69 Tex. 549 | Tex. | 1888
This suit was brought by appellees to recover of appellant certain lots in the city of Brownsville, upon which is situated a building known as the “Miller hotel.” The lots belonged to the community estate of appellant and of her husband, who died in 1883, and were claimed to be the homestead of the family. Miller and wife had occupied them since' 1861. In March, 1880, Miller was indebted to appellees separately as follows: To appellee Kennedy in the sum of two thousand three hundred and forty-one dollars and four cents, principal, besides interest, evidenced by a judgment of the district court of Cameron county, rendered in March, 1870; to Yturria, by a judgment in the same court dated June, 1872, for four thousand eight hundred and seventy-two dollars and eighty eight cents and the interest thereon, which judgment decreed a foreclosure of a lien upon the property in controversy; and to appellee Werbiski in the sum of two thousand seven hundred
Appellant’s defense was that the transaction was a mortgage merely for the security of the debts, and not a conditional sale; and that the property was her homestead at the time the instruments were executed, and that therefore appellees had no claim against it.
Upon the trial the court admitted, over the objection of appellant, the original judgments of Yturria, Kennedy and Werbiski, the record of the subsequent proceedings to revive those of Yturria and Kennedy, and the orders of the court showing a voluntary dismissal of those suits on the twelfth day of March, 1880. The first five assignments of error are to the action of the court in admitting these records and may be considered together.
The defendant offered to testify, that when she acknowledged the instruments before the county clerk, he gave her to understand that they were a mortgage; and also offered to prove by the clerk, that when he took the acknowledgment he explained to her that “she had the right to redeem her homestead property by paying the amount named in the two instruments and defeat the sale of the property, and that defendant signed the papers with the expression that: ‘If I can redeem my property I will sign the papers.’ ” The rulings of the court excluding this testimony are the grounds of the sixth and seventh assignments of error. It is well settled in this court, that the wife can not defeat a conveyance of the homstead or of her separate property, by showing that at the time her acknowledgment was taken she ' did not understand its import, or that the officer did not properly explain it to her, unless she also show that these facts were brought to the knowledge of the grantee. (Moore v. Moore, 59 Texas, 54; Pierce v. Fort, 60 Texas, 464; Edwards v. Dismukes, 53 Texas, 605; Williams v. Powers, 48 Texas, 141; Pool v. Chase, 46 Texas, 207.) Hence it was not error to exclude the evidence.
In regard to appellant’s eighth assignment of error, we are not prepared to say that the testimony, the admission of which is there complained of, was not objectionable. It seeems that the witness’s knowledge that all the parties understood the transaction, was rather a conclusion from the facts than a fact which could be proved by the mere general statement. But it also appears from the other testimony that appellees had declined to take a mortgage, for the very sufficient reason that the property was a homestead, and that they were willing to agree only either to an absolute or a conditional sale. There is no evidence tending to show that Henry Miller did not understand the transaction as making a conditional sale. In view of the very explicit statement in
The ninth assignment is that the court erred in refusing to give the jury the following charge requested by the defendant: If you believe from the evidence that there was a pre-existing debt due by Henry Miller and this defendant to plaintiffs, or to each one of them respectively, and that the instruments in writing executed by defendant and her husband and the plaintiffs, on the ninth day of March, 1880, was for the purpose of securing said indebtedness to plaintiffs, and that defendant had a right to defeat said sale by payment of a sum or sums of money, agreed upon between plaintiffs and defendant and her husband, then said instrument constituted but a mortgage, and you will find for the defendant.” This charge, viewed in its most favorable light, was calculated to mislead the jury. It may be, that if we use the word defeat in its technical sense, a conveyance which maybe defeated by the payment of a sum of money is but a mortgage. But if so without some further instruction, the jury would doubtless have understood this -instruction to require them to find for the defendant, if they found that within six years, the defendant had the right to repay the consideration and hold the property, or to use other words, if they found the transaction a conditional sale.
The special charge, the refusal of which is complained of in the tenth assignment is clearly objectionable, This would have authorized the jury to find for the defendant, if they found that the officer had not fully explained the instrument to her. This doctrine is contrary to the rulings of this court as we have previously shown, and besides there was no testimony to support such a charge. That which was offered, for the purpose of
The eleventh assignment which complains of the first paragraph of the general charge, and the twelfth which complains of the third paragraph, are submitted together. In the first the court instructed the jury, that the two instruments signed on the ninth day of March, 1880, the first by Henry Miller and Charlotte Miller, constituted an absolute sale to plaintiffs, and he second a conditional sale to Henry Miller and Charlotte Miller; and in the third paragraph it charged “That if the jury find that the two instruments constitute, the first an absolute sale, and the second a conditional sale, and that the conditional sale had not been complied with, they would find for plaintiffs.”
It is now insisted that these two instructions took the case from the jury and left, nothing for them to consider. This is true if they stood alone. These are, however, but the predicate for a full and elaborate charge upon the law of the case. These two instruments in controversy showed upon their face a conditional sale, if property can be sold in payment of a debt, with a condition for a repurchase by paying the debt and the interest, within some specified time. This last proposition can not be doubted. (Ruffier v. Womack, 30 Texas, 332; Harvey v. Edens, ante, 420; Holly v. Horris, 3 S. W. Rep., 558; s. c., 68 Texas, 91.) A conveyance, however, which purports to be a sale either absolute or conditional, may be shown to’ be a mortgage by proving that it was intended merely as a security for a debt. It was-the duty of the court to construe the instruments in the first instance and instruct the jury as to their effect, and then to charge them what was necessary to be proved in order to show the conveyance to be but a mortgage. This the court did. The charge, as a whole, is full, clear and concise, land distinctly presented the issues made by the pleading and evidence.
At the request of plaintiffs, the court charged the jury “ that the burden of proof to establish that the documents in evidence constitute a mortgage, is upon defendant, and she is required ‘to establish the same as a mortgage by clear and convincing proof, and if you are not satisfied by such evidence that the same is a mortgage, and not a conditional sale, you will find for plaintiff.” The giving of this charge is also assigned as error. It has been held by this court that, in order to establish that an absolute deed is intended as a mortgage, it must be proved with clearness and certainty (Moreland v. Barnhart, 44 Texas, 275; Markham
The only testimony which tends to show that the agreement was a mortgage is that of the defendant herself. She says that Yturria told her if they could pay the amount within six years, they could do so. This is not inconsistent with the face of the agreement, and does not show a mortgage. She, it is true, calls the instrument a mortgage; but this was evidently her own conclusion. She does not testify that the antecedent debts were not fully extinguished; and the fact of the continued existence of a debt to be secured, is held to be the true test of a mortgage. (Harvey v. Edens, supra; Ruffier v. Womack, supra; Alston v. Cundiff, 52 Texas, 453; Calhoun v. Lumpkin, 60 Texas, 185.) Appellees testified that the debts were discharged; the agreement so provides; and immediately after the consummation of
The fourteenth assignment is too general to call for our consideration.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Opinion delivered January 27, 1888.