Byrd v. Taylor

Decision Date30 June 1931
Docket NumberNo. 4036.,4036.
Citation40 S.W.2d 942
PartiesBYRD v. TAYLOR et al.
CourtTexas Court of Appeals

Appeal from District Court, Hunt County; Newman Phillips, Judge.

Action by Mrs. Rosa Taylor and others against Mrs. Mary E. Byrd and another. From the judgment, the named defendant appeals.

Affirmed.

L. N. Byrd and appellant Mary E. Byrd were married September 23, 1891. He died December 22, 1928, leaving a will by which he bequeathed his entire estate to her. She was appointed administratrix of his estate with the will annexed and qualified as such March 20, 1929. By a deed dated August 21, 1896, filed for record December 7, 1896, Jane Wall conveyed a lot 118 by 157 1/3 feet in the city of Greenville to said L. N. Byrd. According to recitals in the deed the consideration for the conveyance was $50 paid by said L. N. Byrd and his two promissory notes—one for $50, due November 1, 1896, and the other for $200 due on or before May 1, 1897. By a deed dated October 22, 1900, filed for record November 9, 1900, George Swinney and his wife conveyed to said L. N. Byrd a lot 117 by 157 1/3 feet adjoining the lot conveyed by Jane Wall to said L. N. Byrd as above stated. According to recitals in the deed the consideration for the conveyance was $225 paid by said L. N. Byrd. The two lots above described are referred to in the record on this appeal as the "Community Center Property." Appellant claimed it was a part of her separate estate, because it was paid for, she asserted, with funds belonging to that estate. By a deed dated December 15, 1927, filed for record February 11, 1929, L. N. Byrd conveyed 54 by 208 feet of lots 6 and 11, block 202, in the city of Greenville to his son Robert N. Byrd. According to recitals in the deed, the consideration for the conveyance was $10 paid by said Robert N. Byrd. At the trial Robert N. Byrd disclaimed any claim of title by virtue of this deed. By a deed dated January 10, 1928, filed for record March 15, 1929, L. N. Byrd undertook to convey to said Mary E. Byrd lots 1 and 8, block 16, lot 7, block 9, and 53 by 208 feet on Washington and Lee streets, all in said city of Greenville. The land last described was the tract L. N. Byrd conveyed to Robert N. Byrd above referred to. According to recitals in the deed the consideration for the conveyance was "Seventy-five Thousand Dollars (quoting) of the separate money of the said Mrs. M. E. Byrd derived partly from the sale of real estate inherited by her from her parents and partly from the rents of her buildings in the city of Greenville, also inherited by her from her parents, and which moneys were turned over to me (said L. N. Byrd) and much of the same used in the purchase of the property hereinafter conveyed." Appellant omitted the property hereinbefore described from the inventory she returned as administratrix, because, she claimed, same belonged to her separate estate and not to the decedent's estate. This action was by appellees Rosa Taylor, Catherine Craven, joined by her husband, R. L. Craven, Mrs. M. C. Arnold, joined by her husband, W. M. Arnold, Manzy Arnold, W. L. Bush, and Walter Bush, individually and as temporary administratrix of the estates of W. H. Bush, deceased, and Nancy Bush, deceased, who sued in their own behalf as creditors of said L. N. Byrd's estate and for the benefit of other creditors of said estate. It was against Bob Byrd and appellant, Mary E. Byrd, individually, as sole devisee under said L. N. Byrd's will and as administratrix with the will annexed of his estate, and was to set aside the deed dated December 15, 1927, from L. N. Byrd to Robert N. Byrd, on the ground that it was without consideration and made for the purpose of placing the land described in it beyond the reach of said L. N. Byrd's creditors; to set aside the deed dated January 10, 1928, from L. N. Byrd to appellant, Mary E. Byrd, on the ground that it was never completed by delivery thereof by L. N. Byrd during his lifetime, but, if it was, then on the ground that it was without consideration and made at a time when L. N. Byrd was insolvent, and for the purpose of placing the property beyond the reach of his creditors; and to compel appellant as administratrix aforesaid to inventory as property belonging to the estate of said L. N. Byrd, deceased, the property described in said deeds of December 15, 1927, and January 10, 1928, and the land described in the deeds from Jane Wall and George Swinney and his wife to L. N. Byrd. At the trial special issues were submitted to the jury, and on their findings judgment was rendered January 20, 1931, (1) canceling the deed dated January 10, 1928, from L. N. Byrd to Mary E. Byrd; (2) determining that a deed dated December 30, 1895, from L. N. Byrd to Mary E. Byrd was never delivered during L. N. Byrd's lifetime and "never became a valid conveyance," and that the land described in it never became a part of Mary E. Byrd's separate estate, but belonged to the community estate between her and her husband, L. N. Byrd; (3) determining that the property known as the "Community Center Property" was a part of the community estate between said L. N. Byrd and said Mary E. Byrd; (4) that Mary E. Byrd had a charge of $1,750 against the George Swinney lot for improvements she placed thereon; (5) directing Mary E. Byrd to inventory all the property mentioned as the property of the estate of L. N. Byrd; (6) and determining that the property described in deed from L. N. Byrd to Bobby Byrd disclaimed by latter belonged to said estate of L. N. Byrd. The appeal was prosecuted by Mary E. Byrd alone.

