, the estate determines upon the happening of the contingency, to wit, the ceasing or failure to keep a good school by the plaintiff."
This view we are inclined to adopt. We are also of opinion that it to some extent fortifies the position taken in the original opinion in disposing of the cross-assignment of error.
The motion for rehearing will be overruled.
Overruled.