Court Opinion

ID: 3901026
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:31:15.183725+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:57:07.295524
License: Public Domain

* Writ of error granted. *Page 541 
This is an action of trespass to try title, brought by appellees against appellants to recover title and possession of a tract of 91 acres of land on the John McCloskey league in Brazoria county. The suit was originally brought by appellee development company, by petition filed on February 1, 1910, against Pompey Higgins and Joseph Higgins.
By amended petition, filed on August 3, 1910, Hannah Ward and husband, Anthony Ward, and Eliza Ward and husband, Chris Ward, and H. Masterson were made defendants. This petition alleged that B. T. Masterson was the common source of the title claimed by plaintiff and defendant, and further alleged that plaintiff held title under a warranty deed from defendant H. Masterson, and prayed for judgment against H. Masterson on his warranty in event the other defendants recovered title to the land.
The defendants Joseph Higgins and Hannah Ward and Eliza Ward, joined by their respective husbands, answered on February 13, 1911, by plea of not guilty, and specially pleaded that the land in controversy was purchased and paid for by their father, Pompey Higgins, on May 14, 1881, during the lifetime of their mother, Maria Higgins, and was occupied by their father and mother continuously as their homestead until the death of their mother in August, 1890; that immediately after the purchase of the land by Pompey Higgins, he and his wife, Maria, together with their children, these defendants, all went upon the land, made permanent and valuable improvements thereon, and occupied it as their home; that after the death of their mother these defendants continued to occupy the land, claiming a one-half interest therein by inheritance from their mother, and by agreement between themselves and their father, respective portions of the land were set aside to each of the defendants for homestead purposes, and the remainder was thereafter held by them as tenants in common. This answer in a very general way describes the tracts claimed to have been separately held by defendants under the agreed partition just mentioned. These defendants further pleaded the statutes of limitation of 5 and 10 years.
The defendant H. Masterson, by answer filed on July 14, 1916, after a general demurrer, general denial, and plea of not guilty, specially pleaded that he had title to the land at the time he conveyed to plaintiff, and that, if defendants have acquired title by limitation to any portion of the land, he could not be held liable on his warranty for the title thus lost by plaintiff. No further pleading was filed in the suit until August 17, 1925, when appellee the Bankers' Mortgage Company, filed a second amended petition, in which it is alleged that the mortgage company had acquired all of the interest of the original plaintiff, development company, in the land. This amended petition names the defendants in the original suit, with the substitution of Jacob Higgins, Carey Higgins, and Arthur Higgins as heirs of their deceased father, Pompey Higgins, and T. S. Masterson, Rowena Cage, and Elliot Cage, executors of the will of H. Masterson. The prayer of the petition is for recovery of the title and possession of the land against all defendants, and, in event plaintiff fails to recover on its title from H. Masterson, that it have judgment on its warranty against the executors of H. Masterson.
On July 26, 1926, the appellee mortgage company filed a third amended petition, alleging the same cause of action set up in its former petition and against the same defendants, and further pleading title to the land in controversy under the 3, 5, and 10 year statutes of limitation. The defendants, on August 4, 1926, filed a motion to dismiss the suit on *Page 542 
the ground of abandonment. The appellee mortgage company filed answer to this motion, denying the allegations of abandonment, and specially pleading all of the former proceedings in the suit, including the orders continuing the cause from term to term, and also pleading in bar of the motion a judgment of the district court of Harris county, denying appellants an injunction to prevent the taking by appellee of depositions in this case, said judgment having been rendered in a suit brought by appellants against the appellee to restrain the taking of the depositions on the ground that this suit had been abandoned by appellee.
Several amended pleadings were subsequently filed, some of which are lengthy and contain involved statements of fact, but none of them change the nature of the suit or the substance of the issues involved, except as may be hereinafter indicated. Before the cause went to trial, the plaintiff dismissed its suit against the Masterson executors. The trial with a jury resulted in an instructed verdict in favor of the mortgage company for the land, and a judgment in accordance with the verdict followed. The record discloses the following undisputed facts:
On March 4, 1881, Branch T. Masterson, who was the common source of title, conveyed to Pompey Higgins a tract of 131 acres of land, of which the 91 acres in controversy was a part. This deed reserved a vendor's lien to secure four notes, of $291.70 each, executed by Pompey Higgins for purchase money due on the land. Pompey Higgins had a wife at the time of this purchase, and they bought the property for a homestead, and thereafter made their home on it. In 1884, after the death of his wife, Maria Higgins, Pompey Higgins sold 40 acres of this land to Ed Bess; the remaining 91 acres of the 131-acre tract being the land involved in this suit.
Four of the children of Pompey and Maria Higgins survived their mother. These children were Joe and Jacob Higgins and Hannah and Eliza Ward, all of whom continued to reside on the land with their father after the death of their mother.
