Bustamante v. Haynes

55 S.W.2d 137
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 9, 1932
DocketNo. 8895.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 55 S.W.2d 137 (Bustamante v. Haynes) 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
Bustamante v. Haynes, 55 S.W.2d 137 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

The case involves distinct land titles running back through the last hundred years to two grants originally issued by the government of the republic of Mexico to Antonio Zapata and Pedro Bustamante, respectively. The grants lie contiguously in Zapata county, and are known as the Villa and Las Confit-as, respectively. Each embraces five leagues of land, but this suit directly concerns only 20,000 acres thereof, approximately, lying together under one fence.

Appellees claim and recovered a segregated two-fifths interest in the Confitas, amounting to 7,076.5 acres, and 12,252.37 acres in the Villa. Their title to the interest in the Confit-as is based upon an alleged contract between one Leonard Haynes, now deceased, and the heirs of Pedro Bustamante, the original grantee, whereby the former undertook to clear the title of said heirs in the grant in consideration of the stated interest therein. Their record title rests upon a conveyance executed on February 11, 1893, by Manuel Bustamante individually and as attorney in fact for said heirs. Appellees claim the interest in the Villa through purchase and direct conveyances from the heirs of Antonio Zapata, the original grantee, to Haynes. -And appellees claim all the lands here involved by limitation, as well as upon the record.

This suit was brought in the form of tres *139 pass to try title by Alice Doran Haynes, widow of the said Leonard Haynes, and the Security Hirst National Bank of Los Angeles, Cal., against two groups of defendants, to wit, the heirs of Pedro Bustamante, claimants of part of the Comitas grant, and the heirs of Antonio Zapata, claimants of part of the* Villa grant.

The number of defendants seems to run into the hundreds. Some were cited in person; most of them by publication. Some answered in person; others defaulted; others were represented by attorneys appointed by the court. Some disclaimed in toto or in part; some pleaded in abatement as well as in bar; others in bar only; others affirmatively, through cross-actions, as well as defensively.

Each group of defendants asserts ownership of a portion of one of the other of the two grants, but none claims interest in both. The two grants and the respective chains of title thereto are separate, distinct, unrelated. This diversity of grants, of titles, of parties, of claims,'has involved the case in the greatest confusion, as is evidenced in the voluminous record and lengthy briefs.

The grants in controversy have been involved in previous litigation. State v. Bustamente, 47 Tex. 320; Haynes v. State (Tex. Civ. App.) 85 S. W. 1029; Id., 100 Tex. 427, 100 S. W. 912. The record, but not the opinion, in the case-first cited (State v. Busta-mente, 47 Tex. 320), shows that Antonio Zapata and Pedro Bustamante, ancestors of the principal appellants in this case, settled upon the lands in controversy in or before the year 1822, and obtained grants thereto in or before the year 1835, as evidenced by final titles issued by the Governor of the Mexican state of Tamaulipas, on January 2, 1848. Haynes v. State (Tex. Civ. App.) 85 S. W. 1029.

The condition of the titles to the two grants was uncertain prior to the settlement thereof by our Supreme Court in favor of appellants or their ancestors or assigns against the state of Texas, in the final disposition in 1907 of the case last cited, Haynes v. State, 100 Tex. 427, 100 S. W. 912.

The lands in those grants were never patented by the state of Texas to appellants or those under or from whom they claim; their titles were deraigned from the sovereignty through the original Mexican grants, the existence and validity of which were established by the decision cited last above.

There were five sets of defendants or in-terveners below. Appellees recovered Judgment against all of them. Only three sets have appealed, to wit:

(1)Cipriana Garza de Beyes and associates, being the heirs of Desidora Bustamante de Beyes and her husband, Antonio Beyes, thé said Desidora being one of the heirs at law of the original grantee, Pedro Bustamante, of the Comitas. This group disclaimed as to the Villa. It will be hereinafter referred to, for convenience, as “appellants Beyes.”

(2) Dionicio Bustamante and associates, also descendants and heirs at law of Pedro Bustamante, who also disclaimed as to the Villa. This group will be designated herein as “appellants Bustamante.”

(3) Francisco Coronado and associates, descendants and heirs at law of Antonio Zapata, original grantee of the Villa, who disclaimed as to the Comitas. This group will be designated “appellants Coronado.”

Appellants Coronado and Bustamante both urged pleas in abatement, which, being overruled below, are again urged here. These pleas are based upon the contention that the actions to recover the titles to the Comitas and Villa grants were improperly joined in one suit. It is true that each grant was made separately and distinctly from the other, and each took a distinct course apart from the other until the title asserted by appellees in parts of both grants merged into appellees. The two titles rest upon similar grants, issued at the same time by the same authority, to contiguous bodies of land, but to different grantees. And, while appellees’ record title to each originated at different times and from separate conveyances, both were finally settled and established by the same judgment of the Supreme Court, and the limitation titles to both tracts, inclosed under one fence, fully concur and rest upon identical facts of possession. We conclude from this state of facts that the ruling of the trial court on the pleas in abatement did not constitute such abuse of discretion as to require this court to reverse.

Appellants vigorously contend that ap-pellees’ pleadings were not sufficient as against the general demurrers. We have concluded that those contentions must be overruled in view of the familiar.rule which requires the indulgence of every reasonable in-tendment to sustain the allegations of pleadings challenged by general demurrer.

It is first contended that appellees’ pleadings must be tested by the strict rule prescribed in article 1977, B. S. 1925, which requires that the complainant set forth his chain of title in suits to recover title of persons required to be cited by publication; whereas, appellants contend, appellees, dependent upon heirship, did not in terms allege the fact, shown by the evidence, that the title of their grantor was connected only by heirship with the title of the original grantee. We conclude, however, that, giving effect to all in-tendments to which appellees were entitled, their pleadings in this respect were sufficient. In those pleadings all the instruments relied upon by appellees to show their title were .specifically set out, and it was expressly alleged that appellees held their said title *140 through those conveyances “from the heirs” of the original grantees, specifically named. The whole context of the pleadings, as well as those specific allegations, at least when aided by reasonable intendment, amounts to allegations of heirship sufficient to satisfy article 1977, in the absence of special exceptions.

In. further urging their general demurrers appellants insist that appellees’ several pleas of limitation were insufficient.

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Bluebook (online)
55 S.W.2d 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bustamante-v-haynes-texapp-1932.