Duncan v. Adams

210 S.W.2d 180, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1119
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 18, 1948
DocketNo. 4491.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 210 S.W.2d 180 (Duncan v. Adams) 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
Duncan v. Adams, 210 S.W.2d 180, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1119 (Tex. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

MURRAY, Justice.

The appellees, F. P. Adams et al., brought this suit in trespass to try title againt William Duncan, the executor under the will of William Duncan, the devisees of the will, and the unknown heirs of those above and their unknown heirs, for the title to the William Duncan 640 acre survey, Abstract 136, in Jasper County, Texas. The defendants were duly cited by publication. Certain parties claiming to be the heirs of William Duncan and the heirs of devisees under the will of William Duncan filed a formal answer to said suit and thereafter they filed an amended answer and a cross-action against plaintiffs for the title and possession of the same tract of land. Appellees answered such cross-action by general denial and pleaded the three, five, ten and twenty-five years’ statutes of limitation. Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. arts. 5507, 5509, 5510, 5519. The trial court appointed an attorney to represent all defendants cited by publication who were not represented by the attorneys who filed the answer-and cross-action. At the trial the appellees took a non-suit as against those defendants answering and filing the cross-action, without admitting that any of the defendants *182 cited by publication and represented by the attorney appointed by the court were among those answering and filing cross-action, and the appellees became only cross-defendants as to them, remaining in the case as plaintiffs only as to those defendants represented by the attorney appointed by the court. Before judgment was rendered the cross-plaintiffs filed a disclaimer to the surface of the Duncan Survey and to one-half of the minerals located thereunder.

The cause was tried to the court without a jury and judgment was rendered for the appellees against the defendants who had not filed the answer and cross-action, judgment being for fee simple to the William Duncan 640 acre survey, and judgment was also rendered that the cross-plaintiffs take nothing against the appellees by their cross-action.

An appeal bond was filed and the attorneys representing the defendants who filed an answer and cross-action and disclaimer to the surface and one-half of the minerals, filed an appeal bond and gave notice of appeal for all of the persons originally sued as defendants. The appellees have filed a motion to dismiss this appeal on the ground that since the attorneys for the parties appealing have no authority to appeal in behalf of the parties represented by the attorney appointed by the court, the appeal bond is fatally defective as to all parties named in the appeal bond as appellants. They include with such motion an alternative motion that in event the entire appeal be not dismissed, that the appeal be dismissed as to certain named defendants and all parties defendant for whom the trial court appointed an attorney. We have concluded that the attorney who was appointed by the trial court had the duty and responsibility of determining after judgment whether an appeal should be taken in behalf of his clients, and therefore that he and not the other attorneys had the authority to execute such an appeal bond. We do not believe, however, that the appeal bond executed in such a manner as is indicated here is defective as to the parties appealing. A new appeal bond will not be required in behalf of the parties represented by the attorneys who desired to appeal.

The appellees’ motion to dismiss the entire appeal is overruled. Their alternative motion is granted and the appeal of all the parties originally named as defendants and represented in the trial court by Hon. Lewis Lanier, whp was appointed to represent such defendants by the trial court, is dismissed. It is not considered that such dismissal operates to prejudice the appeal of the parties represented by the other attorneys, Hon. A. M. Huffman and Hon. Geo. F. Kirkpatrick. Such parties are before this court as appellants from the judgment which decreed that they as cross-plaintiffs take nothing in their suit against the cross-defendants.

At the request of cross-plaintiffs below, the trial court filed the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:

Findings of Facts

1. The 640 acres, the ownership of which is in controversy in this suit, was patented to William Duncan in 1842 and is known as the William Duncan Survey, Abstract 136, Jasper County, Texas.

2. The patent was issued upon field notes of survey made for George William Duncan, and General Land Office records show the scrip basing the survey to have belonged to G. W. Duncan.

3. William Duncan, a resident of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, died testate in Philadelphia in 1864.

4. The William Duncan of Philadelphia, who died testate in 1864, is one and the same as the William Duncan, patentee of the William Duncan Survey.

5. The will of William Duncan was admitted to probate in the Register’s office for the City and County of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in the year 1864.

6. Letters testamentary under the will of William Duncan were granted in 1864 to Anna C. Duncan, the wife of William Duncan, James J. Duncan, George W. Duncan, sons of William Duncan, John G. Ford, nephew of William Duncan, and William D. Moulder, a grandson of William Duncan.

7. The William Duncan 640 acre survey in Jasper County, Texas, constituted a por *183 tion of the residuary estate of William Duncan which was devised, subject to a life estate in a one-third of the income from such residuary estate in Anna C. Duncan, wife of William Duncan, to the heirs of William M. Duncan, deceased; the heirs of Joseph M. Duncan; to George W. Duncan, his heirs or assigns; Mary Ann D. Ford, her heirs and assigns; Sarah LaSell, her heirs and assigns, and to the heirs of Henry H. Duncan, as tenants in common.

8. Anna C. Duncan, wife of William Duncan, died prior to 1881, as did all of the other executors of the will of William Duncan except John G. Ford. No accounting was rendered by any of the executors of the will of William Duncan after 1881, and there was no need for any.

9. No ancillary administration on the estate of William Duncan was ever had in the State of Texas.

10. A certified copy of the will of William Duncan and its probate was filed for record in Jasper County, Texas, in 1901,

11. On July 31, 1906, John G. Ford, as sole surviving executor of the estate of William Duncan, executed a deed to W. J. B. Adams, R. F. Adams, and Abel Adams, ancestors of the plaintiffs and cross-defendants F. P. Adams et al., all of whom are hereinafter referred to as the “Adams-es”, purporting to convey for a consideration of $4,480, the 640 acre William Duncan Survey, Jasper County, Texas, reserving a one-half interest in the minerals, and especially covenanting that he had not done or suffered to be done anything to encumber, impair or charge the title or estate purported to be granted.

12. At the time of the Ford deed in 1906 taxes were due on the William Duncan .640 acre survey for the years 1902, 1903 .and 1904.

13. At the time of the Ford deed in 1906 there were outstanding limitation claims to 320 acres of the 640 acre William Duncan Survey, to-wit: limitation claim to 160 .acres in the northeast corner by T. A. Bilbo .and limitation claim to 160 acres in the northwest corner by Fred Burrell, tenant of the Adamses.

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215 S.W.2d 599 (Texas Supreme Court, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
210 S.W.2d 180, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duncan-v-adams-texapp-1948.