Hanrick v. Hanrick

173 S.W. 211, 110 Tex. 59
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 10, 1915
DocketNo. 2342
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 173 S.W. 211 (Hanrick v. Hanrick) 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
Hanrick v. Hanrick, 173 S.W. 211, 110 Tex. 59 (Tex. 1915).

Opinion

PHILLIPS, J.

The present case constitutes another chapter in what may be properly termed the ancient and continuing controversy in the courts of this state over the lands belonging to the estate of Edward Iian-riek, since the original action was instituted in the year 1878, and, as is revealed by this record, some of the issues, of which it was the fruitful source, apparently still remain unquieted. It would seem that the able and exhaustive opinion rendered in the case by Mr. Justice Williams in the year 1900, and reported in 93 Tex. 458-482, 54 S. W. 347, 55 S. W. 119, 56 S. W. 330, should have led to a speedy termination of the litigation, since it defined with clearness and precision the rights of the parties and remanded the case for the settlement of but one subordinate issue. But it appears that the determination of that issue has in itself afforded a new controversy of rival force and duration. If, as runs the maxim, time is the common arbitrator of all things, and in its fullness cures that which reason fails to heal, the final result of this suit ought to be approximately just.

As will be seen by reference to the opinion in Hanrick v. Gurley, 93 Tex. 458, 54 S. W. 347, 55 S. W. 119, 56 S. W. 330, above referred to, the district court judgment, from which that appeal was prosecuted, established, among other things: (1) The right of E. J. Gurley to one-third of the land in controversy. (2) The right of E. ,G. Flanriek to one-third of the remainder. (3) The right of E. G. Hanrick to charge upon the common lands involved the amount found in his favor for court costs and taxes expended by him.

Reforming the judgment of the district court in two particulars not material to a statement of the case as it now stands, it was by this court affirmed upon that hearing, except as to E. G. Planriek’s claim for contribution. Upon that issue alone the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded for the sole purpose of a proper account being taken upon that claim. Before this issue came on for retrial in the district court, E. G. Hanrick had died, and his heirs made themselves parties. Notwithstanding an effort to relitigate a number of the issues settled by the opinion of this court on the previous appeal, the district court properly confined the trial to the one issue for the determination of which the cause had been remanded; and on February 18, 1903, adjudged the just amount of the Hanrick claim to be $18,785.89. With the partition of the entire land between all the parties according to their respective rights, as determined by this court, remaining to be effected, this decree of the district court, after directing that the commissioners of partition should first set aside to the heirs of E. G. Hanrick land of the value of $18,785.89 in satisfaction of the claim allowed them in that amount, then proceeded to direct in what manner the remaining lands should be partitioned between the parties. Among other things, it adjudged that E. J. Gurley recover against all other parties an undivided Vo interest in all the lands in controversy; and that the estate of E. G. Hanrick recover likewise an undivided 2/o interest in the land in the La Serda grant and an undivided 1V54 interest in the land in the Zarza grant. In connection with the Gurley and E. G. Hanrick interests, it further decreed as follows:

“All the land in controversy not embraced in the boundaries of Exhibit F attached to plaintiff’s petition (a copy of which is later set forth in the decree) shall be set aside to R. A. Han-rick and Nannie Hanrick as legal representatives of the estate of E. G. Hanrick, and valued at zero. The lands described in said Exhibit F shall be valued by the commissioners and divided’ into two parts, one part to embrace in value four-ninths of the whole, less one-sixth of the value of the land in said Exhibit F on said Zarza grant; and the other part to embrace five-ninths in value of the- whole, plus one-sixth of the value of the land in said Exhibit G on said Zarza grant, the latter to be set aside to the estate of E. G. Hanrick and E. J. Gurley. And the court directs that the lands so set apart to the estate of E. G- Hanrick and E. J. Gurley shall include all tracts of land sold by them, or either of them, before the institution of this suit, and of said portion so allotted to the estate of said E. G. Hanrick and E. J. Gurley three-ninths in value of the same shall be set apart to E. J. Gurley, and the remainder shall be set apart to said legal representatives of the estate of E. G. Hanrick, the lands allotted to the said Gurley to include one-third in value of the tracts of land sold by E. G. Hanrick and E. J. Gurley or either of them before the institution of this suit, and also the 4,113-acre tract heretofore set aside to said Gurley by interlocutory decree at the instance of the interveners R. L. Brown and the American Freehold Land [213]*213Mortgage Company, Limited of London; and the lands so allotted to the estate of E. G. Hanrick shall include two-thirds in value of the tracts of land so sold by either Hanrick or Gurley before the institution of this suit, and shall also include the lands improved by them so far as possible.”

It also contained this provision:

“In making partition of the lands embraced in said Exhibit E, said commissioners shall estimate the same according to its value at the present time as raw and unimproved land, without regard to improvements made thereon, taking into consideration the situation, quantity, and quality and advantage of each share; and, if in making said partition it should become necessary to allot to any of the parties to this suit any portion of the lands embracing improvements made thereon by E. G. Hanrick, then in such event the value of such improvements on the part so taken shall be considered and estimated against such party.”

The partition was not then proceeded with, however, as an appeal from that judgment was prosecuted by Gurley and the heirs of E. G. Hanrick. The result was the affirmance of the judgment by the Court of Civil Appeals (Hanrick v. Hanrick, 81 S. W. 795), and the refusal of a writ of error by this court (82 S. W. xv).

Following the settlement of this last appeal, the commissioners made the partition under the district court decree of February 18, 1903. Their report proved acceptable to all parties, except Gurley and the E. G. Han-rick heirs. There then developed a contest over the report of partition between the last-named parties, in the trial of which certain special issues of fact were submitted to a jury. The present appeal was taken by Gur-ley from the judgment of the district court as rendered upon the report of partition and the findings of the jury in that contest. The honorable Court of Civil Appeals reversed the judgment and remanded the issues between Gurley and the E. G. Hanrick heirs, which alone were involved in the appeal, for further trial. A writ of error was then allowed by this court upon the petition of the E. G. Hanrick heirs, upon the ground that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals practically settled the case.

In accordance with the decree of the district court of February 18, 1903, the commissioners of partition set apart to the E. G.

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Bluebook (online)
173 S.W. 211, 110 Tex. 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanrick-v-hanrick-tex-1915.