De Zavala v. Daughters of Republic of Texas

124 S.W. 160, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 19, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 691
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 27, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 124 S.W. 160 (De Zavala v. Daughters of Republic of Texas) 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 Zavala v. Daughters of Republic of Texas, 124 S.W. 160, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 19, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 691 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

REESE, Associate Justice.

— This is a suit by the Daughters of the Republic of Texas, a private corporation having that corporate name, against Miss A din a de Zalala and twelve other persons named in the petition as defendants. The purpose of the suit can best be shown by a brief statement from the petition, as follows:

Plaintiff is a private corporation created and organized under the general laws of the State of Texas under that name. The objects and powers of the association, as set out in the charter, are:

“First, to perpetuate the memory and spirit of the men and women who have achieved and maintained the Independence of Texas. Second, to encourage historical research into the earliest records of Texas, especially those relating to the revolution of 1835, and the events which followed; to foster the preservation of documents and relics, and to encourage the publication of records of individual service of soldiers and patriots of the Republic. Third, to promote the celebration of March 2 (Independence Day), and April 31 (San Jacinto Day); to secure and hallow historic spots by erecting monuments thereon, and to cherish and preserve unity of Texas, as achieved and established by the fathers and mothers of the Texas Revolution.
“This association may have and hold, by purchase, grant, gift or otherwise, real estate on which battles for the Independence of Texas were fought; such monument or monuments as may be erected thereon, and burial grounds where the dead who fought and died for Texas Independence are buried; and personal property, consisting of books, manuscripts and other historical records, relating to the early history of Texas, and relics.”

It was provided by the constitution of the association that the general management of its affairs during recess should be vested in an executive committee of nine members. The executive committee at the date of the institution of this suit was composed of Mrs. Marie B. Urwitz, as chairman, and eight others named in the petition.

Plaintiff owns" many valuable relics relating to the early history of Texas, gathered from the battlefield of San Jacinto and elsewhere; it owns papers and documents relating to the revolutionary period of Texas history; these relics and papers are valuable by reason of their historical interest; they are worth to plaintiffs thousands of dollars; they can not be valued by any rule of commerce; their destruction or loss would be irreparable only to this plaintiff, which could not be adequately compensated by any recovery of damages in money.

By the Act of the Legislature of Texas, approved January 36, 1905, known as chapter 7 of the Laws of Texas of the Acts of 1905, providing for the purchase, care and preservation of the “Alamo property,” described in said Act, it was provided that upon the receipt of the title to said land the Governor shall deliver the property thus acquired, together with the “Alamo Church” property, al *22 ready owned by the State, to the custody and care of plaintiff, to be maintained by it in good order and repair, without charge to the State; by the terms of section 3 of said Act the duty of keeping, managing, controlling and retaining the custody of all of said property is imposed upon the plaintiff, and not upon any chapter of plaintiff corporation; the affairs of plaintiff are managed and controlled by its executive committee; the executive committee of plaintiff, provided for by its charter, constitution and by-laws, is the one body connected with plaintiff corporation, empowered by said Act of the Legislature to manage and control said “Alamo property” and said “Alamo Church,” and in the name of plaintiff to make contracts and rent same, and to collect and receipt for the rents therefor in the name of plaintiff; the “Alamo property” and the “Alamo Church” are sacred trusts imposed on plaintiff by the State of Texas, to be maintained,- controlled and protected by plaintiff through its duly elected and lawfully qualified executive committee; all of the said property, that is to say, the “Alamo property” and the “Alamo Church,” is of the market value of two hundred thousand dollars, but by reason of its historical worth, it is valuable beyond price; it is the duty in law and in honor of plaintiff, through its proper executive committee, to care for this sacred property, and to keep clear the title thereto in plaintiff, in accordance with the laws of Texas.

Plaintiff owns and holds in trust funds amounting to over one thousand dollars; said funds are in the custody of plaintiff’s duly elected and qualified treasurer, Miss Belle Penn, and plaintiff’s duly elected and legally qualified secretary-general, Mrs. Charles H. Milby, who retained custody of said funds under the control, direction and supervision of plaintiff’s executive committee.

The ladies named in paragraph two of the petition constitute the duly elected and legally qualified executive committee of plaintiff, and under the charter, constitution and by-laws of plaintiff are charged with the management and care of the “Alamo property” and “Alamo Church,” the funds belonging to plaintiff and held in trust by plaintiff, all relics and the historical documents belonging to plaintiff. Said executive committee is charged with the duty of managing and controlling the affairs of plaintiff, as is provided by the charter and constitution of the organization. The executive committee named in paragraph two has continuously, ever since their election, been in charge and control of the affairs of plaintiff corporation, lawfully exercising the duties imposed upon them in accordance with the authority and power in them vested by the charter, constitution and by-laws of plaintiff, and have ever since their election to said committee, had charge of the custody and control of the “Alamo property,” “Alamo Church,” all funds belonging to plaintiff, the relics and historical documents belonging to plaintiff. Mrs. Charles H. Milby is the duly elected and legally qualified secretary of plaintiff corporation; and has been ever since such election and is now in charge of the proper books, papers and documents pertaining to said office, together with the seal of the plaintiff corporation, and has ever since her election exercised the duties *23 imposed upon her as such secretary, and is still the qualified secretary of plaintiff corporation; Miss Belle Fenn is the duly elected and legally qualified treasurer of plaintiff; upon her election she took charge of the funds belonging to plaintiff, and under the control and direction of the executive committee has kept charge and control of said funds ever since her election to said office, and is still in charge and control of same, exercising the duties thereof.

“Plaintiff represents that it is a going concern, carrying out the duties imposed upon it by the laws of the State of Texas and the powers granted to it by its charter and the duties imposed by its constitution, through its legally elected executive committee, as named in paragraph two herein. That it is important to the interests of the property owned by plaintiff as well as property entrusted to plaintiff by the State of Texas, as well as ■ the perpetuation of the memory and spirit of the men and women who have achieved and maintained the independence of Texas, the éncouragement of historical research in the earliest records of.

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Bluebook (online)
124 S.W. 160, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 19, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-zavala-v-daughters-of-republic-of-texas-texapp-1909.