Devereaux v. Daube

185 S.W.2d 211, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 616
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 5, 1945
DocketNo. 14661.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 185 S.W.2d 211 (Devereaux v. Daube) 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
Devereaux v. Daube, 185 S.W.2d 211, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 616 (Tex. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

BROWN, Justice.

The briefs and the record before us disclose that this is a peculiar case in several respects.

*212 We gather from the briefs and record that appellee, Sam Daube, became the purchaser of the lands in controversy in the year 1936 through a court sale made under judgment and order of the District Court of- Montague County in a suit brought by the State of Texas to recover judgment for delinquent taxes on the lands and a foreclosure of the tax lien. In the summer of 1940, Sam Daube brought suit in the said District Court complaining of A. Devereaux and wife, and each and all of their unknown heirs, against Will A. Miller, Jr., and his wife, and each and all of their unknown heirs, and against William D. Redd and each and all of the unknown heirs of said Redd, and against each and all of the unknown heirs of R. L. Miller, deceased, the residences of each being alleged to be unknown to the plaintiff; and the petition also complained of Frank Devereaux, a resident of Cherokee County, Texas, and of Stuart Miller, a non compos mentis, who resides in Wichita County, Texas; and the plaintiff alleged that all such defendants were claiming some right, title or' interest in the lands in question, the exact nature of which the plaintiff did not know.

Plaintiff alleged ownership of the fee simple title in himself; that the claims of the defendants cast a cloud upon his title; and he also alleged that he had enjoyed peaceable and adverse possession under title and color of title, paying the taxes, using and cultivating the property for more than three years, as against the claims asserted by the defendants; and he prayed for judgment against the defendants.

Citation by publication was issued and service had as to the defendants whose residences were alleged to be unknown to the plaintiff, by such process.

Personal service was had on Frank Devereaux and the non compos mentis Stuart Miller.

On October 12, 1940, Frank Devereaux, Ira Stepp, J. D. Stepp, William Stepp, Edith Northrop, and her husband Murray Northrop, alleging that they were all of the surviving heirs of A. Devereaux and wife, deceased, filed an answer through G. L. Robertson, an attorney of Fort Worth, Texas; and on October 15th said attorney filed an answer for Lela Bell Taylor and husband, Dick Taylor, alleging that Mrs. Taylor is a surviving heir of A. Devereaux and wife.

On November 22, 1940, Frank Dever-eaux, Ira Stepp, J. D. Stepp, William Stepp, Edith and Murray Northrop, Albert Devereaux, Charlie Devereaux, Lela Bell and Dick Taylor, by and through said attorney, filed a motion requesting a postponement of the trial for the asserted reason that the defendants were not aware of the existence of the suit until Friday before appearance day, at which time one of the defendants learned of the situation and contacted said attorney and requested him to file an answer for the defendants for the purpose of preventing judgment being taken by default; and that after contacting the other defendants, it was discovered that some of them were desirous of employing their regular attorney to assist in the trial of the case.

No order appears in the record disclosing what disposition, if any, was made of this motion for a continuance, but we here observe that under the then existing statute, the terms of the District Court of Montague County were fixed as follows: “On the first Monday in January and may continue six weeks; on the thirteenth Monday after the first Monday in January and may continue six weeks; on the twenty-fifth Monday after the first Monday in January and may continue six weeks; and on the forty-first Monday after the first Monday in January and may continue six weeks.”

The citation by publication was returnable to the term of court that was to convene on the second Monday in October, 1940, same being October 14th, and the personal service had upon Stuart Miller requires an answer at the same term.

We call attention to these matters and facts because the case was not tried until the term that began the first Monday in January, 1941.

It thus appears that whether or not any affirmative action was taken on the motion for a continuance, all parties defendant obtained the advantage of a continuance until the following term of court, convened on the first Monday in January, 1941, at which time the cause came up for trial.

On January 21, 1941, the said attorney Robertson filed a petition in his own right, asserting that he had theretofore filed an answer for Charles Devereaux of Rome, Georgia, and for Lela Bell Taylor and Dick Taylor of Paris, Texas, and that when he filed such pleading he did so in *213 good faith believing that he was authorized to do so, but that it now appears that the filing of such answer for the said tihree named persons was unauthorized, and this is his prayer: “Wherefore, premises considered, your petitioner prays the court that he be permitted to withdraw as counsel for the said Charles Devereaux, Lela Bell Taylor and Dick Taylor, and upon their substituting counsel that he be permitted to withdraw the pleadings filed by your petitioner on their behalf.”

No action appears to have been taken on such petition, and the answer remained in the file of court papers. Let us observe here that no effort has been made by any party to question the integrity of the above named attorney, and this court is of the opinion that we may take judicial notice of the fact that said attorney is a member of the bar residing in this Supreme Judicial District and that his character is above reproach.

On January 31, 1941, the day on which the judgment was rendered in favor of Sam Daube, Attorney Robertson filed a pleading for Albert Devereaux, M. S. Northrop, Edith Northrop, J. D. Stepp, Wm. Edwin Stepp, Frank Devereaux and Ira Stepp in which it is alleged that the plaintiff, Daube, had brought suit to clear his title to the lands in controversy, and that Daube relies upon a deed from the Sheriff of Montague County to him, recorded in Book 188 at page 544, bearing date October 6, 1936; that such deed is supported by an order of sale issued out of the District Court of Montague County in cause No. 8859 which was a suit for taxes brought by the State of Texas against Frank Devereaux, the unknown heirs of Mrs. A. Devereaux, the unknown heirs of A. Devereaux, the unknown heirs of Will Miller, Jr., and Stuart Miller; that the parties filing the pleading presented were cited by publication and judgment was rendered on such service; that the defendants assert that the judgment was rendered wrongfully because due diligence was not exercised by Daube to ascertain who are the heirs of Mr. and Mrs. A.

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Bluebook (online)
185 S.W.2d 211, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/devereaux-v-daube-texapp-1945.