City of Goliad v. Weisiger

23 S.W. 694, 4 Tex. Civ. App. 653, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 499
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 9, 1893
DocketNo. 336.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 23 S.W. 694 (City of Goliad v. Weisiger) 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
City of Goliad v. Weisiger, 23 S.W. 694, 4 Tex. Civ. App. 653, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 499 (Tex. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

GARRETT, Chief Justice.

The city of Goliad, formerly the town'of Goliad, brought this suit against R. N. Weisiger and S. P. Weisiger to-recover of them certain lands, a part of the four leagues of land conceded to the town of Goliad. The petition alleged title in the town of Goliad, and pleaded the original charter of said town and the various amendments thereto, showing the trusts for which said land was held, and alleged that the claim of the defendants rested solely upon a judgment of the District Court of Goliad County in their favor, in a suit wherein the town of Goliad and others were plaintiffs against the same defendants.

When this case was called for trial the defendants presented a demurrer to the petition, that the matter in controversy was res adjudicata, and that plaintiff’s cause of action was a stale demand. The demurrers were sustained, and judgment was rendered for the defendants.

The facts presented by the petition and exhibits thereto attached may be briefly stated as follows:

The town of Goliad received from the Republic of Texas a grant of four leagues of land, which constitute the town tract; and the town of Goliad, and the towns of Victoria and Gonzales, were chartered by the same act, passed February 5, 1840. Laws of 4th Cong., pp. 276-279.

By the ninth section of that charter, the town council was authorized “ to sell and alienate any portion of the lands owned by said corporation, and appropriate the proceeds thereof to the erection of a jail, court house,. *656 and clerk’s office, and the remainder of such proceeds of said sales shall be appropriated for the purposes of education within said town, and for no other purpose; ” and in 1848 a separate charter was granted to the town, the corporate limits were made the same as the boundaries of the four leagues that had been granted, and by section 12, the town council, in conjunction with the County Court, was empowered to sell any lots within the corporation to which there was no legal claimant or title, and to collect debts and forfeitures due the town, to be appropriated to the erection or repair of a court house or jail, etc., and-to the establishment of a public school for the town.

In 1852 the charter of Goliad was again amended by the Legislature, and by the ninth section thereof it was provided, that “the common council may acquire and hold any property for public uses, and may improve, sell, or otherwise dispose thereof at pleasure; it may collect the prices of any land of said town sold by the corporate authorities since the autumn of 1846, or may acquire the title and control of any part thereof from any purchaser, by compromise or other legal means, or may refund the price with interest on failure of title, and so act under future sales; and may sell at public auction, on sixty days notice in some newspaper published in this State, any portion that may at the time be unsold of the land heretofore conceded to said town by the late Republic of Texas, except such parts as may hereafter be necessary for a public square, a public cemetery, a court house, a jail, public market, and public highways.” And then, after providing for the erection of a jail, court house, etc., out of the proceeds of the former sales and future sales of lands, it is further provided, that “ the remainder of the proceeds of such sales, if any, with the unsold parts of said trust land, shall be held, sold, exchanged, or otherwise used by the common council for the purposes of education within said town, and for no other purpose; and said corporation, as a trustee for the proper disposal of said land and its proceeds, to accomplish the purposes aforesaid, shall be answerable in the District Court of Goliad County at the suit of any party interested.” Acts 1852, p. 87.

By Act of the Legislature of August 13, 1870, this ninth section of the charter was further amended, and after making, in substance, the same provisions in regard to the erection of a jail and court house as is made in the above copied act, this amended section provided, that “the remainder of said lands, or the proceeds of sales of said lands, shall be held, sold, exchanged, or otherwise used and disposed of by the common council for the purpose of repairing the streets, building bridges, and enclosing the court house square and cemetery, and for -such other purposes within the corporate limits of said town as may be deemed necessary and proper by said town council.”

In the year 1874 there were pending in the District Court of Goliad County ten suits against sundry persons to recover certain lands “there *657 tofore claimed and disposed of” by “Paine Female Institute” and <lAranama College,” among which suits was one numbered 1058, and entitled “ Town of Goliad v. Joseph Weisiger et al.;” this suit was brought to recover a number of farm lots upon the town tract, and among said lots were the lots now in controversy in this suit. ■

The parties to the suit number 1058 were the town of Goliad, plaintiff, and Joseph Weisiger, R N. Weisiger, and S. P. Weisiger, defendants. Messrs. Phillips, Lackey & Stayton were counsel for the plaintiff, and Messrs. Lane & Payne were counsel for the defendants. On the 8th day ■of September, 1874, the town council made an order authorizing its attorneys to compromise said suits, which is set out in a written agreement made for such settlement, as follows:

‘ ‘ Ordered, that whereas Phillips, Lackey & Stayton, attorneys of the town of Goliad, be and are hereby authorized to compromise with all parties holding adverse title to realtjr situated on the town tract of Goliad, including all suits now pending in the District Court of Goliad County prosecuted by said attorneys for said town, and for all other persons claiming adversely to said town, and on the payment to the said Phillips, Lackey & Stayton by said claimants of said land or defendants in said suits of §1000 or 1000 acres of land, which is the said attorneys’ fee for their services in said suits; and further, that said attorneys are hereby authorized to go into the District Court of Goliad County and make a binding agreement on the said town of Goliad, whereby the title of said claimants or defendants, and each of them, to their particular lands respectively, shall be forever vested in them and their title quieted, and the claim, title, or interest of the town of Goliad forever annulled, abrogated, and held for naught.”

Pursuant to and embodying this order of the town council, an agreement was made and signed by Phillips, Lackey & Stayton, for themselves and as attorneys for the town of Goliad, and by Lane & Payne, attorneys for the defendants and interveners, in all the causes mentioned in the agreement, including said cause number 1058, whereby it was agreed, among other things, that all the title of the town of Goliad in certain farm lots, which are mentioned in detail, and including the lots sued for in this suit, should be divested out of the town of Goliad and vested in the defendants R. N. Weisiger and Samuel P. Weisiger; and that the town of Goliad should have judgment against said Weisigers for all the land sued for in that suit, except the farm lots so agreed to be vested in said defendants; and further, that the title of certain of the lots agreed to be vested in said Weisigers should be divested out of them and vested in said Phillips, Lackey

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Bluebook (online)
23 S.W. 694, 4 Tex. Civ. App. 653, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-goliad-v-weisiger-texapp-1893.