276 S.W. 784 | Tex. App. | 1925
The court submitted the case to the jury on special issues, which said issues and the answers thereto are as follows:
"(1) Was N.J. Bozeman solvent in September, 1922? Answer `Yes' or `No.' Answer: Yes.
"(2) Did N.J. Bozeman convey by parol gift the lot in question to his daughter, Bonnie, in September, 1922? Answer `Yes' or `No.' Answer: Yes.
"If you answer special issues Nos. 1 and 2 `Yes,' you need not answer special issue No. 3, but if you answer either of them `No,' then you are asked to answer special issue No. 3.
"(3) Were the improvements placed upon said lot by George Ewing and wife placed there in good faith? Answer `Yes' or `No.' Not answered."
On the jury's answers to said special issues the court entered Judgment making perpetual the temporary injunction theretofore granted.
In the later case of Maddox et al. v. Summerlin et ux.,
"As to pre-existing debts, the gift was, by the statute, prima facie void and the property subject to the payment of such debts of Summerlin unless the donee should make it appear that he was, at the time the gift was made, `possessed of property within this state, subject to execution, sufficient to pay his existing debts.' The terms of the statute are so plain that it is not necessary to add argument to enforce it."
This is the rule that has been followed generally by our Texas appellate courts. But, if the rule were as stated in the case of Walker v. Loring, supra, the rule there announced was not intended as a rule of evidence. We do not think that the question as to what property will sell for at execution sale is a matter for expert testimony. That is a matter that a jury would doubtless know as much about as any witness that might be produced. The question involved in special issue No. 1 was not the reasonable market value of the 130-acre farm, but the question involved was whether Bozeman was solvent or insolvent at the time he gave the lot involved to his daughter. And in connection with this issue the court gave the following instruction:
"In assisting you in arriving at your verdict in this case, the term `solvent' is defined to mean a person who has property sufficient to *786 pay all his debts in full at once, or as they become due, and that all of his debts can be collected when due by legal process."
So the jury, in finding that Bozeman was solvent in September, 1922, necessarily found that at said time he had property subject to execution out of which all his debts could have been collected by legal process. Under the instructions and explanations of the court the question of solvency or insolvency of Bozeman in September, 1922, the time the gift was made, was a question for the determination of the jury, and in their determination of said question they were entitled to know and consider the reasonable market value of said farm at said time. The evidence of the witness Howard was properly admitted. We overrule appellant's thirteenth and fourteenth assignments.
By several other assignments appellants contend that the trial court erred in refusing to instruct a verdict in their favor. The theory on which the case was tried was that, if N.J. Bozeman, at the time he gave the lot in question to his daughter, retained a sufficient amount of property to pay his then existing debts — in other words, if he was then solvent, not including the lot in controversy — then in that event the daughter took good title to said lot. This was the correct theory for the trial — at least, would have been, if the pleading had alleged that appellants were creditors of N.J. Bozeman at the time the parol conveyance was made. Article 3967, Revised Civil Statutes. The parol conveyance of the lot in question was made September 9, 1922. The witness J. B. Howard testified, as stated above, that he was familiar with the 130-acre farm in question, and had been 12 or 15 years, and that he was engaged in the real estate business, and a short time before August 9, 1922, he sold two or three small places of about the same grade and quality; that the Bozeman farm of 130 acres in August, 1922, was of the reasonable market value of $50 per acre. There are some circumstances, but no direct evidence, tending to show that about a year and a half later said farm was not worth as much as the witness Howard testified it was worth in August, 1922. This question of the solvency or insolvency of Bozeman in September, 1922, was a question of fact for the jury. The trial court defined the term "solvent," as stated above, and appellants presented no objections to the court's definition of the term "solvent." The court also instructed the jury that the burden of proof was on appellees to establish by a preponderance of the evidence the affirmative of the two issues submitted. It is true this 130-acre farm was the only property subject to execution that Bozeman had left after the gift of said lot on September 9, 1922, to his daughter. It is also true on said date his only indebtedness was two notes, both secured by deeds of trust on said farm, and some delinquent taxes. The question for the jury was the solvency of Bozeman on September 9, 1922, and to find him solvent they were required to find that said farm could be sold at private sale or under legal process in September, 1922, for a sufficient amount to pay all of Bozeman's debts. If said farm could on said date have been sold for what the witness Howard testified it was reasonably worth, then it was ample to pay all of Bozeman's debts, and leave an equity of some $2,500 in Bozeman. It is a matter of common knowledge that land values vary according, somewhat, to local conditions, such as crop failures, drouths, etc. If Bozeman, on September 9, 1922, was solvent, in that said farm was ample to pay all his debts, then the gift to his daughter was legal, and the daughter took good title to the lot in controversy, and, if more than a year later Bozeman was insolvent, in that said farm was not sufficient to pay all his debts, this later insolvency could not affect the legality of said gift to his daughter. The jury found that in September, 1922, N.J. Bozeman was solvent, and their finding is, we think, supported by the evidence. It is also true that, in order for appellants to question the validity of the parol conveyance from Bozeman to his daughter of September 9, 1922, under the provisions of article 3967 of the Revised Civil Statutes, it was incumbent upon them to plead and prove that they were prior creditors of Bozeman, and, appellants not having pleaded that they had any claim against Bozeman prior to the date of said parol conveyance, they failed to bring themselves within the purview of said article of our statutes. Moore et al. v. Belt (Tex.Civ.App.)
We have carefully examined all of appellants' assignments, and find that there is no reversible error disclosed by any of them, and the judgment is in all things affirmed. *787