Holbert v. City of Amarillo

294 S.W.2d 243, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 1830
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 1, 1956
Docket6623
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 294 S.W.2d 243 (Holbert v. City of Amarillo) 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
Holbert v. City of Amarillo, 294 S.W.2d 243, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 1830 (Tex. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

PITTS, Chief Justice.

Appellee, the City of Amarillo, defendant in this action in the trial court, had previously purchased quite a number of City of Amarillo lots at a tax foreclosure sale in July of 1945. Appellant, Joyce Holbert, plaintiff in the trial court, claiming under the previous owners whose interests had been litigated in the tax -foreclosure , suit, instituted this suit on September 27, 1954, against appellee in the nature of trespass to try title. The case was tried before the trial court without a jury as a result of which judgment was rendered against appellant and for appel-lee, from which judgment an appeal has been perfected.

The land here involved is all of Blocks Nos. 11, 12 and 104, University Heights Addition, in Amarillo, Potter County, Texas. By stipulation it was agreed that the common source of title was Mrs. W. A. (Ida) Blackburn, Mrs. Fern Blackburn Brady, Albert Blackburn, James Lee Blackburn and Claude Blackburn. The City of Amarillo, joined by other legal taxing units, had previously filed suit against the herein named Blackburns in the district court of Potter County, Texas, for the collection of delinquent taxes on the land here involved and other city lands not herein described, as a result of which judgment was rendered in Cause No. 7159 on May 10, 1945, for the plaintiffs and against the Blackburns for the delinquent taxes, penalties, interest and attorney fees as provided for by law and a foreclosure sale of the land was accordingly therein ordered, as a result of which the said lands were duly sold for taxes by the Sheriff of Potter County and the Sheriff’s deed to the-sáid land was duly executed to the City of'Amarillo on July 3, 1945. Thereafter, in July, August and'September of 1954, the named Blackburns, for a nominal consideration, deeded and transferred to appellant, Joyce Holbert, whatever interest they each may have had in the said land in question at that' time. Soon thereafter, on September 27, 1954, appellant filed this suit alleging in *245 part that he and his predecessors in title ■owned and were in possession of the land in question on July 3, 1945, when they were ejected therefrom by appellee, since which time appellee has withheld the' said land from them and particularly from him. Ap-pellee pleaded “Not Guilty” and otherwise joined issues with appellant, pleading particularly and in effect that the ' judgment in Cause No. 7159 was duly and legally rendered and recorded and its terms lawfully complied with more than nine years before this" suit was filed as reflected by .appéllant’s own pleadings, that no' appeal was' perfected from th’e'‘said judgment arid it became final, that the losing parties in the said cause (the Blackburns) knew of should have known of all of the proceedings there had but wholly failed to redeem or seek to' redeem the said land or tó file ,any kind of an action to set aside the judgment rendered in Cause No. 7159 at any time; that no complaint was made or question raised until appellant filed this suit seeking nine years later to make a collateral attack upon the said judgment rendered in Cause No. 7159. Appellee also pleaded title by limitation and invoked the doctrine of laches and stale demand.

The evidence reveals'that the land here involved constituted a unit and was designated, together with other land adjacent thereto, as a city park in 1947 by the City of Amarillo, and has since been exclusively .and continuously used by the general public as a city park. At the request of appellant, the trial court filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law, which support •its judgment and which were' not challenged or excepted to by appellant. Thé trial court found'and concluded- in effect •that the title to the land was vested'in the Blackburns prior- to the judgment rendered on May 10, 1945, in Cause No. 7159, as a result of which a lawful foreclosure sale of the land was soon' thereafter held •to satisfy constitutional and Statutory tax liens against the property for delinquent •taxes for the years 1927 tó 1944,' both inclusive; that none of the Blackburns or anybody else sought to vacate the tax foreclosure judgment or to redeem any of the land from the tax sale; that the record reveals therefore that the fee simple title of the land is vested in appellee; that in July and September of 1954 the Black-burns purported to convey to appellant any interest they each may have had in the land in " question' but by ' reason of the valid final judgment entered by the district court on May ‘ 10, 1945, in Cause No-, ‘ 7159, the Blackburns- had ’ no title or interest in 'the said land’ during the year 1954; that appellant has sotight to make a collateral attack'on-the’ valid'and binding -judgment rendered on -May 10, 1945, 'in Cause No. 7159, more thán five y'éars after such' judgment"was: rendered;- that in any event ap-péllée has been' 'iif-peaceable, continuous and:'adve'fá'e possession of the said land for more'than five years before appellant filed this suit and therefore has title to the said land under the statutes of limitations; that for the reasons stated appellant is barred from prosecuting this suit under the doctrine of stale demand and laches; that the Court rendering judgment in Cause No. 7159 having had jurisdiction over the subject matter and the party defendants therein and such judgment not having been appealed from or set aside within the time limit prescribed by law, -it is now a final judgment and is ' binding on- all parties, including' appellánt herein, whether the said judgment is correct or erroneous; and that any- - purported1 ¿vidence seeking to go be^ hind that said judgment and to question the' proceedings had' in that suit or the validity of that judgment in a subsequent action is irrelevant, imrnaterial and not admissible. ■

' According-to the -record before us' arid the law governing such, it is our opinion that the trial court had jurisdiction over the parties and the subject riiatter when it rendered judgment in the tax suit in' Causé No. 7159. We think appellee showed divestiture of title from the common source (the Blackburns) by introducing the tax judgment in Cause No. 7159 of date May *246 10, 1945, the order of sale .in compliance therewith of date May 31, .1945, and the sheriff’s deed to appellee of date July 3, 1945. Brown v. Bonougli, 111 Tex. 275, 232 S.W. 490; Harris v. Mayfield, 260 S.W. 835 (by Commission of Appeals adopted by the Supreme Court). Both cases also held that an attack upon a tax judgment such as appellant here sought to make in a trespass to try title action was a collateral attack. The rules of law there announced have been uniformly followed, in other cases. Stevenson v. Mills, Tex.Civ.App., 14 S.W.2d 94; Restivo v. .Franklin, Tex. Civ.App:, 177 S.W.2d 811; City of Houston v. Darland, Tex.Civ.App., 264 S.W.2d 783 and many other cases. These authorities hold that a judgment such as the one under a collateral attack here is on the same plane as a collateral attack, made on other execution sales, and is not subject .to collateral attack.

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294 S.W.2d 243, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 1830, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holbert-v-city-of-amarillo-texapp-1956.