230 S.W. 819 | Tex. App. | 1921
On March 3, 1918, appellee and appellant entered into an agreement to the effect that appellee would on the following day execute to appellant an oil and gas lease on 10,282 acres of land, for the consideration of $3,598.70 cash, to be paid by appellant. On the following day a lease was executed, in accordance with said agreement, which recited the cash payment of the amount above stated. None of said cash was paid, however except the $50 paid on the day before as earnest money. Appellee and his wife, on March 4th, executed the lease and delivered the same to appellant, in the courthouse at San Saba; and the same was thereupon handed to the clerk for record by appellant, in the presence of appellee. No part of the cash consideration, except the $50 referred to, has been paid. The court submitted the case upon special issues, No. 3 of which is as follows:
"* * * Was it plaintiff's intention that said contract should not be effective and binding on him in case defendant failed to place said balance cash consideration to his credit in said bank on March 4, 1918?"
To which the jury answered "Yes."
Appellee testified as follows:
"This lease was executed on the 4th day of March, 1918, and just prior to that time I had a conversation with Mr. Parker about this oil and gas lease. After this contract, this oil and gas lease, was executed, I delivered it to Mr. Parker, downstairs here in the courthouse. At that time Mr. Parker did not pay me the $3,598.70, the consideration expressed in the oil lease, and he has never to this day paid me that money. In the agreement that we had it was understood that this money was to be put in the first National Bank. * * * As I have stated, Mr. Parker has never paid me this money. I have gone to the bank from time to time to see if Mr. Parker had left any money there for me, but he never left any for me. * * * It is true that after the lease was executed, and I delivered it to Mr. Parker, that he took it to the clerk's office, and had it filed *820 for record. I saw him file this lease. At the time I delivered this lease, I did not intend that it should have effect until the money was placed in the bank."
We sustain appellant's proposition of law, both as to the admission of the testimony and the action of the court in submitting question No. 3. A deed which is complete upon its face and sufficient to pass title without any conditions therein stated, cannot be delivered to the grantee to be held in escrow; and oral testimony that such deed so delivered was not to take effect except upon the happening of some subsequent event is not admissible. Holt v. Gordon,
In Mowry v. Heney,
In Haworth v. Norris,
In Lawton v. Sager, 11 Barb. (N.Y.) 349, it was held that parol evidence was not admissible to show that the deed was intended to take effect upon a condition not expressed therein.
Many authorities are cited in the notes referred to in support of this proposition.
The instant case is stronger against the admission of the testimony given, for the reason that such testimony did not show an oral agreement, acquiesced in by both parties, but only the secret and undisclosed intention of the appellee.
For the reason that the court erred in admitting the testimony referred to, and in submitting special issue No. 3, this cause is reversed, and remanded for a new trial. *821