Club Land & Cattle Co. v. Dallas County

64 S.W. 872, 26 Tex. Civ. App. 449, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 145
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 22, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 64 S.W. 872 (Club Land & Cattle Co. v. Dallas County) 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
Club Land & Cattle Co. v. Dallas County, 64 S.W. 872, 26 Tex. Civ. App. 449, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 145 (Tex. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

HUNTER, Associate Justice.

This was an action of trespass to try title, brought by Dallas County on the 13th of June, 1900, in the District Court of Archer County, against the Club Land and Cattle Company, a Missouri corporation, to recover blocks 39, 47, 48, and 49 of the subdivisions of the Dallas County school lands situated in Archer County and containing 711 acres. The disseizen was laid as of January 1, 1898, and rents were claimed from that date.

The defendant cattle company answered not guilty, and pleaded the three, five, and ten years statutes of limitation. It also pleaded specially that, in 1879, the Commissioners Court of Dallas County entered into a contract with John Henry Brown whereby the said Brown was to survey, subdivide, map, and classify the Dallas County school lands lying in Archer County and consisting of about 13,000 acres, in consideration of which services the county agreed and bound itself to pay him the sum of $250 in cash and to convey to him the land in controversy herein; that in accordance with said contract said Brown did all that was required of him and made report of his work to said Commissioners Court on June 9, 1879, which report was received and accepted by the court, and it thereupon passed and entered an order directing the county judge of Dallas County to convey said lands to said Brown in complete satisfaction of said contract; that in pursuance of said order said county judge on said date conveyed said lands to Brown in fee simple, with covenants of general warranty, as the act and deed of said county; that the value of Brown’s services for which said lands were conveyed was $1250; that said county now claims that said conveyance was void in law because the consideration was other than money, and the sale, therefore, one the Commissioners Court had no power to make; but that said county ought not to be heard in such a plea or permitted to recover said land without first paying for the labor and services of the said Brown which it received in consideration of said conveyance, and to which the defendant cattle company is entitled upon the covenants of general warranty aforesaid, and in equity and good conscience, — it being a remote vendee of the land. It prayed that its title be quieted, but in the event the plain *451 tiff should recover the land, that it have judgment against the county for $1000, with 6 per cent interest from June 9, 1879, and for general relief.

It also impleaded R. B. Bishop personally and as administrator of the estate of Elam W. Harrold, "deceased, upon the covenants of warranty contained in the deed from Bishop, as administrator, to one Carver, who purchased the land for the cattle company, and upon oral agreements and promises to procure a good title from Dallas County to the lands sued for, it being then (in 1898) understood by Carver and by Bishop that the title made by the Commissioners Court to Brown was defective for want of power in the Commissioners Court to convey the land in consideration of Brown’s labor and services in surveying and subdividing it. The amount paid by Carver for the cattle company to Bishop as administrator of Harrold’s estate for said land was $1.50 per acre on October 21, 1898, or $1066.50, and a recovery of this sum is prayed for, with interest as 6 per cent per annum from said date.

Bishop, as administrator and personally, answered by demurrers and special exceptions, general denial and statute of frauds, and adopted the answer of the cattle company as pleaded against the plaintiff, Dallas County.

In replication Dallas County pleaded to the answer and cross-action of the cattle company a general denial, and further that the claim of $1000 for Brown’s services in surveying and mapping the lands was never presented to the Commissioners Court for allowance, and therefore suit can not be maintained thereon, and furthermore that said claim is barred by the statute of limitation of four years.

The case was tried by the court without a jury on March 5, 1901, and resulted in a judgment in favor of Dallas County against the cattle company for the lands sued for and $120.48 for rents from October 2, 1898, to the day of trial, denying the cattle company recovery for Brown’s services in surveying and mapping the land, because barred by the statute of limitation of four years, but rendering judgment in its favor against R. B. Bishop, as administrator of the Harrold estate, for $1217.58, — the same being the purchase money paid to said administrator for said land and interest, — but denying recovery against Bishop personally. From this judgment both the cattle company and Bishop, as administrator, appeal upon conclusions of facts and law filed by the District Court, the substance of which is as follows:

The land sued for was part of the public free school lands granted to Dallas County by the State of Texas for free school purposes. It was conveyed to John Henry Brown on June 9, 1879, by order of the Commissioners Court of Dallas County with covenants of general warranty, in consideration of services rendered by him in subdividing and platting said school lands. The cattle company’s title rests upon mesne conveyances under covenants of general warranty from Brown to it, Brown having received $1422 as consideration therefor, and Bishop, as administrator of Harrold’s estate, having received from the cattle company *452 $1.50 per acre, amounting to $1066.50, for the 711 acres on October 14, 1898, the date of his deed to Carver, and said company has been in actual possession and occupation of said land ever since said date. The sale’ by Bishop, as administrator, to Carver was regularly ordered, made, reported and confirmed, and deed ordered made, said deed containing the following clause after the covenant of general warranty: “I do not bind myself personally, and I make this covenant of warranty in my capacity as administrator so far as I have the power and authority to do so and no further.” Signed and acknowledged by R. B. Bishop “as administrator of the estate of E. W. Harrold, deceased.”

On the 21st of October, 1898, Carver conveyed the land to the defendant cattle company, for whom he had bought it at the administrator’s sale. At the time Carver bought the land, he, as well as Bishop, knew of the defect in the title by reason of the want of power in the Commissioners Court to make the sale for the consideration named, and Bishop agreed orally as administrator that if Carver would pay the purchase price he would have Dallas County make a good and perfect title to the land, and without this promise Carver would not have bought and paid for the land. Bishop afterwards made efforts to get Dallas County to perfect the title but failed. There is yet $2000 in the hands of Bishop belonging to the Harrold estate, and administration is still pending thereon in Tarrant County. The Club Land and Cattle Company has succeeded to all the rights and claims growing out of the sale of this land that accrued to John Henry Brown. The rental value of the land since June 13, 1898, has been 6 1-4 cents per acre per annum. The value of the service of John Henry Brown rendered to Dallas County and accepted by it, and in payment and discharge of which the land in controversy was conveyed to him, in addition to the $250 paid him in cash, is and was $500, and the land conveyed to Brown was not worth more than $500 at the time it was conveyed to him. The contract made by the

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 S.W. 872, 26 Tex. Civ. App. 449, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/club-land-cattle-co-v-dallas-county-texapp-1901.