Burrage v. Hunt

147 S.W.2d 532
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 30, 1941
DocketNo. 5691.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 147 S.W.2d 532 (Burrage v. Hunt) 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
Burrage v. Hunt, 147 S.W.2d 532 (Tex. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

HALL, Justice.

This action was brought in the 44th District Court of Dallas County by appellants against appellees, and had for its purpose the collection of the money alleged to be due them for oil produced and sold from an undivided two acres of land theretofore awarded to appellants on April 4, 1932, by said 44th District Court by an order entered in the case of Adkins v. Joiner. The undivided two acres was a part of a 500-acre tract of land known as the Daisy Bradford tract located in Rusk County, Texas, in the East Texas oil field.

To this action appellees filed a plea of privilege to be sued in Smith County, the *533 county of their residence. This plea was sustained and the case was transferred to Smith County. Upon the merits, appellees averred that the judgment of the 44th District Court of April 4, 1932, entered in the case of Adkins v. Joiner, awarding title to the undivided two acres of land to appellants, was void for the reason that it affirmatively appeared from the record in that case that the 44th District Court of Dallas County did not have jurisdiction of either the parties or the subject-matter affected by said judgment. To this phase of appellees’ answer appellants leveled a plea in abatement in which it was contended that:

“From the judgment of the court of date June 10, 1933, overruling the motion of Hunt, individually and as Trustee, seeking to set aside the judgment in behalf of Burrage, the said Hunt, individually and as Trustee, appealed to the Court of Civil Appeals for the Fifth Supreme Judicial District of Texas, by filing and having approved a bond for cost on June 15, 1933. The Court of Civil Appeals on the ,25th day of May, A. D. 1935, by its order and judgment dismissed said appeal, thereby affirming the judgment’of the trial court and affirming the original judgment of April 4, A. D. 1932, rendered in behalf of Burrage.
“ * * * that thereby, said judgment •is res adjudicata and bars- and concludes said Hunt, or any person claiming under him, from attacking the validity and finality of the Burrage judgment of date April 4, A. D. 1932.”

Appellants also alleged as a plea in bar based upon the judgment of the 44th District Court of Dallas County dated October 31, 1936, restraining the prosecution by appellees of a suit in trespass to try •title filed in Rusk County against appellants relating to the title of the two un-idivided acres of land, which judgment was affirmed by the -Court of Civil Appeals, writ of error dismissed by the Supreme Court. Many other averments are contained in the lengthy petition, of appellants, and answer of appellees, which are not set out herein for the reason that this opinion will be grounded solely on the effectiveness of the judgment of April 4, 1932. A very comprehensive statement of the litigation between the parties hereto leading up to the time of the trial of this case will be found in Hunt v. Burrage, Tex.Civ.App., 84 S.W.2d 1098; Id., Tex.Civ.App., 95 S.W.2d 202; Hunt Production Co. v. Burrage, Tex.Civ.App., 104 S.W.2d 84, and Burrage v. Hunt Production Co., Tex.Civ.App., 114 S.W.2d 1228, to which reference is here made. Repetitions of parts of said statements will be indulged in, only when necessary to a proper understanding of the issue here under discussion.

Trial was to a jury on special issues. Both appellants and appellees made motion for judgment on the verdict of the jury and non obstante veredicto. Appel-lees’ motion non obstante veredicto was sustained. and the court entered judgment overruling appellants’ plea in bar, holding void the judgment of April 4, 1932, awarding the undivided two-acre -interest in the Daisy Bradford 500-acre tract to appellants, and that appellants “recover nothing by reason of their suit.”

Appellants bring forward 85 propositions based upon 95 assignments of error. Several of these complain of the action of the trial court in overruling their plea in bar and holding the judgment of April 4, 1932, void; typical of these are their propositions Nos. 3 and 4 as follows:

“No. 3: • The trial court, on October 31, 1936, issued a writ of injunction against the Hunt Production Company, prohibiting the prosecution of the suit in trespass to try title brought by the defendant against said Burrage, seeking recovery of the property vested in him by his judgment of April 4, 1932. The injunction was issued after the Hunt Production Company had filed an answer asserting the judgment of April 4, 1932, to be void. The trial court, in issuing said injunction overruled the attack upon the .judgment, and upon appeal, the Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the judgment of the trial court. The record shows that all the defendants are in privity with the said H. L. Hunt. Therefore, the judgment was binding upon all the defendants and barred and concluded them from, in any manner attacking the plaintiff’s judgment. The court, therefore, erred in overruling plaintiffs’ plea in bar.”
“No. 4: The record shows that upon the Bill of Review proceedings, the trial court, on June 10, 1933, denied any recovery, and held that the judgment of April 4, A. D. 1932, in behalf of Burrage, was valid and final. Upon appeal, the Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the judgment of the trial court. Its mandate was *534 duly issued and filed with the trial court, and which required the trial court to enforce and make effective said judgment. The defendants herein are in privity with-the said H. L. Hunt, and the adjudication was and is binding upon them. The court,' therefore, erred in overruling plaintiffs’ plea in bar.”

On October 27, 1930, C. R. Adkins and another instituted suit against C. M. Joiner, trustee, in the 44th District Court of Dallas County praying' for appointment of a receiver and for partition of certain oil leases held by Joiner in Rusk County, Texas, upon which Joiner had brought in the discovery well of the East Texas oil field. On October 31, 1931, Ernest R. Tennant was appointed receiver by the 44th District Court of Dallas County, qualified'as such, and took possession of all the Joiner, trustee, oil and gas leases, including the 500-acre Daisy Bradford lease, hereinafter referred to as the 500-acre tract. Shortly thereafter Tom C. Clark was by said District Court appointed master in chancery. On January 3, 1931, H. L. Hunt and a number of other persons filed an intervention in the Adkins v. Joiner suit (hereafter 'referred to as the Adkins suit) alleging that they were the owners of the leasehold on the 500-acre tract, and seeking its dismissal from said .Adkins suit. On April 7, 1931, appellant Richard W. Burrage filed his intervention in this original case, alleging that:

“ * * * on August 28, 1928, one W. J. Gamble of the County of Dallas, State of Texas, being accompanied by - Joiner, a son of C. M. Joiner, came to your intervenor’s home town, McKinney, Texas, on said date, and did at said time, acting as the agent and representative of the Joiner Oil interests or the Joiner Oil Well in East Texas,, sold to the intervenor an undivided interest in and to the C. M.

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147 S.W.2d 532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burrage-v-hunt-texapp-1941.