Appellant's seventeenth assignment of error is, in part, well taken. Some of the evidence of some of the witnesses named in this assignment seeks to establish and prove the declarations of William Reed after the execution of the deeds under which the plaintiffs claim. It was proper to permit the witnesses to testify as to what was said and done by William Reed, prior to and at the time of executing the deeds to his three granddaughters, Florence, Ida and Bettie, children of W.C. Reed by his first wife, but what was said and done by him subsequent to the execution of these deeds and after the time that he intended that they should take effect was not admissible in disparagement of their title. The deeds purported upon their face to be absolute conveyances in fee, and there is nothing in their terms indicating that William Reed intended that they should be considered as advancements as a part of the estate that the grantees might ultimately be entitled to receive from their father, W.C. Reed. Declarations and statements made by William Reed subsequent to the time that these conveyances were executed, to the effect that it was his purpose that the grantees should receive the property in the nature of advancements, would qualify and limit their right, to some extent, in the estate that they expected to inherit from their father, and rests the deeds upon a different consideration from that stated on their face. The general rule that declarations of the grantor, subsequent to the execution and delivery of the deed, are not admissible in disparagement of the title conveyed, applies in this case. Owen v. Tankersly, 12 Tex. 407; Griffin v. Stadler,35 Tex. 706; Wallace v. Berry, 83 Tex. 332 [83 Tex. 332]; Bellville v. Jones, 74 Tex. 151.
It is true that the deeds in question did not go into the possession of the grantees until after the death of William Reed; but the evidence warrants the conclusion that it was the intention and purpose of William Reed that these deeds should take effect from the date of their execution. They were prepared and written at his request by his daughter, Mrs. Rucker. There is evidence to show that at the time of the execution of the deeds, he intended them to take effect as advancements; and when he deposited them with his daughter, Mrs. Rucker, to be delivered by her *Page 206 after his death, she held them, not in escrow, but as bailee for the owners, burdened with the duty to deliver upon the death of her father.
We rule against appellant upon the other questions raised in this assignment, but for the error pointed out, the judgment will have to be reversed; and in view of this fact we will notice other objections to the evidence raised by the eighteenth and nineteenth assignments of error.
It was permissible for Mrs. N.M. Reed to testify as to what was said and done by William Reed, but not subsequent to the execution and delivery of the deeds discussed under the seventeenth assignment of error. But in view of article 2302, Revised Civil Statutes, she could not testify as to what was said and done by her deceased husband, or as to transactions that occurred between him and her. She was a party to the suit and she comes within the prohibition of the statute. Her testimony may not have affected her interest, so far as her right to recover the homestead and life estate in the property involved in the suit; but being a party to the suit she would evidently be affected by a judgment for costs, if the plaintiffs had recovered.
Some of the witnesses, as complained of in appellant's nineteenth assignment of error, were permitted to testify as to what they understood was the purpose and intention of William Reed in executing the deeds to his granddaughters, Florence, Ida, and Bettie. This testimony was not admissible. It was proper for the witnesses to state the conduct of William Reed, and what was said, if anything, by him concerning his purpose and intention prior to the time that the deeds were intended to take effect; but it was not permissible for the witnesses to state their conclusions, based upon the facts, or to state what was the purpose and intention of William Reed and W.C. Reed. It was for them to state the facts, and not what they supposed was his purpose and intention. That was a conclusion to be reached by the court and the jury from all the facts that might be testified to by the witnesses.
We have considered all of the appellants' other assignments of errors, and none are well taken except those discussed.
For the errors pointed out, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
OPINION ON REHEARING.