Easterwood v. Dunn

47 S.W. 285, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 320, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 250
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 18, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 47 S.W. 285 (Easterwood v. Dunn) 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
Easterwood v. Dunn, 47 S.W. 285, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 320, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 250 (Tex. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinions

This suit was instituted in the ordinary form of trespass to try title, and for damages and rents, on February 12, 1896, by James A. Dunn against W.E. Easterwood. On October 13, 1896, plaintiff Dunn filed his first amended original petition, alleging that on December 14, 1895, he was in lawful, peaceable, quiet, and undisputed possession of the lands described in his original petition, which were again described in his amended petition, and that he was and is the lawful owner of the same in fee simple, and entitled to the use and occupancy of same. That on December 13, 1895, defendant with force and arms unlawfully entered upon said lands and premises and ejected plaintiff therefrom, and unlawfully occupied the same and withholds the possession of the same from plaintiff, to his damage in the sum of $1000. And he further alleged that the rental value of said premises was reasonably worth the sum of $500 per annum, and that defendant was using said land and appropriating the rents and benefits derived from the same from the date of his alleged entry to the time of *Page 321 filing said amended petition. Plaintiff further alleged that if defendant ever had any title or interest in said land, he charges that said right and title was finally adjudicated and settled in a suit in the District Court of Van Zandt County, at its fall term, 1894, styled Mrs. Julia A. Shamblin v. M.T. Nix et al., No. 1822, wherein said defendant Easterwood was one of the defendants, and in which the said Easterwood disclaimed any interest in the land in controversy and recovered nothing in said suit; that the land involved in said suit No. 1822 involved the same land involved in this suit, and plaintiff pleads the disclaimer of said Easterwood in bar of his recovery herein; and further alleged, that after the result of the suit of Shamblin v. Nix et al. plaintiff purchased the land in controversy and paid a good price for the same, in good faith, and without any knowledge of defendant's claim thereto.

Defendant answered by plea of not guilty; and further answered that he had been in possession of said premises, that he had held the same under a regular chain of title from the sovereignty of the soil, and had in good faith made valuable improvements thereon, aggregating the sum of $570; and prayed that in the event plaintiff recovered the land that defendant have judgment for the value of his improvements as charged. The cause was tried November 17, 1897, without a jury, resulting in a judgment against the defendant Easterwood and in favor of plaintiff Dunn for the land in controversy and for costs, from which judgment defendant appeals.

The trial court filed the following conclusions of fact, which we find supported by the evidence, and the same are adopted:

"On July 4, 1893, M.T. Nix conveyed to the defendant W.E. Easterwood an undivided interest of 176 acres of the Isaac Killough survey in Van Zandt County. On March 27, 1894, there was a suit pending in the District Court of Van Zandt County, in which Julia A. Shamblin et al. were plaintiffs, and M.T. Nix et al. were defendants, for the recovery of the said Killough survey. The defendant W.E. Easterwood was a party defendant in that suit, as were other vendees of the said M.T. Nix, who had conveyed to them undivided interests in the said Killough survey. On March 27, 1894, the defendant Easterwood filed a disclaimer of `all interest, claim, title, right, possession, or right of possession whatever, as well at law as in equity,' in the land sued for in the said case of Shamblin v. Nix. et al., as aforesaid. On this disclaimer there was entered a judgment in due form for the plaintiffs in that suit for the land, and for the defendant Easterwood for the costs. In this same judgment plaintiffs recovered judgment by default against M.T. Nix. This case of Shamblin v. Nix et al. still remained on the docket of the District Court of Van Zandt County until November 12, 1894. On said November 12, 1894, there was another and what appears to be a final judgment in the suit of Shamblin v. Nix et al., in which the filing of the aforesaid disclaimer by the defendant Easterwood is recited, and in which the plaintiffs are again decreed the land as against Easterwood, *Page 322 and Easterwood recovered costs. That judgment also provides that M.T. Nix, one of the defendants in that suit, and the vendor of the defendant in this suit, Easterwood, shall recover a certain specific 100 acres of the land. On November 12, 1894, the day of the rendition of said judgment, M.T. Nix conveyed this 100 acres to C.M. McCain, and this deed was the same day filed for record, to wit, November 12, 1894, the day of its execution.

"On November 17, 1894, C.M. McCain and wife conveyed said 100 acres to the plaintiff herein, James A. Dunn, and this deed was filed for record December 13, 1894. There is nothing in the record to show that McCain on November 12, 1894, or that the plaintiff Dunn on November 17, 1894, had any notice that the defendant Easterwood had any intention to abandon his disclaimer or to assert title to the land.

"After November 12, 1894, there were negotiations between M.T. Nix and defendant Easterwood, looking to a settlement of Easterwood's claim on the 100 acres of land decreed to Nix in the judgment of November 12, 1894, in which Easterwood agreed to abandon his claim thereto for $100 in money, or a vendor's lien note for $100; but these negotiations never resulted in a settlement on account of Nix's failure to comply with the terms of the agreement. There is no proof to show that McCain or Dunn knew of the pendency or the result of the negotiations.

"The court further finds that on January 24, 1890, M.T. Nix conveyed an undivided interest of 200 acres of the Killough survey to J.W. Poindexter; that said Poindexter conveyed his interest of 200 acres to A.B. Thomas, October 22, 1890; that A.B. Thomas conveyed to Henry King, October 19, 1893; and that Henry King reconveyed said 200 acres to said M.T. Nix, July 14, 1894. On March 17, 1890, M.T. Nix conveyed to R.F. Nix an undivided 200 acres interest of the said Killough survey; and there is nothing in the record to show that the said 200 acres so conveyed to R.F. Nix has ever been divested out of him, but the title to the land appears to be still outstanding in the said R.F. Nix.

"It was agreed that the defendant has placed a fence around the entire 100 acres in controversy, and that it was reasonably worth $1 per acre to fence the same; and that he broke and put in cultivation twenty acres of said land, and that it was reasonably worth $2 per acre to so break and put the same in cultivation; and that the rental value of said land does not exceed $75 per annum."

Appellant's first assignment of error reads: "The court erred in its conclusions of law wherein it finds that the defendant W.E. Easterwood was estopped in this suit from asserting title as against the vendees of M.T. Nix by reason of the entry of the judgment which recited that he disclaimed any title to the land in the suit of Julia A. Shamblin et al. v. M.T. Nix et al., as a disclaimer only admits that plaintiff has a superior title, and acts as an estoppel only as to the plaintiff or the plaintiff's vendees."

The suit of Shamblin et al. v. Nix et al. was a suit of trespass to try title to the Isaac Killough survey of 640 acres in Van Zandt County. M.T. *Page 323 Nix and W.E. Easterwood were defendants in that case. The defendant Easterwood in that suit held a warranty deed from M.T. Nix dated July 4, 1893, for an undivided interest of 176 acres in the Killough survey. In March, 1894, W.E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 S.W. 285, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 320, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/easterwood-v-dunn-texapp-1898.