W. B. Silliman, plaintiff below and appellant here, brought this action originally against J. S. Pelt to recover title to and possession of an undivided one-half of 17,712 acres of land in Val Verde county, and for partition. Pelt impleaded Walter Oliver upon the latter’s warranty. In response to a peremptory instruction, there was a, jury verdict against Silliman, and from a judgment appropriate to the verdict Silliman has appealed.
The legal title to the land was acquired by Oliver in a foreclosure proceeding by the payment of $8,200, procured from a bank for that purpose upon the joint note of Oliver and Silliman. The title was conveyed direct to Oliver alone, in pursuance of an agreement between the two. This, agreement embraced the further stipulation that Oliver go ahead and fence the land, and perhaps otherwise improve it, as a ranch. The project required more money, which neither party had, so the $8,200 loan was transferred to another bank, enlarged and embraced in a new note for $15,000, which was also jointly executed by Oliver and Silliman, who, in order to make it negotiable, procured Pelt to in
It appears that at the time Silliman and. Oliver gave their joint note for $15,000 Oliver executed a deed conveying to Silliman a one-half interest in the land, the consideration, as recited in the deed, being $5,000 cash, which, according to the testimony, was not paid, and the assumption by Silliman to pay one-half of the Pecos county note for $15,712. The testimony sharply conflicts as to the purposes for which this deed was given, and as to the circumstances under which it was given, delivered, subsequently surrendered, and redelivered, if at all. It was executed on August 2, 1917, but was not recorded until May 2, 1919. The conveyance from Oliver to Pelt was made on December' 29,1918, and recorded January 2, 1919, five months before the Oliver-Silliman deed was recorded.
Now, we have set out only such material facts as appear to be undisputed. They constitute only a skeleton outline of the case as made by the evidence. Every other fact in the case seems to be sharply in dispute. The testimony raises a number of material issues, among them being those of innocent purchaser, estoppel, the consideration and purposes of the Oliver-Silliman deed, and the question of the delivery and subsequent surrender and redelivery of that deed. These matters in our opinion should have been submitted,,to the jury, and to that end the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded. The determination of the questions of law raised by the assignments of error depends so intimately upon the effect, force, and sufficiency of the evidence as to preclude any extended discussion of those questions here.
The court below admitted testimony showing the facts and circumstances, and the oral agreements and understandings between Oliver and Silliman, leading up to and inducing the execution of the deed from the one to the other, as well as the delivery, surrender and redelivery of the deed, and conduct and agreements of the parties subsequent to its execution. Appellant objected to the admission of this testimony upon the familiar grounds that the deed was the final expression of the parties into which all antecedent and contemporaneous parol agreements were presumed as a matter of law to have been merged; that where, as here, the deed was delivered in person by the grantor to the grantee, upon condition, it takes effect regardless of such condition. In the abstract, appellant’s contention is correct, and elemental. But we think the peculiar circumstances of this transaction take the case out of that rule, and that the testimony objected to by appellant was admissible upon either one or another of the several questions of estoppel, innocent purchaser, and the purposes, consideration, delivery, surrender, and redelivery of the deed. Oliver contended in his testimony that he and Silliman had a definite oral understanding that Oliver was to take the title, and if Silliman should later on pay his half of the cost of the title and improvements the latter could take a half interest in the property; that when the $15,000 note was executed by both parties Silliman suggested that Oliver execute to him a deed, which Silliman had prepared, conveying to the latter a half interest in the property to show that Silliman had an “equity in this thing,” whereupon Oliver told him that he would give him the deed “according to our first agreement or understanding that this deed was to remain in my name until he was able to pay up, but he went on to say that he thought he ought to have something to show that he had an equity in the proposition, so I finally said to him, T will give you
[1] Now, we are, of course, familiar with the rule that parol agreements will not be allowed to destroy, impair, or vary the effect of plain recitals in a deed, and that when the grantor himself delivers a deed to the grantee, it shall automatically become effective in accordance with the purposes plainly expressed therein. But, as we have said, there are a few well-known exceptions to this rule. Parol testimony may be received, for instance, showing that the cash consideration recited in the deed was not in fact paid (Lanier v. Foust, 81 Tex. 186, 16 S. W. 994), and that other or additional consideration than that expressed was contemplated by the parties (Taylor v. Merrill, 64 Tex. 494). So also is it proper to receive testimony of parol agreements upon which a deed is executed or delivered to show that the instrument was in fact intended as a mortgage, or to create a trust and not to pass title, or that it was not executed or delivered by the grantor with the intention that it shall become operative as a conveyance, which last seems to be the contention here of appellee Oliver. Steffian v. Bank, 69 Tex. 518, 6 S. W. 823; McClendon v. Brockett, 82 Tex. Civ. App. 150, 73 S. W. 854; Ivy v. Ivy, 51 Tex. Civ. App. 397, 112 S. W. 110. In the case last cited the following from the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania is quoted with approval:
“The destruction of a written instrument by parol testimony may seem dangerous, and it is so, but the community would be in a still worse condition if it were established as an inflexible rule that, when a man’s hand was once got to an instrument, no matter by what means, the doors should be shut against all inquiry.”
By his first assignment of error appellant complains of the overruling of his motion for peremptory instruction, and by his second he complains of the admission of the testimony above mentioned. Both assignments are overruled. But we sustain the third and last assignment, in. which appellant complains of the adverse peremptory instruction to the jury.
Reversed and remanded.
null.
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