Court Opinion

ID: 3957914
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:18:47.872218+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:58:13.277969
License: Public Domain

Plaintiff in error sued defendants in error to compel partition of a lot of land 173 × 188 feet, situated in the city of Dallas, alleged to be owned jointly by the parties, two-twelfths by plaintiff in error, and the remainder by defendants in error. There was trial by jury to whom the court conferred for determination certain issues of fact and upon the answers to which judgment was entered for defendants in error.
The facts arising upon the evidence are without dispute and are these: Alfred Stone married Evelyn Barkley in 1864. At the time of the marriage Evelyn had by a former husband two children, Henry Barkley, plaintiff in error, and James Barkley. After the marriage, and in 1874, Alfred Stone acquired from Nat M. Burford about one acre of land, which is conceded to have been community property, and of which the lot sought to be partitioned is a part. Homer and Charlie Stone are the children of Alfred and Evelyn Stone. Evelyn Stone died in the year 1881, intestate, leaving as surviving heirs her four sons, James and Henry Barkley and Homer and Charles Stone. She left no debts, nor was there any administration upon her estate. Shortly after the death of Evelyn Stone her surviving husband, Alfred Stone, married again. Subsequent to the death of his mother, and in 1897, James Barkley died. He left no debts, nor was his estate administered upon. Alfred Stone died in 1911. His second wife died in 1914. The land sought to be partitioned was occupied by Alfred Stone from the time he bought it until his death as his homestead, and after his death it was so occupied by his surviving widow until her death. After the death of Evelyn Stone a portion of the community estate was deeded by Alfred Stone and his second wife, Fannie, to R. B. Seay and J. D. Fouraker. The consideration for the lands so conveyed, between the vendors and the vendees, was that the vendees, who were lawyers, would defend Henry Barkley in the courts against a charge of murder. The services were rendered. As between the vendors and Henry and James Barkley the agreement, which was oral, was that the conveyance should constitute a partition of their mother's interest in the community estate, and that the property conveyed represented their interest or share therein, and should, between the parties interested, have the effect of releasing the residue of the common estate from any claim of theirs in that respect. Defendants in error acquiesced in the transaction we have detailed. The land sought to be partitioned is no part of the land conveyed to Seay and Fouraker, but a part of the original one-acre tract left by Alfred Stone at his death and since occupied and claimed by the defendants in error. Notwithstanding the facts related were not disputed the court submitted to the jury the issue as to whether the deeds were executed in pursuance of the agreement we have detailed, and the jury found they were. *Page 926 
It is the contention of plaintiff in error, raised in several ways, that the conveyance by Alfred Stone to Seay and Fouraker, under the circumstances and for the purposes detailed, in no way affects his right to have the remaining portion of the common estate partitioned. The claim is that the facts detailed did not in law constitute a partition between the tenants in common at the time. Such claim we believe to be a correct legal statement. When Evelyn Stone died, the property being community, the legal title to her undivided one-half vested in her children, Henry and James Barkley and Homer and Charles Stone, subject to the right of her surviving husband to occupy the premises as his homestead. Johnson et al. v. Harrison et al., 48 Tex. 257. Partition, correctly speaking, can only be had between joint owners or those jointly interested. The statutory remedy so provides. Thus, so far as pertained to the interest of the heirs of Evelyn Stone in the estate, there was literally no partition, since neither the vendors nor the vendees had any interest in the estate intended to be conveyed. But it is not correct to say that the conveyances and the consideration therefor are without controlling effect in this proceeding upon plaintiff in error's right to partition the land in controversy.
While the surviving husband can only convey the community real estate to pay community debts, a conveyance for other purposes, acquiesced in by all interested and supported in equity, will pass title to his vendee. McAnulty v. Ellison, 71 S.W. 670. It is not disputed in this proceeding that plaintiff in error, as well as defendants in error, have acquiesced in the deeds made more than 20 years ago by Alfred Stone to Seay and Fouraker, or that it was intended to pass the title to the land described in the deeds. Plaintiff in error does not even deny that the purpose of the deeds was to convey to the vendees his interest and that of his brother in his mother's estate, and that he received the consideration therefor, nor that portion conveyed was equal to the portion which they were entitled to receive. Such being the facts, the application of well-settled rules of equity will deny a partition of the residue of the community property; in fact a denial in such cases, we believe, is contemplated by the statutory remedy, which declares that at the hearing in partition the court shall determine the interest of the joint owners and all questions of law or equity affecting the title. Article 6100, Vernon's Sayles' Civ.Stats.
The effect and purpose of the statute, it occurs to us, is to confer upon the trial court authority to adjust and enforce between cotenants every conceivable equity relating to the parties and the property. Hanrick v. Gurley, 93 Tex. 458, 54 S.W. 347, 55 S.W. 119, 56 S.W. 330; Wipff v. Heder, 41 S.W. 164; Morris v. Morris, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 244,105 S.W. 242; Miller v. Odom, 152 S.W. 1185. The rule is also stated to be that:
"When a suit for partition is in a court of equity, or in a court authorized to proceed with powers as ample as those exercised by courts of equity, it may be employed to adjust all the equities existing between the parties and arising out of their relation to the property to be divided." 30 Cyc. 230.
The effect of the verdict and judgment, in which we concur, is to declare that upon the equities disclosed by the undisputed evidence plaintiff in error had no interest in the land, and was hence not entitled to partition.
The judgment is affirmed.