Eason v. David

232 S.W.2d 427, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2312
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 13, 1950
Docket4662
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 232 S.W.2d 427 (Eason v. David) 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
Eason v. David, 232 S.W.2d 427, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2312 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinions

WALKER, Justice.

Appeal from an order granting a temporary injunction.

Appellees J. W. David and wife were the plaintiffs, and the appellants Eason and O’Fiel were two of the three defendants in the trial court. The third defendant was Reagan Baker, a constable of Jefferson County.

Plaintiffs brought the suit to remove a cloud from the title to land and for injunc-tive relief, temporary as well as permanent. The subject matter of the litigation is certain real property in the City of Beaumont, to wit, Lots 8, 9 and 10 in Block 1 of the Hackett Addition to said 'city. Plaintiffs alleged that they were the owners of, and were in possession of, this property and that defendants Eason and O’Fiel had caused a writ of possession to be issued under a judgment of the District Court of Jefferson County in Cause No. 24120, styled The City of Beaumont v. J. W. David, and that said defendants had delivered said writ to the defendant Baker, a constable of Jefferson County, for execution. Plaintiffs alleged further that said defendants threatened to execute this writ and to dispossess them of the property aforesaid. Plaintiffs alleged generally that they had title in fee simple to the property and also plead specially that they had title to said property by adverse possession under the three and ten year statutes of limitation; Plaintiffs’.' charged that the writ of possession was wrongfully issued -because it required delivery of possession to the City of Beaumont but had been procured without - the City’s consent and further, that the City claimed no interest in the property and was not seeking to dispossess plaintiffs. The plaintiffs also alleged, in effect, that the judgment under which the writ had been [429]*429issued ivas dormant under Article 3773, R.S.1925, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 3773, and was barred by Article 5532, R.S.1925. Plaintiffs prayed judgment for title and for injunctive relief.

The trial court passed a restraining order and set the prayer for temporary injunction down for hearing.

Pending this hearing, defendants Eason and O’Fiel answered, pleading among other matters that they had title to the property. They alleged that the judgment mentioned in the petition was a tax judgment in behalf of the City of Beaumont against the' present plaintiffs, and that by virtue of a foreclosure sale under said judgment, the City of Beaumont became the owner of the property claimed by plaintiffs; and said defendants alleged further that they had acquired the City’s title. Said defendants prayed judgment for title and possession, and for rents.

The constable also answered. Among other matters, he alleged that the writ of possession in his hands was returnable within 90 days and that this period had expired. It is not disputed that this writ was never executed.

Plaintiffs’ prayer for temporary injunction came on for hearing, and was granted. The order in effect restrains defendants from executing any writ of possession issued under the judgment referred to in the pleadings and from interfering in any way with plaintiffs’ possession. From this judgment defendants Eason and O’Fiel have appealed.

The proof made in the trial court raised only issues of law except, perhaps, in one particular hereinafter mentioned. Plaintiffs were the common source of the titles exhibited to the trial court.

The property in suit was conveyed to the plaintiffs by one James H. Block by a deed dated January -6, 1922; and since that time (or at least since 1922) the plaintiffs have resided and have made their home upon said property, holding said property all this while in actual, adverse, exclusive and uninterrupted possession, claiming to be'- the owners thereof. Plaintiffs!-deed from Block was filed for record on February 6, 1922 and was recorded on February 11, 1922. These facts, with some testimony from Mrs. David that the constable had made some attempt to dispossess plaintiffs, constituted the proof 'made by plaintiffs.

In reply, defendants Eason and O’Fiel tendered evidence of title in themselves,as alleged by them. They first proved Block’s deed to plaintiffs and then adduced the following documents as evidence of their title:

(1) Tax foreclosure judgment of the District Court of Jefferson County, dated January 23, 1936, rendered in Cause No. 24120, styled The City of Beaumont v. Joseph William David and Susie David. The defendants .named are the present plaintiffs. This judgment awarded the City a recovery from the present plaintiffs, in personam and not in rem, of the taxes levied by said City for the years 1924 to 1934, inclusive, upon the property in suit, and foreclosed the tax liens securing the payment of said taxes, directed the issuance of an order of sale, and provided that “in the event the right of redemption is not exercised within two years from date of sale, the clerk * * * shall issue a writ of possession to the purchaser.”

(2) Order of sale dated April 15, 1936, issued under the aforesaid judgment.

(3) Sheriff’s return upon said' order of sale. . This return recites, in substance, that the property now in suit was sold on June 2, 1936, to the City of Beaumont for the amount of the judgment and costs' accrued.

(4) Sheriff’s deed dated July 10, 1936, conveying the property now in suit to the City of Beaumont, pursuant to the sale of June 2nd.

(5) Judgment of the District Court of Jefferson County dated June 15, 1949, (Some 13 years after the tax sale) rendered in Cause No. 251905 in behalf of Winston Eason against the City of Beaumont, awarding the said Eason the title and right to possession of the property now in suit.

(6) A.quitclaim deed dated June 15, 1948, from the South Park Independent School District to Winston Eason, conveying the District’s interest in the property in suit. [430]*430It was not proved that the District ever had any interest in the property, and under the proof this deed was irrelevant to the issues made in the trial court.

(7) General warranty deed from Winston Eason to David E. O’Fiel dated June IS, 1949, conveying an undivided one-half interest in the property in suit.

(8) Entries in the Civil Fee Book, Tax Suits of the District Clerk of Jefferson County. These entries showed that on March 3, 1947, and on June 14, 1948, and on June 19, 1949, writs of possession were issued out of the said clerk’s office under the tax judgment.

The writ of March 13, 1947 was put in evidence at the trial court’s instance. Upon the place prepared for the officer’s return was written in pencil: “Returned request of Atty for plaintiff”. No signature was appended, and the form of the officer’s return was not filled in. The writ of June 4, 1948, had never been returned to the clerk and could not be found, and there is no evidence concerning it other than the fee book entry listed above. The writ of June 10, 1949, remained in the hands of the constable. This writ was not executed. It was in the constable’s possession at the time of the hearing, and according to the constable’s answer, had expired by lapse of time.

The foregoing statement exhibits the proof made by defendants.

There was no proof that plaintiffs had exercised the right of redemption under the tax judgment. Instead, plaintiff J. W. David testified that as well as he could remember, he had not paid any taxes on the property since “in 1936”, and that “I just didn’t have the money to pay it”.

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Bluebook (online)
232 S.W.2d 427, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eason-v-david-texapp-1950.