Henry Clay Heirs v. James A. Bouligny and Larry Sallee, as Independent of the Estate of Elsie Sallee

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 26, 2009
Docket13-08-00566-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Henry Clay Heirs v. James A. Bouligny and Larry Sallee, as Independent of the Estate of Elsie Sallee (Henry Clay Heirs v. James A. Bouligny and Larry Sallee, as Independent of the Estate of Elsie Sallee) 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
Henry Clay Heirs v. James A. Bouligny and Larry Sallee, as Independent of the Estate of Elsie Sallee, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion



NUMBER 13-08-00566-CV



COURT OF APPEALS



THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS



CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG



HENRY CLAY HEIRS, Appellants,



v.



JAMES A. BOULIGNY AND LARRY

SALLEE, AS INDEPENDENT EXECUTOR

OF THE ESTATE OF ELSIE SALLEE, Appellees.

On appeal from the 130th District Court of Matagorda County, Texas.



MEMORANDUM OPINION



Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Garza and Vela

Memorandum Opinion by Justice Garza

Appellants, the Henry Clay Heirs (the "Clay Heirs"), appeal the 130th Judicial District Court's granting of a motion for summary judgment in favor of appellees, James A. Bouligny and Larry Sallee, as Independent Executor of the Estate of Elsie Sallee. By five issues, the Clay Heirs contend that the court erred in granting Bouligny and Sallee's motion for summary judgment premised on the doctrine of res judicata. We affirm.

I. Background



The underlying dispute pertains to a fifty-acre tract of land located in Matagorda County, Texas, also known as the Henry Clay Tract. (1) In 1983, Mamie Clay Washington, Pearlean Higgins, and others filed a trespass to try title suit--trial court cause number 84-C-0849-C--against Bouligny and others in the 23rd Judicial District Court in Matagorda County. Bouligny and the other defendants in trial court cause number 84-C-0849-C filed a traditional motion for summary judgment, which the trial court granted on April 10, 1990. In its summary judgment order, the 23rd Judicial District Court stated that:

Plaintiffs [the Clay Heirs] have been duly noticed and appeared in Court represented by counsel of record.



Defendant, JAMES A. BOULIGNY, is ordered to be vested with full fee simple title to the surface of the 50 acre tract of land out of the lower quarter of League No. 31, Caney Surveys, known as the Freeman George Leagues in Matagorda County, Texas, as said land is described and conveyed by Deed from L. L. Duckett et al to James A. Bouligny et al, dated March 31, 1968 of record in Volume 561, Page 613 of the Matagorda County Deed Records.



Defendants, L. L. DUCKETT, J. J. DUCKETT (now JESSE JAMES DUCKETT, JR. and MARY JANE DUCKETT), and WILLIAM A CLINE, SR. (now Wm. A. CLINE, JR.[,] PEGGY C. MARR, ROBERT C. CLINE and CAROLYN CLINE)[,] are ordered vested with full fee simple title to the oil, gas, and other minerals in and to the 50 acre tract of land out of the lower quarter of League 31, Caney Surveys, known as the Freeman George League, Matagorda County, Texas, as described and reserved in a Deed from L. L. Duckett et al to James A. Bouligny et al, dated March 31, 1968 of record in Volume 561, Page 613 of the Matagorda County Deed Records, SUBJECT to whatever interests in said oil, gas and other minerals were previous[ly] conveyed and were outstanding as of March 31, 1968 as shown by the Matagorda County Deed Records.[ (2)]



The trial court further stated that:



Plaintiffs, being all of the heirs of Henry Clay, Sr., deceased, as listed in Plaintiffs' Fourth Amended Petition[ (3)] . . . are ordered divested of any and all right, title or interest in and to said 50 acre tract of land out of the lower quarter of League No. 31, Caney Surveys, known as the Freeman George Leagues as described and conveyed in a Deed from L.L. Duckett et al[.] to James A. Bouligny et al. dated March 21, 1968 of record in Volume 461, Page 613 of the Matagorda County Deed Records.



(Emphasis added.) The plaintiffs in trial court cause number 84-C-0849-C did not file a motion for new trial, a bill of review, or an appeal with respect to the 23rd Judicial District Court's April 10, 1990 order.

On May 7, 2003, Bouligny and Elsie Sallee filed an original petition in the 130th Judicial District Court of Matagorda County, alleging that they had adversely possessed approximately 200 acres of land from Mac C. Milner, Jr., Marlin D. Milner, and others, including the Clay Heirs. The 200 acres in dispute included parts of three tracts of land owned by three different families: (1) the Simmons 100-acre tract, known as the Berry Simmons Tract; (2) the Clay family fifty-acre tract, known as the Henry Clay Tract; and (3) the Harrison family fifty-acre tract, known as the George Harrison Tract. Bouligny and Sallee served the Simmons, Clay, and Harrison heirs by publication. (4)

The Clay Heirs filed an original answer and later filed cross-actions against Bouligny and Sallee seeking to recover possession of the land in dispute. (5) Bouligny and Sallee subsequently filed a motion to nonsuit all of their claims in their adverse possession lawsuit. The 130th Judicial District Court granted Bouligny and Sallee's motion for nonsuit on September 22, 2004. Thereafter, the court severed the cross-actions of the Clay Heirs and assigned the dispute a new trial court cause number--03-E-0287-C-A.

On October 4, 2004, Chris Williams, on behalf of several parties, filed an original petition in intervention, asserting cross-actions to quiet title to the disputed land, for damages for desecration of a cemetery located on the Henry Clay Tract, for accounting and reimbursement for oil and gas royalties received, and for continuing fraud damages. (6) Bouligny and Sallee responded to the Clay Heirs' cross-actions and the Williams cross-actions by filing a traditional motion for summary judgment, asserting the affirmative defense of res judicata. (7) Specifically, Bouligny and Sallee contended that the 23rd Judicial District Court's April 10, 1990 order vested fee simple title in the Henry Clay Tract in Bouligny and that the Clay Heir's cross-actions were an impermissible attempt to void that order.

The Clay Heirs filed a response to Bouligny and Sallee's motion for summary judgment, alleging, among other things, that: (1) a question of fact remains as to possession of the land in dispute because of the location of the Clay family cemetery and as to whether they were in continuous possession of the land; (2) they did not receive proper notice in trial court cause number 84-C-0849-C; (3) they were Bouligny's cotenants; and (4) the April 10, 1990 order is void because all proper parties were not served, Pearlean Higgins and Mamie Clay Washington misrepresented to the 23rd Judicial District Court that they represented all of the Clay Heirs, the deeds relied upon by Bouligny and others in the original trespass to try title suit were deficient, and the 23rd Judicial District Court did not have the authority to divest the Clay Heirs of right and title to the property.

The 130th Judicial District Court granted the motion for summary judgment filed by Bouligny and Sallee on August 4, 2008.

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Henry Clay Heirs v. James A. Bouligny and Larry Sallee, as Independent of the Estate of Elsie Sallee, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-clay-heirs-v-james-a-bouligny-and-larry-sall-texapp-2009.