This suit was instituted by C. S. White and L. A. Pry against the Rincon Investment Company, a corporation domiciled in Houston, to recover certain land and $10,000. Appellant investment company filed a cross-action and an answer to the petition. Phillip Welhausen, M. C. Driscoll, and others were made parties by appellant. The cause was tried by jury on special issues, and judgment was rendered against the Rincon Investment Company and Welhausen and Driscoll, investing title to the land in White and Fry, and for $1,200 for rents, and damages in the sum of $15,000, in which the Bankers’ Mortgage Company was included. The cross-action was denied.
The jury found that the instrument executed by appellee, in form a deed, to appellant, was a mortgage, in fact given to secure a debt; that the rental value of the land for 1929 and 1930 was $1,200; that in the transaction the Rincon Investment Company was the agent of the Bankers’ Mortgage Company ; that Phillip Welhausen, appellant, and the mortgage company failed to comply with the terms of the contract between Welhausen and Rincon Investment Company; that ap-pellees did not receive any part of a check for $100,000, dated April 9, 1928; that ap-pellees were not damaged by the failure of appellants Welhausen and mortgage company to comply with their contract.
The jury also found that Phillip Welhausen represented to appellees that they were obtaining a loan from the mortgage company and the title to the land conveyed by deed to appellant would be held in trust to secure the payment of a loan, and that appellees relied upon such representation and were induced by such representations to deliver the deed to Welhausen and Driscoll. The jury found that the deed was obtained by fraud.
The statement of facts in this case is long and tedious, and a thorough scrutiny of it would consume more time than can be given to it. We shall assume that the summaries of the testimony made by appellants and appellees, considered together, contain all the salient pertinent facts in the record. In those summaries we fail to discover a single fact tending to show that the instruments, deeds on their faces, were intended to constitute a mortgage and not a full conveyance of the title to the lands. There is nothing in the contract of agency between appellant and Welhausen and Driscoll that tends to show that the deeds were intended as a mortgage. No privity of contract appears to have exist
The rule is thus stated in Pomeroy, Eq. Jur. § 1196: “Any conveyance of land absolute on its face, without anything in its terms to indicate that it is otherwise than an absolute conveyance, and without any accompanying written defeasance, contract of repurchase, or other agreement, may, in equity, by means of extrinsic and parol evidence, be shown to be in reality a mortgage as between the original parties, and as against all those deriving title from or under the grantee, who are not bona fide purchasers for value and without notice. ⅜ * ⅜ The presumption, of course, arises that the instrument is what it purports on its face to be, an absolute conveyance of the land; to overcome this presumption, and to establish its character as a mortgage, the cases all agree that the evidence must be clear, unequivocal, and convincing, for otherwise the natural presumption will prevail.”
There were no transactions between appellant and appellees, nor any one authorized to represent them. The evidence tended to show that the investment company was an innocent purchaser for value without notice, and as such could not have the deed transformed into a mortgage because of an agreement between third parties.
The judgment will be reversed, and, in case on another trial it should be determined that the deeds were merely a mortgage to secure a debt, in order to do equity, the court must compel a payment of the debt secured by the mortgage. That is too plain for argument.
The following charge was asked by appellant and denied by the court: “At the request of counsel for defendants, Rincon Investment Company and Bankers’ Mortgage Company, you are instructed that to constitute an instrument executed in the form of a deed of conveyance to be in fact a mortgage, it must have been the intention of both the grantors and the grantees to such instrument at the. time of its execution and delivery, that the same was executed and delivered for the purpose of securing an indebtedness then and thereafter due by the grantors to the grantees.”
That charge should have been given, and therefore the fourth proposition is sustained.
It is probable that the matters complained of in the remaining propositions will not occur on another trial of the cause. There was no evidence binding appellant as to a mortgage, rents, or any other matter.
The court, after destroying the deed, pro- ' ceeded to render a judgment for damages, for which there was no justification in law or support in the evidence.
We have deemed it best to return the cause for another and proper trial, rather than to render judgment here, and consequently the judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.