J. P. White brought this suit against Ed P. Mann, Mallie D. Mann, his wife, E. D. Henry, R. S. Pershing, and others to enforce specific performance of a contract for the purchase by White of 2,952 acres of Haskell county school land, situated in Hockley county, Tex. It was alleged that the contract was made between plaintiff White and the defendant Ed F. Mann, and that thereafter Mann conveyed the land to E. D. Henry, who bound himself to carry out the terms of the sales contract with White. These allegations of plaintiff’s petition were established on the trial, and the real controversies in the case arose out of the claim of R. S. Pershing to an interest in the land or the proceeds thereof, and the claim of Mallie D. Mann and Ed F. Mann to a note that was to be given by White in part payment for the land. The judgment awarded a specific performance of the contract, and denied the claims of Pershing and the Manns, who have appealed.
The appellant Pershing pleaded his claim in two counts; First, in the form of trespass to try title, in which he claimed the entire land; second, he alleged that Ed F. Mann held the title to 3,985.2 acres of the Haskell county school land, including the 2,952 acres which were subsequently contracted to be sold to White, in trust for his (R. S. Pershing’s) benefit; that he owned an undivided one-third interest therein; that Mann conveyed said 2,952 acres of the said land to Henry under an agreement whereby Henry bound himself to satisfy Pershing’s claim in the 3,985.2 acres out of said 2,952 acres so conveyed to Henry; that Ed F. Mann had conveyed the remaining 1,033 acres of said land to his wife, Mallie D. Mann; that the contract of sale to White and conveyance to Mallie D. Mann were in violation of his (Pershing’s) rights, and constituted an appropriation of his equitable interest in said land; that his said interest was of the value of the sum of $10,000, and he was entitled to have the same enforced as a claim against the 2,952 acres of land. The defendants Ed F. Mann and Mallie D. Mann replied to this answer and claim of R. S. Pershing that such claim had been adjudicated and settled adversely to Pershing, by a judgment rendered in the district court of Lubbock county, Tex., in cause No. 12S0, entered on January 23, 1920, wherein the said Ed F. Mann and R. S. Pershing and others were parties. This plea of res adju-dicata was sustained, and the claim of the defendant Pershing therefore denied.- The facts necessary to a disposition of this phase of the case will be stated in the general statement, which will follow a statement of the pleading of the Manns’ claim.
Ed F. Mann and Mallie D. Mann claim in their pleading a right to a portion of the proceeds of the sale to White of the said 2,952 acres of land, to wit, the sum of $7,-380, to be evidenced by a note to be executed by the said White, and which they claim should be made payable and delivered to the
Haskell «county originally owned four leagues of school land, which included the land in controversy, and sold it to Flynt & Biorris, largely on credit, the deferred payments being secured by deed of trust on the land. Flynt & Morris in turn sold the four leagues of land to Ira J. Hoover, who assumed the indebtedness due the county, and executed second lien notes in part payment therefor. R. S. Pershing claimed to be entitled to commissions aggregating about $11,000 for services in procuring said sales, and which he claimed were chargeable against the land in the hands of Hoover. E. D. Henry claimed to have acquired the second lien notes and to have pledged them to Gus J. Groos, and that he had advanced on said notes sums of money aggregating something over $39,000, and that he was entitled to foreclose said lien on said land to secure repayment of said money to him. Default was made in the payment of the indebtedness to the county, and it foreclosed at trustee’s sale, bought in the property, and subsequently sold it to Ed F. Mann, who thereafter conveyed all of the land except the 3,985.2 acres to E. W. Miller. Charges of fraud and irregularity in the foreclosure by the county and the subsequent sale of the land to Mann and Bliller were made, and several suits were filed by the interested parties in an attempt to save themselves from the effect of the foreclosure. The only one @f these suits that requires particular reference in this statement is cause No. 1280, filed in Lubbock county, and referred to later. In March, 1917, Ed F. Mann executed an instrument, in which he recited that he was holding the title to the 3,985.2 acres of land for the benefit of R. S. Pershing, H. C. Flynt, and J. J. Parker, subject to the payment of certain sums of money to Mann and G. C. Davis. It is not necessary to set out this agreement in full, because we think it was unquestionably superseded by an agreement entered into between said parties on the 7th day of June, 1917, and upon which last-named agreement Pershing, in our opinion, must rely to sustain his claim in this suit. By this agreement of June, 1917, Mann acknowledged that he held the title to said 3,985 acres of land in trust for the benefit of “the interested parties,” Pershing, Flynt, and Parker, and it was