Davidson v. Bodan Lumber Co.

143 S.W. 700, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 24
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 19, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 143 S.W. 700 (Davidson v. Bodan Lumber Co.) 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
Davidson v. Bodan Lumber Co., 143 S.W. 700, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 24 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

LEVY, J.

The suit was by appellant, seeking to recover title to certain lands and the timber thereon, and damages for the conversion of certain pine timber, and for trespassing and negligently causing fire to rim over the land. Appellees do not assert title to the land, 'but claim to be the owners of the pine timber by purchase with the acquired right to remove it from the land. Appel-lees further deny damage to the land and having set out any fire. The court gave a peremptory instruction to the jury to return a verdict for appellant for the land, and in favor of appellees on the other issues; and judgment was entered accordingly, but with the costs against appellees up to and including the trial of the case.

The controversy here first' involves the question of whether or not the Bodan Lumber Company was the owner of this timber, and had the right to remove it from the land. It was agreed that W. W. Burke acquired the title to the land in controversy, and that it was his separate property. Burke died intestate, leaving four children. It was shown that, after the death of Burke, his wife and all of thq children conveyed the land by warranty deed to W. H. Spiuks on October 7,1901. Spinks conveyed the same land to W. D. Aery by warranty deed dated April 5, 1902. W. D. Aery conveyed the pine timber on this land to the Arkansas Lumber Company on July 25, 1902, with the express right to enter the land and remove the timber. W. H. Bonner was appointed receiver of the property of the Arkansas Lumber Company on December 16, 1902. On January 29, 1908, the district court of Cherokee county, wherein the receivership proceedings were pending, ordered W. H. Bonner to sell the pine timber in question. Acting under the order, the receiver on April 7, 1908, made sale, which was confirmed by the court, and executed deed to the Bodan Lumber Company. It appears that the deed from Aery to the Arkansas Lumber Company was in exchange for some oak tie timber situated upon another tract of land and claimed by the Arkansas Lumber Company. In the same instrument in which this timber was conveyed to the lumber company other timber belonging to Robert Nun-ley was also conveyed, Nunley joining Aery in the deed. After the conveyance by Nunley and Aery to the Arkansas Lumber Company, Aery conveyed his interest in the oak tie timber received in exchange from the lumber company to Nunley. It appears that the title to the tie timber received from the Arkansas Lumber Company failed, and Nunley was compelled to pay for it a second time. It further appears that Nunley had fully paid Aery for his interest in the tie business, including the tie timber which he and Aery had acquired from the Arkansas Lumber Company in exchange for the pine timber in question. When the title to this tie timber had failed, Nunley, having bought part of it from the Arkansas Lumber Company and the remainder from Aery,. assumed that the pine timber reverted to him, and conveyed *701 it to A. Harris & Co. A. Harris & Co. conveyed it to appellee Bodan Lumber Company. From these conveyances it conclusively appears that the Bodan Lumber Company had title to the timber, unless defeated by some superior right in appellant. It was shown that on February 12, 1906, Aery conveyed the land in controversy by deed of general warranty to W. C. Davidson, the deed reciting a consideration of $1 and the assumption by Davidson of Aery’s obligation on vendor’s lien notes to Spinks. This deed upon its face did not except the timber which Aery had theretofore conveyed by deed to the Arkansas Lumber Company, and of which conveyance Davidson had full knowledge. In May, 1907, Davidson by a deed of ‘general warranty conveyed the land in controversy to T. S. Hatton, who had notice of the sale of the timber, reciting a cash consideration and deferred payments evidenced by notes. In 1908 Hatton sued the Bodan Lumber Company for this land and the timber, and the timber was awarded the Bodan Lumber Company by the judgment of the district court. This judgment was affirmed by this court on appeal (Hatton v. Bodan Lumber Co., 123 S. W. 163), and application for writ of error denied by the Supreme Court.

[1] Appellant now claims under deed from Hatton after rendition of the above judgment. It was shown that Davidson had notice of the fact of previous sale, as well as the judgment, when he took the conveyance. It was after the writ of error was denied in this appeal that the Bodan Lumber Company cut and removed the timber. Indisputably it appears, we think, that the Bodan Lumber Company, as held in the former appeal, had acquired title to the timber against Hatton. And appellant purchasing the land with full notice, as it indisputably appears, that the Bodan Lumber Company had previously purchased and had a conveyance to the timber, and that the Bodan Lumber Company was adjudged the owner, it must be held that the Bodan Lumber Company had acquired title to the timber against him.

[2] If any right to the pine timber in question had reverted from the Arkansas Lumber Company because of the failure of the title to the tie timber which the Arkansas Lumber Company exchanged for the pine timber, the right to it would be in Nunley, who, according to the conclusive proof, had acquired Aery’s rights, paying him for them and receiving a warranty deed to the tie timber. And, if there is any doubt that the title to the three heirs of W. W. Burke, who were minors at the time of their execution of the deed to Spinks, had not passed to him by that deed, it still must be said that their title passed to T. S. Hatton by the deed of Cor-ley Dowling, one of the minors, who, joined by her husband, conveyed her interest by deed to T. S. Hatton, and also by the deed of the guardian of the other two minors, who conveyed under the order of the probate court. If their title to the timber in suit was acquired by Hatton, appellant’s vendor, it was clearly divested out of Hatton by the judgment of the district court, and vested in the Bodan Lumber Company.

[3] Appellant, though, makes the point that, as there was an agreement between him and Aery by which he was to furnish the money to pay off the vendor’s lien notes which Aery had executed and assumed to pay in the deed to Aery from Spinks, he was entitled to be subrogated to the lien given to secure their payment, and also subrogated to the legal title, and because thereof he was entitled to recover the timber. The deed to Aery from Spinks recited the consideration as being two notes, one for $100 due in 90 days, and one for $200 due in 12 months, and also the assumption by Aery of the four purchase-money notes previously executed by Spinks to Mrs. Burke and others. Appellant testifies that he furnished Aery the money with which to pay these notes. But in this connection it conclusively appears that the agreement was merely that appellant would loan that amount of money, and it was so understood. There was no joint acquisition of the land by Aery and Davidson, nor was there any intended beneficial interest in the land to Davidson, nor was it so understood by Aery or Davidson, nor claimed by Davidson by reason of the purchase or agreement. Neither is there any pretense in the evidence that Davidson wás the original vendor of either Spinks or Aery, or had any interest or claim in the land at the time of his conveyance. Under these circumstances conclusively appearing, there was no legal title vested in Davidson, and he could predicate no legal title in the land merely upon the ground that he furnished the money to pay off the notes.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 S.W. 700, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davidson-v-bodan-lumber-co-texapp-1912.