Full opinion text
GERMAN, Commissioner. Defendants in error, Mrs. Arrenva V. "Bade and husband J. W. Bade, and John O. Banks, who will be designated plaintiffs, brought this suit in the district court of Gregg county against W. L. Pickens and E. B. Germany, who will be designated defendants. The suit was in nature of trespass to try title and to cancel a purported deed of conveyance dated January 14, 1931, conveying an undivided one-fourth mineral interest in 150.7 acres of land in Gregg county. Judgment was against plaintiffs in the trial court, but this judgment was reversed by the Court of Civil Appeals, and judgment was rendered there in favor of plaintiffs. 78 S.W.(2d) 260. In the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals will be found a full statement of facts touching the dominant questions in the case. It is undisputed that Mrs. Bade owned in her own right an undivided one-fourth interest in the minerals in the 150.7 acres of land, subject to a lease. She and her husband lived on the land as their homestead. A one-half interest in the land and minerals was owned by the children of Mrs. Bade by a former husband. The deed in question purported on its face to be an absolute conveyance of an undivided one-fourth interest in and to the oil, gas, and minerals in and under the land, subject to any valid existing lease. This instrument was executed by Mrs. Bade and her husband and bore a certificate of acknowledgment in statutory form. W. L. Pickens was named as grantee. Contemporaneously with the execution of the purported deed defendants Pickens and Germany signed arid delivered to Mrs. Bade the following instrument: “Longview, Texas, January 14, 1931. “Mr. and Mrs. Bade and Children, Long-view, Texas. “To Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Bade and Children: We understand that you and the children of Mrs. J. W. Bade are the owners of one-half of the leasehold interest and three-fourths of the royalty interest in 153 acres more or less in the Dolores Sanches Survey. It is understood that Mrs. J. W. Bade will be appointed guardian of her minor children and that the ½ of the leasehold interest owned by the children of Mrs. J. W. Bade will be leased to the undersigned for the sum of $22.50 per acre for a primary term of ten years. “Mrs. J. W. Bade and J. W. Bade are the owners of ¼ of the royalty and this ½ royalty will be pledged and placed up in escrow to secure the performance of this agreement. When all guardianship proceedings have been complied with and the lease is ready to be delivered, to the undersigned by Mrs. J. W. Bade as guardian, the undersigned shall have the option also to' buy the ⅛ royalty so pledged, on the basis of $40.00 per royalty acre. In the event that the undersigned does not choose to exercise the option of buying the ⅛ royalty, he shall pay for the leasehold interest on the basis of $22.50 per acre and shall re-deliver to J. W. Bade and wife, Mrs. J. W. Bade, the . one-fourth royalty contract. “Yours very truly, “E. B. Germany “Accepted: W. L. Pickens.” It is undisputed that the mineral deed, the above-mentioned letter, and a check to cover the purchase money of the proposed lease were taken by the parties to Longview on the 14th of January, 1931, with the intention of leaving them in the bank there. The bank objected to the form of the agreement, and the parties left the papers with a Mr.’ Jones during the night of the 14th. Next morning Mr. Bade returned to Longview and then advised defendant Pickens, who was acting in the matter for himself and for Mr. Germany, that his wife declined to go forward with the transaction. We take from the answer of defendants the following statement showing what was then done: “On the morning after the papers, including the check and contract and deed, had been left with Mr. Jones, Mr. Bade came into town and said that they had decided they could get more money for the lease and didn’t want to sell it. Mr. Pickens contended that as he had put up his money and had secured a wire from the bank in Dallas that the money would be paid, he wanted to hold the parties to the contract, so it was agreed that they would call the first trade off and sell the royalty at $40.00 an acre. “The matter was fully discussed and considered by all of the parties, so Mr. Jones was instructed to deliver the mineral deed to W. L. Pickens and E. B. Germany, and. a check, was delivered to Mr. and Mrs. Bade for the sum of $1530.00. Upon said check was written: ‘To purchase ¾, royalty ½ her part of farm in Gregg Co.’ This check was also wired upon, and was then delivered to J. W. Bade, was carried out to the farm where his wife was situated, and his wife there endorsed the check and the same was deposited, on January 16th, 1931.” Defendants, among other things, relied upon an estoppel. Their main contention, hqwever, may be briefly stated as follows: That the contemporaneous agreement shows that the purported mineral deed was executed for and was to accomplish a two-fold purpose, to wit: First, that it was to be held as a pledge to secure the faithful performance by Mrs. Bade of the agreement to execute, as guardian, the lease of the one-half interest of her children; and, second, that it was to serve as a conveyance, in the event defendants later decided to exercise their option and purchase the royalty interest. In order to more fully disclose their contention, we quote the following language from their motion for rehearing in the Court of Civil Appeals: “The original agreement between the parties was not carried out, as the papers were not placed in escrow in the Bank, and this fact was admitted by all parties, then there must have been some new contract or some new agreement with reference to the royalty contract. This new agreement was had between Mr. Bade and the appellee and constituted an entire new transaction