Benavides v. Garcia

283 S.W. 611
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 20, 1926
DocketNo. 7449.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 283 S.W. 611 (Benavides v. Garcia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benavides v. Garcia, 283 S.W. 611 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

In this cause appellant, Dazaro Garza Ayala Benavides, brought an action in the form of trespass to try title against ap-pellee, S. E. Garcia, to recover title and possession to lot 8, block 92, Western addition to the city of Daredo. Garcia answered by plea of not guilty. An intelligent and authoritative disposition of the controversy between the parties requires the construction of a contract of adoption and the effect of an attempted conveyance or devise embraced in said' contract, as well as the construction of a somewhat intricate joint and mutual will, executed by Santos Benavides and wife, Augustina Y. de Benavides, and a determination of the rights and estates, both direct and alternative, of a number of designated devisees and those claiming under them.

Appellant claims an interest in the property as the survivor of his father, Francisco Garza Ayala Benavides, one of the devisees in the will, and as the residuary legatee of his uncle, Juan V. Benavides, deceased, another devisee in said will. He bases his claim to the interest of Juan V. Benavides upon the fact, repeatedly assumed in his brief, that the latter died without issue, but, while it is stated by the parties in their briefs that Juan V. Benavides did in fact die without issue, no reference is made in the’briefs to a record of this fact, and We have been unable after a tedious search to find any evidence thereof in the record. As the fact is essential to the full title asserted and relied upon by appellant, and as such fact is apparently without support in the record, this court is without authority to give effect thereto.

Upon the other hand, appellee claims title by purchase, to establish which he'introduced patent from the state to the city of Daredo as well as various other instruments by which, if effectual, the title passed on down into one Manuel Perez, to whom it was conveyed in a deed executed by J. K. Baretta, as attorney in fact for others, in 1903. But the record contains no instrument whatever, nor other evidence of any character, so far as we have discovered, which directly or otherwise connects the title with appellee, whose name does not even appear in the record, except, simply, that he was the defendant below and is appellee here. In the face of this showing appellee is not entitled to judgment affirmatively decreeing title in him to the property in controversy. There remains, then, the question of what disposition shall be made of the judgment against appellant.

The will here in controversy need not be set out in this opinion, in view of the disposition to be made of the- appeal. That in *613 strument was considered and in part construed in tiie decision of the case of Rossetti V. Benavides, 195 S. W. 208, decided by this court, and in which writ of error was denied by the Supreme Court. In that case appellant, Lazaro Garza Ayala Benavides, then a minor, through his mother as nest friend, and joined by her in her own right, asserted that:

“Said joint will between Santos Benayides and his wife, Augustina V. de Benavides, taken in connection with the deed of adoption therein referred to and made a part thereof, became, was, and is a contract binding upon the testators therein, and was intended to and did in fact convey the legal title, in equal moities, to Juan V. Benavides and Francisco Garza Ayala Benavides, deceased, in and to all the real estate then owned by the joint makers of said contract and will, subject only to the life estate and right of use and enjoyment to one half thereof on the survivor as between the said joint makers thereof.”

In the decision of that case the contention of appellant, as above set out, was upheld by the court below, as well as by this court and by the Supreme Court in the denial of the writ of error, to the extent of holding, as stated in the opinion of- this court, that:

“The mutual will, in view of the facts of adoption and ratification by the surviving widow, vested an undivided one-half interest in the Laredo lot No. 5 in Francisco, which- was inherited by appellees, heirs of Francisco, and the other undivided one-half interest in Juan Benavides, vendor of appellant [Rossetti].”

Upon that holding, in accordance with his contention -there asserted, appellant recovered in that case the title to a portion of the devised estate, consisting of an undivided interest in a parcel of land not here in, controversy, but occupying the same legal status. The contention asserted by appellant in the former suit is contrary to that asserted by him in this case, and is substantially identical with that here asserted .by appellee, who, however, was not a party to -the former controversy. Upon the trial of the instant suit appellee introduced the pleading of appellant and the judgment of the court below and of this court in -the former suit, contending that by those pleadings arid that judgment appellant was estopped to deny the title he there successfully asserted, and was bound by the construction of the contract and will successfully asserted by him in -the former suit. Appellant now contends that, as he was a minor at the time of the former adjudication, he could not be estopped by the position assumed for him by his next friend in that proceeding, and was not bound -by that -adjudication. It is not deemed necessary to discuss the question of the application of the doctrine of estoppel to infants by reason of acts done by or for them. But we conclude that appellant, though an infant and acting through his next friend in the former proceeding, was bound by the adjudication in that proceeding.

It is well settled that an infant may sue by next friend; the statute expressly provides therefor. Article 2167, R. S. 1911. And so is it settled that when an infant sues or is defended in litigation by his next friend, he is as much bound by the judgment and decrees in such suits as if" he were an adult. Gannon v. Hemphill, 7 Tqx. 184.

It is true that such judgment may be set aside in a direct action brought for that purpose, in case of fraud, collusion, neglect, or an adverse interest of the next friend, but, this being a collateral attack on the judgment, and there being no charge of m-is-"conduct against the next friend, the validity of the judgment is conclusively presumed.

And when in one case the highest court of the state has determined a specific issue, or given a particular effect to a specific instrument in writing or state of facts, such determination is conclusive upon the identical matters in subsequent litigation involving such matters, even though it is presented by different parties and concerns different properties. 21 C. J. 1063; Black Judg. §§ 607, 609; Freeman Judg. §§ 672, 822, 855, 857, 858; Hanrick v. Gurley, 54 S. W. 347, 55 S. W. 119, 56 S. W. 330, 93 Tex. 458; O’Rourke v. Olopper, 54 S. W. 930, 22 Tex. Civ. App. 377; Hennegan v. Nona Mills Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 195 S. W. 664. So the hold ing of this court in the former suit, approved by the Supreme Court in the denial of writ of error, that under the will here in controversy Francisco and Juan Benavides were each vested with an undivided one-half interest in -the lot there in controversy, is determinative in this case in so far as it affects the interest of appellant in the lot here in controversy, since appellant’s interest in that tract is identical with his interest in the tract here involved.

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283 S.W. 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benavides-v-garcia-texapp-1926.