Hipp v. Donald

220 S.W.2d 268, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1732
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 1, 1949
DocketNo. 15020
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 220 S.W.2d 268 (Hipp v. Donald) 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
Hipp v. Donald, 220 S.W.2d 268, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1732 (Tex. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

SPEER, Justice.

This is a trespass to try title suit instituted by Paul Donald and J. M. Donald, and J. W. Cummings and wife against A. S. Hoffman and wife; the First National Bank of Childress, Texas; Mrs. Alton W. Hipp and husband, Ben Hipp, to recover and quiet title to 96½ acres of described land in Montague County, Texas. Plaintiffs’ claims are that the Donalds above named own the mineral rights in the land and that the Cummings own the surface rights.

Subsequent to the filing of this suit all matters claimed against the defendants, the Hoffmans and the Childress bank, were settled and those defendants have gone out of the case. This leaves Mrs. Alton W. Hipp and her husband as the sole defendants. These two defendants resisted plaintiffs’ suit only as to an undivided one-sixth interest in the mineral rights in the land. It follows that plaintiffs, the Cummings, owners of the surface right, had no adversary in the trial and the contest lay between the Donalds as plaintiffs and the Hipps as defendants as to the mineral rights only.

A trial to the court resulted in judgment, for the Donalds and the Hipps have appealed on ten points of assigned ■ error. The. points relied upon present in different forms assigned reasons why the judgment was wrong.

For sake of brevity we shall refer to defendants, Mrs. Alton W. Hipp and husband, Ben Hipp; as appellants, and to plaintiffs, Paul Donald .and J. M. Donald as appellees.

In the interest of clarity we deem it advisable to note some of the background of the controversy and to make explanations of the identity of the parties defendant. '

Mrs. Alton W. Hipp was prior to. her marriage Alton Willie Booth, and in 1917 she married W. W. Pritchard and prior to the date.of this trial she was married to Ben Hipp.

" In 1909. W. W. Booth purchased the land in controversy and executed a series of vendor’s lien notes as part of the purchase money. Bv mesne transfers Robert Meyer acquired the notes. W. W. Booth died intestate in 1920; his survivors were his wife, Lilia Booth and three minor daughters, namely, Alton Willie, Thelma Lee and Gladys Clyde Booth. During the latter part of 1922 Mrs. Lilia Booth, the surviving wife of W. W. Booth, deceased, was married to W. R. Massagee. On October 13, 1923 Alton W. (Booth) Pritch-ard and husband conveyed by warranty deed all of the undivided oné-sixth interest in the. land' inherited by Alton W. Pritch-ard from her father, W. W. Booth, deceased, to her mother, then Mrs. Lilia Massagee, reserving to grantors “an undivided one-sixth (l/6th) interest in. and to 'all of the mineral rights to the property as hereinabove described.”

‘In. cause No. 6564 in District Court of Montague County, Texas, Robert Meyer sued Lilia Massagee et vir., Thelma Lee (Booth) Baker et vir., and Gladys Clyde Booth on the original vendor’s lien notes executed by W. W. Booth, and recovered judgment with a foreclosure of the lien on the whole tract of land. On April 7, 1925, the Sheriff sold the land out under execution to T.'B. Vastine; that purchaser, by deed dated August 15, 1925, sold and conveyed the land to Lilia Massagee and husband, George R. Massagee, and took as a part of the purchase price a series of vendor’s" lien - notes. ■ Mrs. Robert Meyer, then a widow, thereafter acquired the series of notes. They became delinquent and she instituted foreclosure proceedings thereon in cause No. 7978 against Massagee and wife and Alton W. (Booth) Pritchard and her husband, W. W. Pritchard. (Alton W. Pritchard is the same person as Alton Willie Booth, who later became Alton W. Hipp, appellant here.) Plaintiff’s petition in that suit refers to the substance of appellant’s (Alton W. Hipp’s) former conveyance to,her-mother and. the reservation of [270]*270mineral rights which we have previously pointed out. Claims were made in the petition that any and all rights retained by her were inferior and subject to the superior rights of plaintiff (Mrs. Meyer), in that the vendor’s lien existing against the land at the time the Pritchards reserved the mineral rights was later foreclosed and the land was sold to satisfy the judgment. Prayer was for judgment for debt and foreclosure of the lien and that such judgment be so entered that any interest Mrs. Alton W. Pritchard (Hipp) may have in the land should be inferior to the rights of plaintiff. The judgment entered in that case recites, among other things, that defendants (including Alton W. Pritchard and her- husband) were duly served with citation but -each of the defendants failed to appear and that they had not filed answers, etc., that the court heard the plead-, ings and evidence and that the law and facts were found to be with the plaintiff. The judgment continues by awarding-plaintiff (Mrs. Meyer) recovery against all the defendants by use of much of the same language found in plaintiff’s prayer.

The sheriff sold the land out as under execution and plaintiff in that suit, Mrs. Meyer, bought it in and received a sheriff’s deed. Thereafter by mesne conveyances J. ' W. Cummings, one of plaintiffs in the instant suit, acquired the surface title and appellees (the Donalds) acquired the mineral rights. There is no controversy about these .matters except as t0‘ claims in the instant case of appellants (the Hipps) of an undivided one-sixth interest in the mineral rights as set out in their conveyance to the mother, Mrs. Massagee, mentioned above. As first mentioned above, this appeal-involves only title to' a part of the mineral rights under the 96½ acres of land. Appellees, two of the plaintiffs below, claim all, while appellants, .defendants below, -claim a one-sixth interest.

Our excuse for making the foregoing extended statement is because of the many complications involved in the record which culminate in the single controverted issue of whether or not appellants own an undivided one-sixth interest in the mineral rights under the land. It will be noted that there are three judgments :involved, many persons mentioned who are not parties to this suit, and the various names by which Mrs. Alton W. Hi.pp is referred to at various times in the record.

In so far as applicable to the matters involved here, appellants (Mr. and Mrs. Hipp) answered appellees’ petition with general denial, not guilty and specially that they own an undivided one-sixth interest in the minerals; and further that the judgment in cause No. 7978 (in which Mrs. Hipp was a named and served defendant) was void as to her because the court was without jurisdiction to adjudicate the rights between her and plaintiff in that case with reference to title.

The judgment from which this appeal was taken, in so far as it affects appellants and 'appellees before this court, awarded full title to all the mineral rights in the land to appellees and of course divested all rights claimed by appellants out of them. The judgment accurately described the 96½ acres of land.

Appellants’ first five points complain of the trial court giving effect to the judgment in cause No. 7978 rendered in 1930; point No. 6 asserts error because the court considered the judgment in cause No. 6564 rendered in 1925; point No. 7 assigns error because the court overruled their special exceptions; point No. 8 complains because the court overruled their plea in abatement; point No. 9 is based upon asserted error in the court sustaining ap-pellees’ plea of limitation, and No. 10 contends that there was no testimony indicating that appellants had ever parted with their undivided one-sixth interest in the mineral rights.

Appellants briefed the first six points together and we shall so discuss them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
220 S.W.2d 268, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hipp-v-donald-texapp-1949.