agreed: That Mann was entitled to an equitable lien on the land for the sum of $8,069, subject to the balance due Haskell county, and a deed of trust lien in favor of G. C. Davis, for $1,000; that said lands should be sold as soon as title to the same was cleared, at a price mutually satisfactory to all of said parties, and out of the proceeds thereof Mann should be paid the said sum of $8,069, etc. In June, 1918, Pershing agreed to assist Henry in an effort to have the county’s foreclosure sale and the subsequent sale to Mann set aside, and to furnish evidence of invalidity of the trustee’s sale. According to the findings of the jury it was agreed between Pershing and Henry at this time that said parties would divide the net proceeds of land recovered by such joint undertaking, after payment of all expenses incident to any litigation brought for such purpose, in the ratio of 11/50 to Pershing and 39/50 to Henry. In pursuance to this agreement suit No. 1280 was filed in Lubbock county, Tex., wherein Gus J. Groos, whose name Henry was using, E. D. Henry and others were plaintiffs, and Haskell county, Ed F. Blann, Ira J. Hoover, R. S. Pershing, H. O. Flynt, J. J. Parker, and others were defendants. During the pehdency of this suit Ed F. Mann entered into the contract with J. P. White, which is sued on by White in this case. By the terms of this contract Mann agreed to sell to White said 2,952 acres of land, and White agreed to assume payment of the amount due Haskell county and to pay $5 per acre “bonus,” $7,380 cash, and $7,380, to be evidenced by a vendor’s lien note of even date with the deed, executed by Mann when the contract was closed, and which note should be payable to the order of Mal-lie D. Mann, one year after date, etc. Said contract referred to the pendency of said suit by Gus J. Groos and others, and provided that Mann should clear up the title before said contract of sale was consummated. Cause No. 1280 came on for trial, and while the trial was in progress a compromise agreement was made between Henry on the one part and E. W. Miller and Ed F. Blann on the other part. In pursuance to this agreement judgment was entered that the plaintiffs recover nothing by their suit; that the defendant Ed F. Mann be quieted as against the plaintiffs and all other parties to the suit in his title and possession of the
[1] We agree with appellant Pershing’s contention that the judgment in cause No. 1280, the deeds executed by Miller and Mann to Henry, and the agreements made in such connection, are all part of one transaction and the rights of the parties to be determined from a consideration of all of said instruments as a whole. So regarding them, we doubt whether the judgment cut off “any valid claim of R. S. Pershing” to the 3,9S5 acres of land; but certainly it did not establish a claim, but left E. D. Henry to contest the validity of any claim which Pershing might assert or settle it upon any terms that he might arrange with Pershing. The effect of the whole transaction was a recovery in this litigation of these two tracts of Haskell county school land, deeded to Henry by Miller and by Mann. These, lands are the result of the undertaking in which Henry and Pershing agreed to jóintly engage, and, as already stated, Pershing- is claiming, and we have upheld such claim, that they are held by Henry, subject to the Fort Worth agreement for such acquisition. Now that agreement contemplated the destruction of all claims of Mann and those holding under him in whatever might be acquired by the parties in the undertaking. It also contemplated a merging of any prior claims of both Henry and Pershing against the land into what might be procured by the litigation and a division between the said parties of what was so procured regardless of what might have been their previous claims therein, in the agreed proportion of 39/50 to Henry and 11/50 to Pershing. Pershing himself testified as to such matter:
“With reference to any understanding or agreement I might have had with E. D. Henry covering any claim or interest that either of us might have had or might acquire in the land involved, will say that in June, 1918, I had a conference with Mr. E. D. Henry in the office of L. O. Penry at Forth Worth, concerning certain information that I had in my possession to assist him in recovering the land involved in this suit against Mr. Miller and Mr. Mann. Mr. Henry stated to me that in consideration for my assistance in recovering this land he would recognize any existing claim of myself on the same basis as his claim. Ho claimed he had $39,000 in this land, and I had a claim of $12,000; that he would recognize my claim on that basis and whatever we might recover would be divided between us on that basis.”
Again be testified as to the same transaction:
“Yes; it was discussed as to that part held out from Haskell county that there were 3,900 and some odd acres held out in the name of defendant Mann, in which Flynt and Parker and myself were interested. Yes, sir; that was the thing discussed, that if Henry recovered in his suit, that that would necessarily mean the cancellation of the claim of the defendant Mann and that would wipe out me and «Parker and Flynt.”
