Dwyer v. Rippetoe

10 S.W. 668, 72 Tex. 520, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1287
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1889
DocketNo. 2610
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 10 S.W. 668 (Dwyer v. Rippetoe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dwyer v. Rippetoe, 10 S.W. 668, 72 Tex. 520, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1287 (Tex. 1889).

Opinion

Henry, Associate Justice.

Thomas Dwyer instituted this suit in the year 1873 against A. H. Rippetoe and Julius Tomashefsky to recover a portion of lot 43 in the city of Brenham. The case was before this court on appeal by defendants, and was reversed and remanded in the year 1886.

In 1887 plaintiff filed an amended petition in the form of an action of [526]*526trespass to try title, making I. M. Onins, D. C. Giddings, and J. D. Giddings defendants, charging that on the 23d day of February, 1871, while plaintiff was in quiet possession of said premises, the original defendants, “acting for themselves and for and by consent of their co-defendants, with force and arms,” etc. The deaths of defendants Rippetoe and J. D. Giddings were suggested and their heirs and legal representatives were cited. Giddings and Onins demurred generally, and by special exceptions pleaded both the statutes of limitations and stale demand.

The original defendants filed a general denial and plea of not guilty, and specially answered in substance as follows:

“That on March 17, 1859, one Browning sold and conveyed to W. B. Pressley lot 43 and part of lot 90 in one parcel, for which Pressley executed his three notes each for $150, and each retaining vendor’s lien.
“That on 29th February, 1860, A. Testard as assignee and for the use of Lowery instituted suit on one of. said notes in the District Court of Washington County against said Pressley, in which suit judgment was rendered on the 21st April, 1860, for the debt and foreclosing the vendor’s lien. The case was taken to the Supreme Court by the defendant, and in 1867 was reversed and remanded. Afterwards H. B. Perryman, having purchased part of lot 43 and being in possession (not of the part claimed by plaintiff), was made a party defendant with Pressley. In October, 1870, a judgment was rendered for the plaintiff for his debt, with foreclosure of vendor’s lien on all the land sold by Browning to Pressley.
“That in March, 1868, R. D. Harris instituted suit in the District Court against Pressley and Perryman on one other of- said notes, and on October 24, 1870, judgment was rendered against Pressley for $118.75, and against both defendants for the foreclosure of. vendor’s lien on all of the land sold by Browning to Pressley (all of lot 43 and part of lot 90) against both defendants.
“That on February 19,1861, Pressley conveyed the part of lot 43 now claimed by plaintiff to J. C. Jennings, who on March 16, 1861, conveyed it to plaintiff. On February 19, 1861, Pressley conveyed thirty by ninety feet out of the northeast corner of lot 43 to C. J. Erwin, who' on February 27, 1861, sold it to original defendant A. H. Rippetoe, and he on May 16, 1861, sold it to one Prindle, who on August 28, 1863, sold it to W. S. Wilkins, from whom it was purchased on May 23, 1886, by Perryman and Pflughaupt, all of said conveyances being made with warranties of title. The consideration stated in the last mentioned deed was seven hundred and fifty dollars, and that in the deed from Rippetoe to Prindle was seven hundred dollars.
“ That said lots lie contiguous to each other, forming one parcel of land.
“About April 16, 1870, Pflughaupt, for the purpose of protecting himself and before judgments were rendered, purchased said notes with the understanding that the suits should be prosecuted to judgment in the [527]*527name of the original plaintiff for his benefit. Afterwards and before judgment Swearingen and Onins became the owners of said notes with the right to control said suits, and defendant A. H. Eippetoe, for the purpose of protecting himself and his vendee, purchased of Swearingen and Onins a one-half interest in said notes and suits, paying therefor about $207.
“ That after the purchase of said notes by Eippetoe he solicited the parties interested to unite with him and pay off said encumbrances, which they all declined to 'do, and thereafter on the 28th and 29th days of November, 1870, he caused orders of sale to be issued on said judgments, in pursuance of which the sheriff on the 3d of January, 1871, sold said lots to A. H. Eippetoe, who bid $50 at each sale, which by reason of adverse claims and encumbrances and threatened litigation was all that said lots would bring at a fair sale. The sheriff executed to said Rippetoe a deed for said lots whereby he became invested with the title thereto as it existed in Browning before his sale to Pressley.
“That defendant Tomashefsky was at the date of the filing of plaintiff’s original petition the tenant of his codefendant A. H. Rippetoe, and claims no other title; that defendant Eippetoe became seized of the entire legal title, one-half of which he held in trust for Swearingen and Onins; that J. D. Giddings and D. C. Giddings never acquired any interest in said lots until December, 1881, when they purchased a third interest therein; that Swearingen sold his interest to Onins, but the legal title to the whole always remained in A. H. Rippetoe.”
Plaintiff filed an amended supplemental petition in which he alleged: “That at the time of filing his suit he was not aware of the title or claim of right under which defendants afterwards undertook to defend this action; that the pleadings filed in this action previous to the trial of this cause on the 16th of September, 1874, consisted alone of the plea of not guilty, and plaintiff did not learn or have opportunity to learn the pretended title under which defendants claimed until it was disclosed through the evidence offered by them at said trial. At said trial a judgment was rendered for plaintiff, which having been appealed from by defendants, the cause was reversed by the Supreme Court and remanded in 1878; that defendants’ title first came to his knowledge by their pleadings filed in this court on January 17, 1879, and September 5, 1879. Plaintiff charges that the Harris judgment ought not to have effect against him because the suit in which it was rendered was not instituted until long after plaintiff had purchased the lot owned by him and caused his deed to be recorded. That said sheriff’s sale and purchase thereat by the defendant Rippetoe, and all the proceedings anterior thereto upon which said sale purported to be based, were fictitious and void and ought not to avail the defendants or to prejudice the rights of the plaintiff for this, that the said purchase of the defendant Rippetoe, though made in his own [528]*528name, was in secret trust for himself and the defendants I. M, Onins, J. D. Giddings, and D. C. Giddings, who were jointly interested with him therein, upon some agreement the exact terms of which are unknown to the plaintiff, whereby the rights of the plaintiff and others were to be sacrificed by said parties under the forms of the law, although they well knew the fictitious character and consequent invalidity of said proceedings, and the defendant Rippetoe’s said pretended purchase was made with notice and actual knowledge of the several matters set up in this supplemental petition in relation thereto.
“That the notes upon which said two judgments were rendered were executed by W. B. Pressley to said W. A. Browning in part consideration of the conveyance by said Browning to said Pressley of said lot 43 and part of lot 90 heretofore mentioned; that on or about January 5,, 1860, the said Pressley, joined by his wife, by their deed duly executed and recorded, conveyed to one O. J.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 S.W. 668, 72 Tex. 520, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dwyer-v-rippetoe-tex-1889.