Duffey v. Cross

175 S.W.2d 637
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 27, 1943
DocketNo. 9391.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 175 S.W.2d 637 (Duffey v. Cross) 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
Duffey v. Cross, 175 S.W.2d 637 (Tex. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

McClendon, chief justice.

This appeal involves a proper construction of Art. 5367a, V.A.C.S. (Ch. 183, p. 560, Gen.L. 43rd Leg., Reg. Sess., 1933). In 1926 Cross, the surface owner of a tract of land, the mineral title to which was in the State, conveyed as agent of the State under the Relinquishment Act (Art. 5367, R.C.S.) a mineral lease thereon to Duffey, the recited consideration being in part a bonus of $1,000, the entire amount of which was paid by Duffey to Cross at the *639 time of the conveyance. The lease was in terms the same as that construed in the Navarro case. Navarro Gil Co. v. Cross, 139 Tex. 272, 162 S.W.2d 677, reversing Tex.Civ.App., 150 S.W.2d 117. The State brought this suit against Duffey alone for 1/2 of the bonus, on August 30, 1938, the last day upon which it could be brought within the five-year limitation period prescribed in Art. 5367a. September 24, 1940, the State filed an amended petition in which Cross was sued with Duffey. December 27, 1940, Cross filed a plea in abatement to the State’s suit, predicated upon failure of the Land Commissioner to comply with alleged prerequisites of Art. 5367a regarding ascertainment of the amount and by whom due the State (Sec. 1), demand for payment thereof (Sec. 5), and giving the debtor an opportunity (90 days) to make affidavit of inability to pay in cash (Secs. 2 and 6). February 7, 1941, Duf-fey filed an amended answer in which he sought judgment over against Cross for any amount the State might recover against Duffey, asserting the three grounds of recovery over upheld in the Tippett case (Shell Petroleum Corp. v. Tippett, Tex.Civ.App., 103 S.W.2d 448, error refused, and expressly approved in Allison v. Stanolind Oil & Gas Co., 133 Tex. 540, 129 S.W.2d 267, and in the Navarro case): (1) Cross’s warranty of title; (2) reimbursement for money paid Cross under mutual mistake (indemnity) and (3) subrogation to the State’s right to recover against-Cross. November 25, 1942, Cross filed his answer to the Duffey cross-action, in which he alleged (among other defenses) that Duffey was not liable to the State because of noncompliance with the’ above alleged prerequisites. He added a plea of limitation under Art. 5367a. A trial amendment to his cross-action was filed by Duffey, in which he alleged in substance: Duffey’s residence was given as Fort Worth, Tar-rant County, Texas, in the mineral lease; he never lived in Tarrant County, but lived then and always thereafter in Midland County, Texas; the State did not know and was not able to learn his address until long after suit was filed, and could not have located him in Tarrant County; there was no obligation on the State to ascertain his residence; and “if there might otherwise have been an obligation on the State to notify” him before filing suit, these facts excused such notice. Other matters of pleading, where deemed necessary, will be stated later.

The trial was to the court and resulted in judgment: (1) Sustaining Cross’s plea in abatement and dismissing the State’s suit as to him; (2) awarding recovery by the State against Duffey; and (3) denying recovery over against Cross by Duffey on his cross-action. Duffey alone has appealed.

Duffey’s brief does not challenge the judgment against him in favor of the State, his only points being directed against the judgment denying him recovery over against Cross, and against the ruling of the court in sustaining Cross’s plea in abatement. As to this latter ruling it is only necessary to point out that Duffey had no justiciable interest in that controversy, since his rights were not in any way prejudiced by that ruling. Only the State could challenge that ruling and it has not appealed.

There is no merit in the breach of warranty theory of recovery over since there was no allegation or proof that there had been an ouster or that there had been any development under the lease, or that it was still in force. Consequently, there was no showing of any lien, present or prospective, against any property conveyed by the mineral lease (and therefore protected by the warranty) which payment of the State’s judgment would discharge.

Duffey’s claim against Cross must therefore be sustained, if at all, upon his asserted - right to indemnity or subrogation upon the theory of payment to Cross under mutual mistake.

Cross’s theory of defense to Duffey’s-cross-action which we sustain, may be substantially stated as follows: Sec. 6 of Art. 5367a, construed in connection with Secs. 1, 2 and 5, constituted demand upon the debtor a condition precedent to the right of the State to sue; no demand was made upon Duffey, and no pleading averred or proof showed facts which would obviate the necessity for such demand; Duffey therefore had a valid defense to the suit of the State which he could have asserted by plea in abatement, upon the sustaining of which limitation would bar any further action; Duffey’s failure to interpose this defense, under the circumstances already detailed, precluded his recovery over against Cross.

The State has filed an amicus curiae brief opposing this construction of Art. 5367a, asserting that its interest arises by reason of involvement of the question in-other cases pending in trial courts.

*640 The contentions of Duffey and the State in opposition to Cross’s above theory of defense, stated likewise substantially, are: Sec. 6 of Art. 5367a does not prescribe any act on the part of any official as a condition precedent to suit; the requirement of notice, etc., was merely a privilege afforded the debtor, which was personal to him and which he might waive without affecting his right of indemnity. The State further suggests that to impose a duty upon the Land Commissioner and make performance of that duty a condition precedent to the right of the State to sue upon a preexisting debt due the school fund would violate “the spirit, if not the actual letter,” of Art. VII, Sec. 4 of the State Constitution, Vernon’s Ann. St.

We need not reiterate here the history of the Relinquishment Act and the various •controversies that arose thereunder prior to adoption of Art. 5367a. See in this connection the emergency clause, section 8 to Ch. 23, p. 28, Gen.Laws, Reg. Sess., 42nd Leg. and the Tippett case. The purpose of Art. 5367a, passed at the next session of the Legislature after the Supreme Court’s decision in the Empire case (Empire Gas & Fuel Co. v. State, 121 Tex. 138, 47 S.W.2d 265), was thus expressed in its emergency clause: “Sec. 10. The fact that the State •does not know the amounts due to it from transactions arising under the so-called Relinquishment Act, nor by whom such indebtedness is due, and the further fact that such indebtedness was inadvertently incurred, and because of the present economic stress and strain the debtors should be allowed time in which to pay this indebtedness, constitutes an emergency * * Acts 1933, c. 183.

The pertinent portions of Art. 5367a read :

■ “Sec. 1.

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Bluebook (online)
175 S.W.2d 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duffey-v-cross-texapp-1943.