The effect of this agreement of June, 1918. between Pershing and Henry was that any previous claims they might have against the land would be satisfied as between them by the division in the proportion agreed upon. So when Henry acquired this land its holding by him was controlled by the previous
[2] The contention made by the appellants Mallie D. Mann and Ed P. Mann that Mrs. Mann is entitled to the note for $7,380 to be executed by White, in part payment ?or the 2,952 acres of land, is based on two propositions: (1) That the proper construction of the contract between Mann and Henry, made at the time that Mann conveyed the land to Henry, entitles Mrs. Mann to this note; (2) that the provision in the contract between Mann and White for the execution of the note to Mrs. Mann created a claim which would be the separate property of Mrs. Mann, and that Ed P. Mann could not thereafter change tMs contract and deprive his wife of the benefit thereof without her consent, which it appears was not given. The conveyance of the land from Mann to Henry conveyed every right and interest therein held by Mann not expréssly or by clear implication reserved. It, of itself, we think would have entitled Hanry to the proceeds of the sale to White when it should be consummated. The note, when executed, would have constituted a lien on the land. This note, as we later hold, would have been the community property of Mann and wife, so that if Mann is entitled to tMs' note it constituted a charge on the land in his favor which could not be held to exist in the face of his conveyance of the fee-simple title to the land, unless there were some agreement to reserve it from the effect of the conveyance of the land itself. The deed itself conveys the land without reservation, except subject to the indebtedness due Haskell county. The contract, executed contemporaneously therewith, provides that Henry shall carry out the White contract by executing necessary deeds of conveyance to White. It does not expressly say that Henry shall receive the proceeds of the sale of the land, but that is the necessary implication from some of the express provisions thereof. It was expressly agreed that Henry should, “out of the proceeds of the sale of the land,” pay the Lubbock State Bank $5,811 and B. L. Parker and H. C. Elynt each $1,000, and also “out of the sale of the land” pay to G. C. Davis $1,000, and in addition “satisfy' any valid claim of B. S. Pershing.” The aggregate of these items largely exceeded the cash payment of $7,380, and there were no other proceeds of the sale of the land except that to be evidenced by the note in question. So the contract, both by its silence as to express reservations in Mann’s favor and by its express provisions as to the proceeds of the sale to White, clearly indicates that it was the intention of the parties that Henry should receive all of sufifi proceeds, subject to the agreement to pay the above-mentioned items out of the same. No other conclusion could, we tMnk, be sustained, and it does not become necessary to call to its aid the oral testimony of the witnesses that this was the undertaking between the parties at the time of the making of the contract. So we need not discuss appellants’ assignments as to the admission of such evidence.
[3] We also overrule the other contention that the contract creates a claim in behalf of Mrs. White’s separate estate. The question as to whether the note, when executed would have been the community property of Mann and wife, or the wife’s separate property, is to be decided on presumptions arising from the provisions of the contract itself as there is no other evidence as to the intention of the parties. We start with the presumption that all property acquired during the marriage relation belongs to the community. The 2,952 acres of land which Mann agreed to sell to White was therefore community property. The presumption also is that a note payable to the wife belongs to the community. Wells v. Cochrum, 13 Tex. 127. But it is contended on the authority of Roberts v. Prather, 158 S. W. 789, that the transaction amounted to an assignment of, or an agreement to assign, the note from Mann to his wife. If such was the effect of the agreement we think it is probably true that the note would become the separate property of
[4] The contract between Mann and White provides for possession of the land by White after September 14, 1919, pending the clearing of the title, and he sought in his petition damages on account of the possession not having been delivered until May 1, 1920.
On the trial his damages for breach of this term of the contract were assessed at the sum of $922.50. No judgment was rendered against Mann or any one else for a recovery of such damages, but the judgment authorized White to retain such sum of money out of the consideration to be paid by him for the land. The appellant E. D. Mann assigns error in reference to several of the proceedings concerning the trial of this issue and the assessment of this amount of damage. We do not think he is in position to urge these assignments. Royal Neighbors of America v. Fletcher, 230 S. W. 476 (10). The abatement of the purchase price to be paid by White in effect requires the payment of these damages by Henry, and the said Henry does not complain of the judgment in this respect.
We find no reversible error, and the judgment will be affirmed.
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