Neyland & Neyland and B. F. Crosby, all of Greenville, and Wm. Hodges, of Texarkana, for appellant.

B. M. McMahan, Clark, Harrell & Clark, and L. L. Bowman, Jr., all of Greenville, for appellees.

WILLSON, C. J. (after stating the case as above).

Of the twenty-five propositions in appellant's brief, the first nine relate to the land constituting what is referred to in the record as the "Community Center Property." As appears in the statement above, that land was conveyed to L. N. Byrd after he and appellant were married in 1891, to wit, in 1896 and 1900. Presumptively, therefore, when the land was so conveyed, it became a part of the community estate between said L. N. Byrd and appellant. Wideman v. Coleman (Tex. Com. App.) 17 S.W.(2d) 786. To the contrary of that presumption, appellant insisted in the court below, and insists here, that the conveyances to L. N. Byrd were in trust for her, and therefore that the land never became a part of said community estate, but, instead, became a part of her separate estate.

In support of her contention appellant adduced evidence showing or tending to show (1) that her father gave her money which she gave to L. N. Byrd to use in buying the property for her; (2) that afterward said L. N. Byrd repeatedly declared he bought the land with such money, and that it belonged to appellant; and (3) that appellant, claiming to own the property, expended money belonging to her separate estate in improving it. As controverting appellant's contention, appellees relied (1) on the presumption that the property was community arising from the fact that it was conveyed to L. N. Byrd while he and appellant were married; and (2), on certain declarations as to the ownership of the property made by L. N. Byrd during his lifetime, admitted as evidence over objections thereto interposed by appellant.

As to one of the declarations it appears in a bill of exceptions that L. L. Bowman testified that after L. N. Byrd's death he had a conversation with appellant with reference to the "Community Center Property," in which she said something about the property being hers, when her daughter, Mrs. Starke, who was present, spoke up and said: "Papa always said that belonged to him." The objection was to what Mrs. Starke said L. N. Byrd said. The grounds thereof were that what L. N. Byrd said was "irrelevant, immaterial, prejudicial to the right of Mrs. Byrd, and hearsay." Appellees' view is that the declaration was admissible as evidence because it was, they assert, part of the conversation between the witness Bowman and appellant, and because it was, they assert, further, in rebuttal of testimony on appellant's behalf. In support of that view, which is shared by a majority of the members of this court, appellees cite many authorities, among same being the following: Sumner v. Murphy, 2 Hill (S. C.) 488, 27 Am. Dec. 397; Wingo v. Caldwell, 36 S. C. 598, 15 S. E. 382; Joyce v. Hamilton, 111 Ind. 163, 12 N. E. 294; 22...

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4 cases
  • Burnett v. Graves
    • United States
    • U.S. Court of Appeals — Fifth Circuit
    • March 8, 1956
    ...within some reasonable compass, Wigmore on Evidence, § 1230; McCormick and Ray, Texas Law of Evidence, § 709, page 922; Byrd v. Taylor, Tex.Civ.App., 40 S.W.2d 942 (error dismissed); Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co. v. Shaw, Tex.Civ. App., 8 S.W.2d 196 (error dismissed); New Amsterdam Casu......
  • Peters v. Brookshire, 14746.
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    • Texas Court of Appeals
    • April 5, 1946
    ...with approval many times); Hartford Acc. & Ind. Co. v. Shaw, Banking Com'r, Tex.Civ. App., 8 S.W.2d 196, writ dismissed; Byrd v. Taylor, Tex.Civ.App., 40 S.W.2d 942; and Corbett v. Raymondville Ind. School Dist., Tex.Civ.App., 56 S.W.2d 325, writ dismissed, support our views as to the admis......
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    • September 24, 1942
    ...the statutes of limitation. Rutherford v. Carr, 99 Tex. 101, 87 S.W. 815; O'Banion v. Henry, 128 Tex. 59, 96 S.W.2d 233; Byrd v. Taylor, Tex.Civ.App., 40 S.W.2d 942, error dismissed; Texas National Bank of Beaumont v. Angelo, Tex.Civ.App., 102 S.W.2d 314, error It was agreed upon the trial ......
  • Ellison v. Ellison
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    • Texas Court of Appeals
    • September 4, 1942
    ...has made an examination of them, to state his opinion as to what they show. Clopton v. Flowers, Tex.Civ.App., 183 S.W. 68; Byrd v. Taylor, Tex.Civ.App., 40 S.W.2d 942, writ There is evidence in the record showing the net income of the estate during the years 1934 to 1940, inclusive. The wil......

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