Freestone County, Texas Court Case Page 24 13 S.W. 24 ANDERSON et ux. v. HORN. Supreme Court of Texas. January 28, 1890. Appeal from district court, Freestone county. Action by W. L. Horn for specific performance against J. B. Lee, as administrator of the estate of Alexander Lee, deceased, A. G. Lee, and Isophena Anderson and J. R. Anderson, her husband, heirs at law of Alexander Lee. Defendants Anderson and wife appeal from a judgment for plaintiff. Bell, Bell & Bell, for appellants. Rufus Hardy, for appellee. STAYTON, C. J. It appears from the findings of fact that, in 1866, J. B. and Alexander Lee, son and father, purchased on a credit a part of the Sparks head-right survey, situated in Freestone county, and that, after the purchase the father, Alexander Lee, agreed that his son should have the land if he would pay the purchase money, which he did, and that, soon after this occurred, J. B. Lee exchanged that tract of land for another on the same survey, for which, however, no deed was made until 1874. Whether the deed then made was to the father and son, or to the latter only, the court did not find; but the inference from the evidence is that it was made to the son, and that they joined in the deed for the land given in exchange. The court further found that, after the exchange of lands was made, J. B. Lee settled on the land received in exchange, and thereon made permanent and valuable improvements, and occupied it as his own continuously for 15 or 16 years, paying all taxes until 1884. The Sparks survey was in conflict with an older valid grant, and litigation arose in reference thereto, which in some way was compromised, whereupon J. B. Lee and other persons, who were claiming the different parts of the Sparks survey, floated the certificate and located it on the land in controversy, which is situated in Floyd county. That part of the Sparks survey originally purchased by J. B. and Alexander Lee seems to have embraced five or six hundred acres of land; and, at the time they purchased, the wife of Alexander Lee was living, and so continued until after the certificate was floated and located on the land in controversy, which consists of 374 acres, an undivided interest in the Sparks survey as relocated. Alexander Lee died on February 7, 1885, and the court found that up to the time of his death he recognized the right of his son to the land in controversy, as well as his right to all of the Sparks survey situated in Freestone county, which had been purchased by the two, and repeatedly attempted to make a deed to him, and always expressed his willingness and desire to do so. The wife of Alexander Lee died in 1878, and the court found that he, after her death, made a division of the community property, and conveyed to each of his children more than they were entitled to as heirs of their mother. In this partition all the children seem to have participated personally or by representation, and to have received the property allotted to them. Appellee claims the land in controversy through a conveyance from J. B. Lee; and the court found that before his purchase, which was for valuable consideration, Alexander Lee informed him that the land in controversy belonged entirely to J. B. Lee. Alexander Lee had three children, all of whom were made defendants to this suit brought by appellee to establish his right to the land. J. B. Lee admitted his right, but Mrs. Anderson and her husband, who had acquired the interest of the other child, asserted title to an interest in the land. The court below found that the verbal agreement between Alexander Lee and his son, with the making of improvements and long occupation, vested title in the latter to that part of the Sparks survey in Freestone county obtained by J. B. Lee in exchange for that originally bought by father and son. Under the past decisions of this court, this ruling seems correct, and no question is here made as to the correctness of the conclusion of fact on which the ruling is based. We see no reason why the same rule, as between Alexander Lee and his son, should not be applied that would be had the valuable improvements been made on the land purchased by them in the first instance, instead of the land received in exchange. All the right claimed by appellants seems to be based on the purchase originally made by the father and son, and, if it be true that the land first purchased by them by virtue of the transactions between them did not equitably vest entirely in the son, then, unless the father parted with his interest therein when the exchange was made by joining in the deed, his Page 25 heirs may have an interest in the land in Floyd county yet; but this would not defeat the right of appellee to recover the undivided interest for which he sues. The inference from the evidence is that the father did join in the deed. If he did not, the persons with whom J. B. Lee made the exchange might have ground to complain of failure of consideration in part for their conveyance, which, if made to J. B. Lee alone, would, however, vest such title in him as his vendors had. The court further found that the transactions between the father and son were such as to pass title to the latter to the certificate when floated from the land in Freestone county, that being susceptible of transfer by verbal agreement; and this seems to be true. All these matters occurred during the life of the mother of Mrs. Anderson, and what bound her father bound her mother, and what bound both binds her and co-heirs. Appellants present the case as though the court had held that the fact of payment by J. B. Lee of all the purchase money for the land bought by himself and father, under an agreement made between them after the purchase, would create a resulting trust in favor of J. B. Lee; but that was not the ground on which the case was decided, and it becomes unnecessary to consider the assignments of error further which controvert the existence of such a trust. The pleadings of appellee may have been faulty, and it is urged that the court erred in overruling appellants' special exceptions; but it does not appear from the record that they were called to the attention of the court, or that any ruling was had on them. It is urged that the court erred in permitting the introduction of partition deeds between Alexander Lee and his children, to show that each child had received its full share of the community estate inherited from the mother; but the record does not show that any objection was made to the evidence when offered, and it cannot be made here. The court seems to have held that appellants were estopped, by the declarations made by their father to appellee, from claiming through inheritance from him. It is not now necessary to determine whether all the facts existed necessary to create such an estoppel. If not, the facts brought the case to the very verge of estoppel. Mayer v. Ramsey, 46 Tex. 375. The sixth and seventh assignments are as follows: "The court erred in rendering judgment for plaintiff under the law and evidence in the case." "The court erred in overruling defendants' motion for a new trial." The motion embraced many grounds; and, under the well-settled rules of this court, it must be held that these assignments are not sufficiently specific to require or authorize their consideration. There is no complaint that the findings of fact were not in accordance with the evidence, and there is but one bill of exceptions found in the record which relates to the only remaining assignment of error. It appears that the judgment was rendered on September 18th, motion for new trial was filed on September 21st, and an amended motion on 27th of same month. It appears from a bill of exceptions that, on the day the judgment was rendered, appellant requested the judge to file within two days conclusions of fact and law, in order that a motion for new trial might be based thereon, which the court then declined to do, having orally stated the findings at the time of rendering judgment. The court, however, during the term, did file findings of fact and law. Counsel would doubtless prefer to have findings filed within the time required for filing motions for new trials, as the rulings of facts and law could then be definitely known; but we know of no statute or rule which requires a judge to do this, and to require it would often interfere with the orderly progress of the business of a court. We find no error in the judgment, and it will be affirmed.