On June 7, 1893, Pompey executed a deed to H. Masterson for the 91 acres of land, which recites that the grantor owed Masterson a balance of $310 on the purchase-money notes given by him for the land, and, being unable to pay this balance, the land is conveyed in satisfaction of the debt.
On November 1, 1894, H. Masterson reconveyed the land to Pompey Higgins, retaining a vendor's lien to secure four notes of $90 each, given for, the purchase money of the land. On June 5, 1897, in a suit in the district court of Brazoria county, H. Masterson recovered a judgment against Pompey Higgins for $594.75, with foreclosure of a vendor's lien upon the land.
On April 5, 1897, Pompey Higgins and his then wife, Emily Higgins, and Joe Higgins, Jacob Higgins, Hannah Ward, and Eliza Ward, children by his first wife, employed W. S. Sproles, an attorney of Brazoria county, to set aside the judgment in favor of H. Masterson, foreclosing a vendor's lien on the land, and to recover the land for them. Under this contract of employment, Sproles received a deed from the Higginses for an undivided onehalf of the land. In pursuance of his contract of employment, Sproles instituted two suits against Masterson in the district court of Brazoria county. The first, which was a suit to set aside the judgment foreclosing the vendor's lien on the land, was styled Pompey Higgins et al. v. H. Masterson. The second suit was styled Emily Higgins et al. v. H. Masterson, and was a suit to remove cloud from the title to the land.
By agreement of the parties these cases were consolidated and tried as one. A judgment was rendered in the consolidated case on July 10, 1897, setting aside the former judgment foreclosing the vendor's lien on the land for $594.75, and giving judgment in favor of Masterson against Pompey Higgins for $500, with foreclosure of a vendor's lien on the land against all the plaintiffs in the suit. The land was sold under this judgment and conveyed by the sheriff to H. Masterson on September 7, 1897.
Thereafter, on October 1, 1897, H. Masterson conveyed the land to Pompey Higgins, retaining a vendor's lien to secure five notes, for $100 each. This deed is not of record, and was not produced on the trial, but in a subsequent suit by Masterson against Pompey Higgins to foreclose a vendor's lien on the land for the five $100 notes executed by Pompey Higgins the judgment recites the execution of the deed and foreclosing of the vendor's lien therein retained. This judgment of foreclosure was rendered on February 7, 1905. An order of sale was issued on this judgment, and the land sold thereunder to H. Masterson, and conveyed to him by the sheriff on March 28, 1905.
The land was conveyed to the South Texas Development Company by H. Masterson on September 18, 1905, and that company brought this suit on February 1, 1910. Prior to the filing of its petition herein the appellee mortgage company acquired the title of the original plaintiff development company.
We agree with the learned trial judge that, upon the undisputed facts before set out, defendants could not have acquired title by limitation against Masterson. The joint possession of the land by Pompey Higgins and his children could not be held adverse to the superior title of the holder of the notes and the vendor's lien reserved in the deed under which Pompey Higgins held possession.
In the situation shown by these facts no agreed partition of the land between Pompey Higgins and his children could make the *Page 543 
possession of any part by one or more of the children adverse to Masterson. By the judgment in the consolidated case before mentioned, to which all of the defendants in this suit, or those under whom they claim, were parties, Masterson's lien was established and foreclosed against all of the parties, and the land was thereafter sold and conveyed to Masterson under this judgment, and presently reconveyed by him to Pompey Higgins in consideration of five notes, for $100 each, secured by a vendor's lien upon the land, reserved in the deed. There was no change in the character of the possession of Pompey Higgins and his children, the defendants herein, after the judgment, or after the reconveyance to Pompey by Masterson. That such continued possession of the land, without actual notice to Masterson of defendants' claim of ownership, could not ripen into title by adverse possession, is, we think, well settled. Ater v. Knight (Tex.Civ.App.) 218 S.W. 648; Hardy v. Wright (Tex.Civ.App.)168 S.W. 462; Burnett v. Atterberry, 105 Tex. 119, 145 S.W. 5S2; Id. (Tex.Civ.App.) 130 S.W. 1028; Pearson v. Boyd, 62 Tex. 544; Thompson v. Dutton (Tex.Civ.App.) 69 S.W. 641; Runge v. Gilbough (Tex.Civ.App.)87 S.W. 832, 833. After the subsequent foreclosure and sale to Masterson in 1905, no sufficient time elapsed to mature title by adverse possession prior to the institution of this suit in 1910.
The claim of defendants that the land was paid for prior to the death of their mother, Maria Higgins, and that H. Masterson held no lien upon their mother's one-half interest, cannot be entertained, because defendants are precluded by the judgment against them before mentioned, foreclosing Masterson's lien, from now claiming that such lien was discharged in the lifetime of their mother.
