Bunn v. City of Laredo

245 S.W. 426, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1421
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedNovember 15, 1922
DocketNo. 211-3309
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 245 S.W. 426 (Bunn v. City of Laredo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bunn v. City of Laredo, 245 S.W. 426, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1421 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

McCLENDON, P. J.

This was a suit in trespass to try title in which T. A. Bunn, plaintiff below, sought to recover of the city of Laredo, defendant below, four blocks of land within the limits of said city. The cause was tried without a jury, and judgment was rendered in favor of defendant, which judgment the Court of Civil Appeals affirmed. 208 S.W. 675.

[427]*427The controlling facts in the case are: The town of Laredo, of which defendant is the legal successor, was established hy the crown of Spain about the year 1767, at which time the Spanish government granted to the town some 10,000 acres of land for a town site. The state of Texas subsequently extended her letters patent to defendant for all that part of this grant lying north of the Rio Grande river. The lo,nd in question is a part of this original grant, and is included within the corporate limits of the present city, and many years ago, with other parts of the grant, was platted into blocks, lots, streets, avenues, and plazas. On June 15, 1888, the city council of Laredo passed an ordinance wherein it authorized the sale of the lands included within the district in which the land in question is situated, at the price of $130 per block, the sales to be made for cash, or not less than 10 per cent, of the whole purchase price in cash, and the balance on time of not less than 10 nor more than 20 years, payable in equal annual installments with interest payable semi-annually at 8 per cent, per annum, the purchaser being given the right to pay the entire balance at any time. The purchaser was required to give his promissory note for the balance of the purchase price payable to the city, and secured by vendor’s lien expressly retained therein, and providing that in case of default in principal or interest the purchaser should forfeit all right to the land, and the city secretary should indorse on the note “land forfeited,” and make an entry to that effect on the account of sales kept by him, and thereupon the land should be forfeited to the city without the necessity of re-entry or judicial ascertainment, and that the land might thereafter be resold by the city in the same manner as if no sale had been made. The city secretary was required to record and keep a strict account of all sales made.

On September 14, 1889, the city authorities acting under this ordinance sold the four blocks in question to one Antonio Juarez at $130 per block, he paying $13 per block in cash and executing his four promissory notes for $117 each, payable on or before 20 years after date with interest; the notes containing the other provisions required by the ordinance, including retention of the vendor’s lien. At the same time the city through its proper officers executed four deeds, conveying the four blocks in question to Juarez, the deeds reciting the execution of the notes and retention of the vendor’s lien. On December 20, 1889, Juarez conveyed the land to one A. P. Luckett. No payment was ever made upon any of the notes, either principal or interest. No taxes were ever paid to the city on the property after the year 1903, whether any were previously paid is not disclosed. On December 4, 1915, the city secretary indorsed upon each of the notes and upon his account or book of sales wherein he kept accounts with the original purchasers the words “land forfeited.” Between September and November, 1916, the city built a hospital on one of the blocks in question at a cost of about $2,782.52, and in addition bored a well and erected a windmill on said block at a cost of $555, and since November 2, 1916, when the hospital was completed, the city has used it for public patients suffering from contagious diseases requiring isolation. On Peruary 3, 1917, the executors under the will of A. P. Luckett, joined by others, executed a quitclaim deed by which they conveyed the land in question to T. A. Bunn, plaintiff below, for the recited consideration of $100. Neither Juarez, Luckett, Bunn, nor any one claiming under any of them was ever in possession of any of the land in controversy. The suit was filed on September 15, 1917.

The contention upon which plaintiff’s assertion of title is rested is that under the limitation act of 19Í3 (R. S. arts. 5694, 5695, as amended in 1913 [Vernon’s Sayles’ Ann. Civ. St. 1914, arts. 5694, 5695]) the superior title which the city reserved in the deed and notes was barred by limitation in November, 1914, one year after the act as amended took effect; after which time all vestige of title to the property in the city was lost; and that therefore, since the city had taken no steps prior to the expiration of the one year thus allowed by statute to assert its rights, its subsequent action in attempting to forfeit the sale by the indorsement on the notes and in its record book, and its subsequent acts of possession, including the improvements placed upon one of the blocks in question, were of no avail as reinvesting the city with any title whatever to the property.

. It is stated in the findings of fact of the trial court that there are about 150 blocks of land in the city of Laredo which the city claims, the title to which is in the same condition as the title to the blocks in this suit. The questions which the case presents are therefore of grave importance to the city.

The 1913 act has recently received very careful consideration by the Supreme Court in the case of Cathey v. Weaver, 242 S. W. 447. In the opinion in that case an exhaustive analysis of the act is given, and its various provisions are construed and their constitutionality passed upon. In that case the Supreme Court was construing the act as related to instruments executed after July 14, 1905; but in the course of the opinion the court holds that the effect of the act, as its language clearly implies, was to bar after the expiration of one year from the date when the amended act went into effect the right of action to recover upon the superior title, where the deed or notes retaining it were executed prior to July 14, 1905, provided, of course, the notes themselves were more than four years past due. There were a number of [428]*428grounds upon which the Court of Civil Appeals sustained the trial court’s judgment, but we have reached the conclusion that none of these holdings merit consideration, except that to the effect that the 1913 Statutes do not expressly or by necessary implication destroy the superior title reserved by the city, or affect its right reserved in the ordinance to forfeit the sale for noncompliance with the payment provisions of the purchase-money notes; but that said statutes only bar the remedy of resort to the courts for the enforcement of the city’s superior title.

The case of Goldfrank v. Young, 64 Tex. 432, enunciates the principles which we think control the proper solution of the question thus presented. In that case it was distinctly pointed out that limitation statutes, unless providing otherwise, relate merely to the remedy, and affect only the right to resort to the courts; that such statutes, unless so providing, do not destroy the rights of the parties as distinguished'from the remedy of enforcing them in the courts; and that where the parties themselves have created their own remedy by contract, whereby their rights may be enforced independently of the courts, such remedy is not affected by the limitation statutes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
245 S.W. 426, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bunn-v-city-of-laredo-texcommnapp-1922.