De Ramirez v. De Ramirez

29 S.W.2d 872, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 658
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 18, 1930
DocketNo. 8462.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 29 S.W.2d 872 (De Ramirez v. De Ramirez) 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
De Ramirez v. De Ramirez, 29 S.W.2d 872, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 658 (Tex. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

COBBS, J.

This suit was filed by appellants against appellees to recover a certain tract of land situated in Zapata county, but by agreement the suit was transferred to Webb county district court, where it was finally tried. The case has been elaborately briefed and was argued orally.

It was alleged:

“(a) That plaintiffs and defendants are the joint owners in fee simple of Porcion 5, Zapata County, Texas, which land was originally granted by the Crown of Spain to Jose Luis Ramirez.
“(b) That such land was community property of said Ramirez and his wife, Basilia Martinez, neither of whom were ever married except to each other, and to whom ten children were born.
“(c) That said Jose Luis Ramirez died intestate in the year 1819 and that after his death his estate was partitioned and Porcion 5 Was set aside to his widow.
“(d) That on or about January 1, 1844, his widow died testate and her will was probated in Guerrero, Mexico, about January 12, 1844, 'in which will her ten children were named as her devisees.
“(e) That one of these ten children, namely, Pedro Ramirez, predeceased his mother and left surviving him as his sole heir his minor son, Jose Maria Ramirez, the father of the plaintiffs.
“(f) That no administration was ever had upon the estate of said Basilia Martinez in Texas, nor was any record ever made in Texas of the proceedings in Guerrero, Mexico.
“(g) That the independent executors named in such will in the year 1860 attempted to deed Porcion 5 to one of such executors, to-wit: Manuel Ramirez, in which deed it was recited that sale of said Porcion had been made long prior thereto. That such deed was recorded in Guerrero, Mexico, but was not recorded in Zapata County, Texas, and that neither the plaintiffs, nor their ancestor, had any knowledge thereof, active or constructive, prior to January 3, 1928, or that defendants claimed any title or interest thereunder prior to June, 1929. That such deed is wholly void for the reason that it was an attempt by executors and trustees holding a fiduciary position to convey trust property to one of their number and an attempt by an executor (whom they alleged to have been guardian of said Jóse Maria at that time) to acquire trust property for his own benefit, and that the oral sale purported and represented by such instrument to have been made at a prior time is, and was, from its inception (if made at all), null and void for the same reasons.
“(h) In the alternative, that said deed of 1860 was voidable at their instance, and that if any title passed to Manuel Ramirez, it passed to him as trustee in trust for the benefit of plaintiffs, which trust was never repudiated until some time in the year 1929.
“(i) Plaintiffs prayed as follows: ‘That upon trial hereof, they be adjudged and declared the legal and equitable holdings and rights, jointly, of an undivided one-tenth interest in said Porcion 5; that said purported deed or instrument, Exhibit ‘A,’ be declared void or the defendants declared trustees for plaintiff thereunder as to the one-tenth part of said land, and for judgment for the partition and division of said land, etc.’
“(j> The above mentioned deed was attached to such petition, marked Exhibit ‘A.’ ”

The answer contained general demurrer and special exceptions based on the four-year statute of limitation, stale demand, and laches; general denial. It admitted as be *874 ing true tile fact tliat such porcion of land was granted to Jose Luis Ramirez, and the allegations in regard to his wife and children, and partition of his estate, the execution of the will and prohate thereof, devisees named therein, the death of Pedro Ramirez, and that Jose Maria Ramirez was the sole heir of Pedro Ramirez, and that plaintiffs were the sole heirs of Jose Maria Ramirez.

Specially denying that plaintiffs had any interest in porcion 5, defendants further alleged as follows:

“1. That immediately after the probate of the above mentioned will the estate of said Basilia Martinez was partitioned among her devisees according to the laws of Mexico. That such partition was executed by each of the adult devisees and by guardian ad litem, for the minor Jose Maria, duly appointed by the proper authorities, and that such partition was approved by the Mexican courts according to the laws of Mexico. That by the terms of this partition, not a single one of such devisees obtained any part of Porcion 5 but said Porcion 5, together with a part of the Mexico porcion, was set aside for the purpose of paying the debts and bequests, and title to same vested in the executors who, under the terms of the will and such partition, had power to sell same, and that they immediately sold and conveyed said Porcion 5 to Manuel Ramirez, either by a parol sale or by a written instrument, but that if such sale was evidenced by a written instrument the same has been lost.
“2. That in the event such partition was not executed according to the laws of Mexico, then that it was the voluntary act of each of the devisees, and that said Jose Maria, upon becoming of age, accepted his share of said estate according to the terms of said partition, which partition in question covered Porcion 5, converted same to his own use, thereby ratifying and confirming the action of his guardian ad litem in making such partition, and that said Jose Maria Ramirez, who lived for a period of seventy years after such partition, continued to ratify and confirm the same as long as he lived, and that Manuel Ramirez and the defendants and their predecessors in title, all of whom are holding under said Manuel Ramirez, relied on such partition at the time they purchased and would not have purchased such land unless they had been relying bn such partition, by reason of which an estoppel was created, and further that such partition was a valid oral or verbal partition followed by ratification and confirmation.
“3. Especially denied thát Manuel Ramirez was the guardian of said Jose Maria Ramirez at the time he purchased Porcion 5 or at any time prior thereto, but that in all of such proceedings said minor was represented by his guardian ad litem, Francisco Ramirez, and further that subsequent to the purchase of such porcion Manuel Ramirez did become the guardian of said Jose Maria, and in the year 1857 turned over to one Jose Antonio Guellar Gutierrez the entire estate of Jose Maria under the supervision of the Mexican court, said Manuel having resigned as guardian and said Gutierrez having been appointed guardian.
“4. Specially denying that executors or trustees were forbidden by the laws of Mexico or Texas to purchase property in their charge.
“5. That said Porcion 5 was actually sold to Manuel Ramirez in January, 1844, and that the sole purpose of the 1860 deed was to serve as a written evidence of the title acquired by Manuel Ramirez in 1844.
“6.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.W.2d 872, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-ramirez-v-de-ramirez-texapp-1930.