This suit was brought by appellant, E. E. Henderson, against appel-lees, Morgan Jones and Prince Baxter and wife, for specific performance of a contract partly in parol and partly in writing, entered into on the 18th day of June, 1919, with Morgan Jones for the sale of real estate described, and, in the event specific performance cannot be decreed, appellant sues for damages stated which he alleges to be the difference between the market value of the premises and the contract price with Jones. As to Baxter' and wife, appellant alleges that they are asserting some character of claim to the land he purchased of Jones, and he sues to have whatever title or claim they have divested out of them, and vested in him and his title quieted. All appellees answered by general demurrer, special exceptions, and general denial. Baxter and wife further answered by way of cross-action, and aver that on March 21, 1919, they bought the property in controversy from Morgan Jones, and were in possession of the premises under a general warranty deed from Morgan Jones. They pleaded forcible entry by appellant and ejectment, and a continued occupancy of the premises by appellant to their damage. Appellant filed his first supplemental petition, in which he answered by general denial the matters contained in appellees’ answer, reasserts the title of the property to be in Jones, and other matters not necessary to state. The ease was tried with a jury. After evidence heard the court instructed a verdict for appellees.
Appellants’ first assignment asserts that the court was in error in instructing the jury to find for appellees, and in not submitting the case, as requested. Appellants present a number of propositions under this assignment, which we need not state.
We need not state the evidence nor the facts the evidence establishes as to the contract between appellant and appellee Jones *737 for the sale of the premises by Jones to appellant.
Appellant, having only a contract for title which Jones could not specifically perform, such contract did not have the effect to give him superior title over the Baxter deed. Had there been any evidence to support a finding that the Baxter deed was fraud or sham to enable Jones to avoid performance of his contract to convey, the question should have been submitted, but we find no evidence tending to establish fraud, or that the Baxter deed was ■ not a bona fide sale of the property. The evidence indicates only that Jones thought that Baxter might not meet his notes, and that the lien expressed in the deed might be foreclosed. But there is no evidence of fraud, and especially to which Baxter.was a party.
The third assignment claims error in rendering final judgment on the ground that the verdict does not finally dispose of all the material issues involved in the suit as made by the pleadings.
The verdict finds for Baxter and wife for title and possession of the premises in controversy, and for Morgan Jones.
The nunc pro tunc judgment rendered, we think, was a final judgment. Trammell v. Rosen,
Finding no reversible error, the case is affirmed.
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