There is no merit in appellants' contention that appellee was not entitled to recover the land, because the record shows an outstanding title in W. S. Sproles to a one-half interest therein. Such outstanding title in Sproles could at most only prevent appellee's recovery of the entire tract, but the record does not show an outstanding title in Sproles. At the time the land was conveyed to Sproles by appellants, Masterson had a judgment establishing and foreclosing his vendor's lien against the land, and the consideration for the deed to Sproles was his undertaking to set aside this judgment and recover the land for appellants. In the suit brought by him for this purpose, by an agreed judgment Masterson's lien was again established and foreclosed. Masterson's vendor's lien and superior title being thus shown to have existed and been known to Sproles at the time the deed to him was executed, and his position being that of a subsequent vendee, he was not a necessary party to the second foreclosure suit; his only right being that of redemption.
Sproles having acquired his title with full notice of Masterson's superior right in the land, and having undertaken in pursuance of the contract under which he obtained title to relieve the land from this lien, and a judgment by agreement having been rendered in the suit brought by him to defeat the lien, establishing and foreclosing the lien, he is estopped by that judgment from asserting a title superior to the lien held by Masterson. Johnson v. Bingham (Tex.Civ.App.) 251 S.W. 529.
The evidence was amply sufficient to show the issuance of the order of sale on the judgment in favor of Masterson in the suit brought by Sproles, foreclosing Masterson's lien, and the sale thereunder to Masterson. The record shows the rendition of an agreed judgment in the consolidated cases brought by Sproles, foreclosing Masterson's lien against all the parties to the suit, and directing the clerk to issue an order of sale thereon, commanding the seizure and sale of the 91 acres of land in controversy.
Among other items charged in the fee book is the following: "August 6, 1897, order of sale and return, $1.50." The sheriffs deed, which was executed on August 7, 1897, recites the issuance and levy under the order of sale, and the sale of the land thereunder to Masterson. A. E. Vorderman, clerk of the court, testified:
"My name is A. E. Vorderman. I am clerk of the district court of Brazoria county, Texas. I am custodian of the records and papers in the clerk's office. I have made a search in my office for the original papers in causes Nos. 6608 and 6609. I have not been able to find them. I have made a search of the execution docket of Brazoria county, to see if I could locate the entry in the execution docket of the execution that was issued. The order of sale that was issued in causes Nos. 6608 and 6609 I did not find. This [indicating] is the execution docket of Brazoria county that was used in 1897. That is a civil fee book of the district court; it shows a cause on there as No. 6608. This record shows that on August 6, 1897, the clerk assessed a fee of $1.50 against the plaintiffs, or as court costs, for an order of sale and return in cause No. 6608. That is in civil fee book of the district court. It hasn't got any other name that I know of, but it is a book in which the clerk records the fees assessed in all the different cases, on page 188 of said book."
See Ludtke v. Bankers' Trust Co. (Tex.Civ.App.) 251 S.W. 600; Bendy v. Carter (Tex.Com.App.) 269 S.W. 1037.
The trial court did not err in refusing appellants' motion to dismiss appellees' suit on the ground that the suit had been abandoned. The evidence introduced on the hearing of the motion, a large portion of which consisted of entries on the court's docket and in the minutes of the court, conclusively shows that there was no intention on the part *Page 544 
of the plaintiff to abandon its suit. The case was continued from term to term, in many instances by agreement. No motion was filed by any of the defendants to dismiss the suit for want of prosecution prior to the motion filed on the trial.
The defendant, Joe Higgins, testified: "The reason that Mr. Munson did not dispose of my case was that I hadn't paid him all of my fee before he died. Yes, sir; that was the reason why Mr. Munson did not go on and try the case. Mr. Munson didn't tell me, as soon as I paid him all of his fee, he would go on and try my case. I just think that the reason he didn't go ahead and dispose of the case was that I hadn't paid him all of his fee. Crops were failing, and we were behind, and we just didn't get to pay him all of his fee."
Plaintiff's attorney was shown to have been present on the call of the docket at every term of the court after the suit was filed. Roemer v. Shackelford (Tex.Civ.App.) 23 S.W. 87.
The appellee mortgage company, having, subsequent to the filing of the suit, acquired all of the original plaintiff development company's title and interest in the land, had the right to prosecute the suit in its name, or in that of the development company, and the petition filed by the mortgage company, whether properly designated an amended petition or not, was in fact a continuation of the original suit by one having all the rights of the original plaintiff. The rights of none of the parties were affected by the mortgage company designating its petition an amended petition, nor by the petition having been filed in vacation. Gabb v. Boston, 109 Tex. 26, 193 S.W. 137; Heard v. Vineyard (Tex.Com.App.)212 S.W. 489, 492.
We have duly considered all of the propositions presented in appellants' brief, and none of them can, in our opinion, be sustained. What we have said disposes of all the material questions presented by the record. The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.