Harvey v. Provident Inv. Co.

156 S.W. 1127, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 36
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 26, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 156 S.W. 1127 (Harvey v. Provident Inv. Co.) 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
Harvey v. Provident Inv. Co., 156 S.W. 1127, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 36 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

KEY, C. J.

February 23, 1911, appellant filed an action of trespass to try title against appellee, seeking to recover certain lots in the city of Waco. Appellee filed an answer which contained a general demurrer, general denial, and plea in reconvention, in which it asked for judgment against appellant for the lots in controversy. Thereafter appellant, as plaintiff in the court below, dismissed his suit against appellee, and filed' an answer to appellee’s cross-action, which answer contained (1) a general demurrer; (2) a special exception; (3) a general denial; (4) an averment that appellee was not duly incorporated, as alleged in the plea in reconvention; and (5) an averment to the effect that appellee had forfeited its charter by failure to pay to the Secretary of State the annual franchise tax, due from said company for the years 1895 to 1908, inclusive, and that on account of the failure to pay such tax, the Secretary of State had caused appellee’s charter to be forfeited, as provided by law. There was a nonjury trial on appellee’s plea in reconvention, which resulted in a judgment against appellant, and awarding to ap-pellee the lots in controversy, and appellant seeks to have that judgment reversed.

The trial court filed the following findings of fact:

“Finding of Fact.
“The defendant, Provident Investment Company, was chartered by the state of Texas' on the 17th day of March, 1890, and very shortly thereafter purchased several tracts of land adjacent to the city of Waco, which it plotted into blocks, lots, streets, alleys, etc., as an addition to the city of Waco, known as Provident Heights, and began the sale of such lots and blocks. This corporation continued in active business until the year -, at which time it attempted to close up its business by dividing the unsold lots remaining on hand at that time among its stockholders. It paid no franchise tax after the year 1894. Quite a good many *1128 stockholders took the value of the stock in lots which were conveyed to them, leaving others unsatisfied and other lots undisposed of, including the lots in dispute in this suit. The lots in dispute were rendered for taxes in the name of the Provident Investment Company for the years 1898 to 1901, inclusive, and rendered as ‘unknown’ from 1902 to 1904, inclusive. These taxes being unpaid, the state of Texas instituted suits in the district court of McLennan county, in October, 1905, for the taxes due for said years, and for foreclosure of tax lien, alleging that the ‘defendants’ names are. to the attorney bringing this suit unknown, and after inquiry cannot be ascertained,'’ the suit being filed against the ‘unknown owners’ of the lands in question. Citation to such unknown owners as provided by the statute was regularly issued, and published as required by law in the Mart Herald, a newspaper published in McLennan county, in Mart, which is about 18 or 20 miles from Waco. Thereafter judgment was properly rendered for the state for said taxes, lien foreclosed, property sold thereunder, and plaintiff claims under such sale.
“The Provident Investment Company was a Waco institution, with its headquarters at that place, its president being Sam Sanger, one of the best-known citizens of the county, and its secretary being N. H. Atkinson, a well-known attorney of Waco up to some few years since, when he removed to Houston, his removal and whereabouts being well known in Waco, and also to the attorney representing the state in said tax suits. Many deeds on record from the Provident Investment Company before the tax suits were brought were signed by Sanger as president and Atkinson as secretary of the company, and all the deeds conveying the tract of land out of which the Provident Heights Addition was made were of record in. Mc-Lennan county, and said records fail to show that the title to the lots in question was ever conveyed by the Provident Investment Company to any one. • Hence I find that the state, through its attorney prosecuting said tax suits, could have ascertained with reasonable diligence that the Provident Investment Company was the owner of these lots at the time suit was brought, and that its president was a citizen of Waco, and its secretary a citizen of Houston.
“I further find that the publication of the citation of notice to the unknown owners in the tax suits was published in the Mart Herald, rather than in one of the papers in the city of Waco, solely because of the financial arrangements that could be made with the publisher of such newspaper being more favorable than with the newspapers in Waco, and that said publication was not intended as a fraud upon the rights of the defendant, and in fact worked no fraud upon it, as alleged in the defendant’s answer.”

Opinion.

[1,2] The first assignment charges that error was committed in rendering judgment for appellee for the property in controversy for the reason that appellee failed to show a paramount title 'to the property. That assignment might be answered with the counter proposition that in trespass to try title such action may be maintained on a title that is not paramount as against a third person, unless the defendant holds under a title from such third person; but in this case appellant asserts title through a sale that was made upon a judgment obtained by the state for taxes due upon the property. The proceeding which resulted in the judgment referred to was instituted by the state, and against the unknown owners of the property. The trial court seems to have held, and we think correctly, that appellee was, at the time the suit referred to was instituted, the owner of the property within the purview of the statute which authorized the institution of suits against unknown owners. That court also held, and correctly, that appellee was not, within the purview of that statute, an unknown owner. Scales v. Wren, 108 Tex. 804, 127 S. W. 164. But it is contended by appellant that appellee was not, within the purview of that statute, the owner of the property, because of the fact that in its 'chain of title liens had been retained to secure the payment of certain purchase-money notes. Because it has been held in this state that when a grantor in a deed purporting to convey land retains a vendor’s lien, the legal and paramount title remains in the vendor, therefore appellant contends that within the purview of the tax laws authorizing a suit by the state against unknown owners, the vendor, and not the vendee, in such a deed is to be considered the owner. ' We do not regard that contention as sound. On the contrary, such a vendee has title to the property against every one except his vendor; as between him and the vendor it is his duty to pay all taxes which accrue against the property, and therefore, for the purpose of taxation, he should be considered the owner of the land.

[3,4] The second and last assignment charges that error was committed in rendering judgment for appellee for the recovery of the property, because the undisputed evidence showed that appellee, a corporation, had failed to pay its franchise tax for the year 1908. There seems to be more than one reason why that assignment should not be sustained. In the first place, the rules of pleading require that a plea challenging the capacity of a plaintiff to sue should be presented in limine, and before an answer to the merits.

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Bluebook (online)
156 S.W. 1127, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harvey-v-provident-inv-co-texapp-1913.