and new sale of the royalty by him to them. The instrument was duly acknowledged and not retracted and was in the hands of the logical agent of Mrs. Bade, who was authorized to act for her. The Statute only requires that in the conveyance of a wife of her separate estate, she shall be joined by her husband, and the instrument properly acknowledged by her. There is no restriction with reference to delivery or placing the same in the hands of an agent escrow or otherwise. The instrument having been formally executed, Mr. Bade with authority from his wife could change it if it was a pledge to an executed conveyance by delivering it, not as a pledge or a mortgage, but as a deed. In the instant case the Bank had refused to take the escrow and had refused to accept it as a pledge.” We are of the opinion that this language of defendants shows with reasonable certainty just what was attempted to be done. Under no view of the evidence can it be said that at the time Mrs. Bade signed and acknowledged the instrument in question it was intended to constitute a conveyance of her mineral interest effective at that very time. It is appropriate to state that the letter of January 14th does not purport to be the contract of Mrs. Bade, as it was not executed by her in the statutory manner. It merely evidences a parol agreement so far as Mrs. Bade is concerned. Unquestionably such parol agreement would be void as to her. But looking to the letter of January 14th as evidencing the nature of the parol agreement, it is manifest that the so-called mineral deed was intended primarily to he held as a pledge. It was merely an inference that it was also to be held subject to the exercise of the option to purchase the royalty. But, if it be assumed that it was intended also for this purpose, it was still not a present conveyance, but was nothing more than part of a contract to convey when the option was exercised. We are clearly of the opinion that the Contract which Mrs. Bade is alleged to have made,' which involved the execution of the instrument for the purpose of being used in performance of the agreement, was void, because it rested in parol and because it was not such a contract as Mrs. Bade could legally make. Consequently, as the agreement was void, the instrument would pass out with it, and would necessarily have no legal effect. It has been many times held that a married woman cannot make any contract with reference to her homestead or her separate estate which is not a present conveyance of the whole or a part of her title. In the case of Blakeley v. Kanaman, 107 Tex. 206, 175 S.W. 674, 675, the court quoted with approval from a prior decision as follows : “The power to convey does not, therefore, enable her to contract generally with reference to her separate property, but only to dispose, in vahóle or in part, of her title; and the only operation which her conveyances have is to pass such title or some interest in it. Wadkins v. Watson, 86 Tex. 194, 24 S.W. 385, 22 L.R.A. 779.” (Italics by court.) In the case of Jones v. Goff, 63 Tex. 248, 255, it was said: “With us the power to sell or otherwise dispose of the homestead is derived from the constitution and statute; the former declaring that it shall not be disposed of except as prescribed in the latter. The statute makes no provisions whatever for the wife to enter into agreements or executory contracts to convey the homestead at some future time. That is not one of the modes provided by statute in which she may divest herself of the homestead right. “The sole and only mode prescribed by statute is by ‘conveyance,’ in which she joins the husband, and which she acknowledges privily and apart from him. To the word conveyance, as used in the statute, must be assigned its ordinary signification; that is, a writing by which property is conveyed from one to another. As before remarked, the statute does not include agreements to convey, but conveyances only.” (Italics by court.) According to. defendants’ own admissions, as set out above, after Mrs. Bade,' through her husband, advised defendants of her determination not to go through with the transaction, there was a new contract be-tween Mr. Bade and themselves, which “constituted an entire new transaction and new sale of the royalty by him to them.” They assert that this new sale could be made binding upon Mrs.' Bade' merely . by delivery of the instrument previously executed and acknowledged by her. As the purported deed at the time of its acknowledgment was not intended as a conveyance in prsesenti, it could not later be transformed into a conveyance merely by being delivered by Mr. Bade, and by an acceptance of the check by Mrs. Bade. The following additional authorities so' conclusively settle this cáse that argument is unnecessary: 23 Texas Jur. 267, § 231; McEntire v. Thomason (Tex.Civ.App.) 210 S.W. 563 (writ refused); De Bell v. Schuetz (Tex.Civ:App.) 65 S.W. (2d) 413 (writ refused); Maynard v. Gilliam (Tex. Civ.App.) 225 S.W. 818; Jackson v. Scoggins (Tex.Civ.App.) 220 S.W. 302. There is nothing in this case that would estop Mrs. Bade. She did nothing that would constitute an act of affirmative fraud. Defendants accepted the deed, from Mr. Bade with full knowledge that Mrs. Bade had not signed and acknowledged it with the intention of making it a present conveyance. It is well settled that, as to one who is not a purchaser for value without notice, the mere acceptance of purchase money and the delivery of an instrument which is void as a conveyance will not es-top a married woman, when her homestead or separate property is involved. Cauble v. Worsham, 96 Tex. 86, 93, 70 S.W. 737, 97 Am.St.Rep. 871; Daniel v. Mason, 90 Tex. 240, 38 S.W. 161, 59 Am.St.Rep. 815; 23 Texas Jur. 315, § 275. The judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals is affirmed. Opinion adopted by the Supreme Court.