277 S.W. 189 | Tex. App. | 1925
Appellee instituted this suit in the district court of Duval county against appellants to recover 200 acres of land.
On the 4th day of January, 1922, appellees gave a deed of trust on 547.87 acres of land in Duval county to appellants to secure one promissory note for $1,785. Default being made in the payment of said note, the property was advertised for sale, and on the 2d day of September, 1924, was sold by the trustee to pay the debt, and bid in by the appellants. After the notice of sale was published *190 appellees had 200 acres of said land surveyed and designated it as their homestead. The contention of appellees was that no title of the 200 acres passed by the sale, because the sale was void as to it on account of its homestead character.
The case was tried with a jury, and after all the evidence was in both parties requested an instructed verdict in their behalf. Whereupon the court instructed a verdict for appellees. This, of course, must be treated on the part of each side as a waiver of the jury and an approval of the testimony by each party in their favor, thus electing to take the action of the court as final, and cannot be heard, either one of them, to complain of the court's action resolving any issue against them. L. N. R. R. Co. v. Weldon,
Appellants filed no assignments of error of any kind; if so, none are found in his brief. The proposition is that the court should have submitted the issue to the jury. No issue was requested to be submitted to the jury by appellants, but the effect of the written motion made by appellants to instruct a verdict was tantamount to a withdrawal from the jury any matter or issue of fact, and for the court as a matter of law upon the facts admitted to pass to appellants a judgment for the land. In support of their contention they cite Henderson Grant v. Gilbert (Tex.Civ.App.)
That case does not support appellants' contention. An instructed verdict when there is sufficient evidence to go to the jury constitutes fundamental error. There are many decisions to that effect; and for that reason an exception to the charge of the court is not necessary. But the error should be presented to the appellate court in an assignment of error and proper proposition presenting the identical question. Nogals Oil Gas Co. v. Merchants' Planters' Bank (Tex.Civ.App.)
It was shown that the 200 acres claimed as a homestead were a part of the larger tract of 547.87 acres, and at the date of the execution of the deed of trust he had no other homestead and claimed the 200 acres alone as the homestead of himself and family and was using it as such by grazing goats and cattle thereon; his occupation at that time being that of a stock raiser and farmer; that he had made plans and arrangements to build a home on that particular land and move his family thereupon, prior to the execution of the deed of trust, but that on account of the illness of his wife, who had been sick for several years and was still ill at the time of the trial, he was prevented from carrying out his purpose.
Appellee acquired these 547 acres, known as share No. 1, through the partition of his father's estate, and soon after began grazing his cattle on the land and making preparations to build a house thereon to live in. He was a farmer and stockman, making his livelihood by farming and raising cattle and goats. He built a fence around a portion of the land, and made arrangements with a carpenter to build a house thereon, but was prevented from doing so on account of the illness of his wife and want of money for that purpose.
Appellee states that he could neither read nor write and understood at the time he gave the deed of trust that it was only on 347.87 acres; but the testimony on that point is controverted. However, it is not contradicted that he was living upon a rented place near the land, at that time, and grazing his cattle upon the particular 200 acres claimed by him as the homestead of himself and his family, and upon other land under one fence.
Upon these facts the verdict was instructed. It is true, while nothing had been said at or before the execution of the deed of trust in regard to the homestead claim, that appellant was put on notice of the appellee's open and exclusive possession, use, occupation, and claim of ownership and homestead rights, whatever the declaration to the contrary. Haswell v. Forbes,
The idea of the homestead law is to benefit the family, and appellee's business was that of farming and stockraising. He was wresting a living from the use of this land. He had no other home, and to sustain such a claim it made no difference whether he erected a castle costing millions thereon, or had the intent and hope of erecting some humble kind of improvement to shelter the heads of himself and family. His purpose and intent was as great and noble as that of any other homesteader, and he has thereby secured the approval of the law.
We find no reversible error properly raised or assigned, and therefore affirm the judgment of the trial court. *191