Dec Ball v. Carroll

92 S.W. 1023, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 323, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 255
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 17, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 92 S.W. 1023 (Dec Ball v. Carroll) 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
Dec Ball v. Carroll, 92 S.W. 1023, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 323, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 255 (Tex. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Associate Justice.

—This is an action of trespass to try title to a tract of 139 acres of land in Anderson County brought by appellant against the appellees, J. L. Carroll and Alen Brown.

The petition, in addition to the usual allegations in trespass to try title, sets up title in plaintiff under the statute of limitations of ten years, and further alleges in substance that the defendants are asserting claim to and have entered into possession of the land by virtue of a void sheriff’s sale and deed made under a void judgment for taxes, rendered by the District Court of Anderson County in a suit brought by the State of Texas against J. W. Zacharie, et al. The grounds upon which said judgment and sale are attacked are thus summarized in appellant’s brief:

*327 “(1) Because said sale was based upon a suit and judgment against unknown heirs, which was not authorized by law.
“(2) Because said sale was based upon a judgment rendered in a suit against J. W. Zacharie and C. E. Zacharie, and they were both dead before said suit was ever instituted.
“(3) Because said sale was based upon and made under a judgment rendered for the taxes alleged to be delinquent and due upon said land for the year 1884, which was not authorized by law.
“(4) Because said sale was based upon and made under a judgment rendered against two different sets of defendants, both of which sets could not have had any interest in the subject matter of said suit at one and the same time, and the same was therefore void for uncertainty.
“(5) Because said judgment, under which said sale was made, was rendered upon a petition that proceeded against, and a citation that cited, in the alternative, as defendants, the said J. W. Zacharie and C. E. Zacharie, or the unknown heirs of said parties, and said judgment was therefore void for uncertainty.
“(6) Because said judgment under which said sale was made, was rendered by default against nonresident defendants on a citation by publication which gave no notice that the State had or sought to foreclose a lien against said land, and the court was therefore without jurisdiction to render said judgment.
“(7) Because said sale was made under a judgment rendered in a suit against unknown heirs, and even if such suit was authorized by law, the citation on which said judgment was rendered was not published for eight consecutive weeks previous to the return day thereof, as required by law, and was therefore void.
“(8) Because said sale was made under a judgment rendered upon a petition and citation naming as defendants, in the alternative, J. W. Zacharie and C. E. Zacharie, or the unknown heirs of said parties, and said judgment was rendered against all of them jointly, and the same was therefore unauthorized by the pleadings, and void.
“(9) Because said judgment was rendered for, and said sale was made to pay the aforesaid items of cost, which were illegal and not authorized by law.” Said items referred to were set out in the petition and were as follows, to wit:
“J. Y. Gooch, the attorney appointed by the court to represent
said defendants cited by publication..............$ 50.00
Gideon J. Gooch, for dividing the land into lots and making
a map thereof.................................. 150.00
Fee of the District Clerk in said case................. 47.00
Fee of H. M. Cook, as sheriff.......................... 47.00
Fee of W. T. Sadler, as county attorney................ 94.00
Total ........................................$388.00
“(10) Because said sheriff executed said deed to said Carroll after said lot 43 had been sold to the State, and after the expiration of said order of sale.”

The prayer is for the recovery of the title and possession of the land *328 and for an order vacating and annulling said judgment and sheriff’s deeds as a cloud upon plaintiff’s title.

The defendants answered by general and special exceptions, plea of • not guilty, and special plea setting up the statute of limitation of four years in bar of plaintiff’s suit to vacate the judgment described in his petition. Defendant Carroll further answered by cross bill claiming title to the land and praying for its recovery against plaintiff.

The trial in the court below was without a jury, and resulted in a judgment that plaintiff taking nothing by his suit, and that defendant Carroll have and recover of plaintiff the title and possession of the land, and all costs of suit.

The land in controversy is a part of a grant of eleven leagues made by the States of Coahuila and Texas to Manuel Bionda. The whole of the grant was conveyed by Bionda to William Moore prior to 1840. On June 12, 1841, Moore conveyed the entire grant of J. W. Zacharie. On October 21, 1902, the heirs of Zacharie and his wife, C. B. Zacharie, conveyed a portion of the grant to J. A. Stewart. Appellant claims under Stewart, who conveyed to him 7,886 acres of the land by deed of date December 14, 1902. The deed from the heirs of J. W. and C. B. Zacharie to J. A. Stewart purports.to convey portions of said Bionda grant. The whole eleven league grant is accurately described, but the only description of the portions conveyed by the deed is as follows:

“This deed conveys without warranty all the lands we own as heirs at law of James W. Zacharie and his wife, Caroline E. Zacharie, and by purchase of the said grant, which is estimated to be thirty thousand (30,000) acres, remaining at the death of J. W. Zacharie, June 1, 1870, unsold, uncompromised, not donated or lost in suit by himself or his wife, reference being hereby made to the several deeds of record on the records of deed of Anderson and Freestone Counties, and to the United States District Court at Austin, Texas, for the number of acres sold, compromised and lost in suit.”

There was no evidence showing that the land in controversy was not a part of the lands mentioned in the deed to Stewart as not included in the conveyance thereby made.

The deed from Stewart to appellant conveys by metes and bounds a tract of 7,886 acres out of the Bionda grant, and there is no evidence showing that the 139 acres of land in controversy is a part of this 7,886 acres.

Appellant offered no evidence in support of his claim of title by limitation.

On October 1, 1897, the State of Texas brought.suit in the District Court of Anderson County to recover delinquent taxes due upon a part of the Bionda grant described in the petition as containing 24,354 acres, less a number of small tracts which had been sold by J. W. Zacharie. The 139 acres are a part of the land upon which the tax lien was foreclosed in this shit.

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Bluebook (online)
92 S.W. 1023, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 323, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dec-ball-v-carroll-texapp-1906.