Hood v. Askey

270 S.W. 1047
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 28, 1925
DocketNo. 11030.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 270 S.W. 1047 (Hood v. Askey) 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
Hood v. Askey, 270 S.W. 1047 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

Plaintiffs, W. H. Askey, A. J. Ogle, B. R. Floyd, and Buey Milton and her husband, David Milton, sued C. E. Hood, F. T. N. Hood, E. G. Graves, C. M. Jasper, Ray Haggard, and' W. C. Armstrong, alleged to reside in Collin county, and T. F. Hunter, alleged to reside in Wichita county, and J. M. Scott, alleged to reside in Wise county.

Defendants Graves, Jasper, Haggard, Armstrong, and C. E. Hood filed a verified plea of privilege to be sued in Collin county, the county of their residence, which seems to be in proper form. To this plea the plaintiffs filed a controverting answer, duly verified by one of the plaintiffs, in which the plaintiffs denied certain allegations made in the plea, and further alleged that in truth and in fact the plaintiffs’ petition alleged, and they expected to prove, that “each and all of the parties to the conspiracy in pursuance of which the said contract for the private sale of said land was entered into and breached, and that each and all of the defendants conspired and acted together in and about the making of said contract and the breach thereof,” etc.

It is well settled in the authorities that a plea of privilege in proper form and properly verified is prima facie proof of facts stated, and entitles the party so pleading to be sued, in the county of his residence, unless the opposing party controverts such facts by affidavit, and by evidence establishes the existence of -an exception to the general venue statute. First National Bank of Bowie v. Bulls (Tex. Civ. App.) 243 S. W. 577; Ray v. Kimball (Tex. Civ. App.) 207 S.W. 351; Murphy v. Dabney, 208 S. W. 984; Shafer v. Swift (Tex. Civ. App.) 256 S. W. 309; Cumming v. Chilson (Tex. Civ. App.) 265 S. W. 1099.

The plaintiffs, as proof to establish the venue in Wise county, introduced the first-amended original petition, as set out in the transcript, and also proof that the land mentioned in said petition was situated in Wise county, and that defendant J. M. Scott resided in Wise county, and that the contract of salé was written’ in Wise county, signed T. J. McMurray, as attorney for Scott. This was all the proof offered.

We do not believe that the petition sets up a cause of action of trespass to try title -to' the land, or one involving the right of title to said land. The petition is quite lengthy and involved, and allegations were made that the plaintiffs and defendants Graves, Jasper, Haggard, and Armstrong entered into an agreement and partnership for the purpose of acquiring title to all that certain tract of land situated in Wise county and described in plaintiffs’ petition, and that the deed to said land was made to A. J. Ogle, as trustee, for the pm-chasers, and said trustee paid cash $5,000, and gave his notes for the balance of $9,300, payable to C. E. Hood, and that said Ogle executed and delivered to the defendant F. T. N. Hood, as trustee, a deed of trust upon said tract of laud; said deed of trust containing the usual clauses of warranty and power of sale. It was further alleged that the Joint owners of the land, for the purpose of developing the oil industry and procuring an oil field in said territory, joined with others and entered into a contract with the “Keystone Oil *1048 Company” to sink a well to tke depth of 3,500 feet or deeper, if necessary, to procure oil in paying quantities upon a tract of land known as tke “Graves tract,” adjoining tke tract of 143 acres purckased by tke plaintiffs and tke named defendants; tkat tke Keystone Oil Company undertook to drill a well on said Graves tract of land under its said contract, and did drill tke same to a depth of about 3,200 feet, and found suck quantities of oil as indicated tkat they were in a paying oil field, but they failed to complete tke well; tkat, as a part of tke consideration paid to said Keystone Oil Company for its work in drilling said well, tke said A. J. Ogle, for himself and those jointly interested with him, conveyed an oil lease upon 43 acres of tke above-described tract of 143 acres; tkat thereafter A. J. Ogle and those interested with him in the tract .of land above described, and others interested in contiguous land, entered into a contract with tke defendants J. M. Scott and T. E. Hunter, by which, in consideration of leases upon about 5,000 acres of land in said territory, tke said Scott and Hunter undertook to drill and complete another well on said Graves tract of land to the depth of 3,270 feet, unless oil or gas in paying quantities was sooner found, and as their part of said consideration the said A. J. Ogle and those concerned with him in the 143-acre tract of land conveyed to the said J. M. Scott and T. E. Hunter an oil and gas lease upon the remaining 100 acres of said tract of land; that the said Scott and Hunter completed their said contract and drilled said - well started by them on said Graves tract of land to said depth of 3,270 feet; that after the said Scott and Hunter had begun drilling the said well on said Graves tract of land the defendants Graves, Jasper, Haggard, and Armstrong, designing and intending to confuse the plaintiffs and cast a cloud upon their title to the tract of land afoi'esaid, and diminish the value thereof, set up a claim that the said lease of 100 acres of said land executed by the plaintiff A. J. Ogle to the defendants Scott and Hunter had been executed without authority and was illegal and void, and the said defendants so interested with the plaintiffs in and to said tract of land failed and refused to pay their part or any part of the principal and interest of the said promissory notes above mentioned that were secured by deed of trust to the said. F. T. N. Hood, trustee, and the said land was by the said trustee advertised to be sold under said deed of trust in the city of Decatur, on the first Tuesday in March, 1923, the same being the 6th day of March, 1923; that at the time the said tract of land was so advertised for sale and at the time it was sold on the 6th day of March, 1923, it was of the reasonable market value for agricultural, purposes of $14,-300, and that on account of the oil industry that had been developed in that territory it had an additional oil value of $14,300, so that the actual cash market value of said tract of land was the sum of $2S,600; that, in addition thereto, the cash market value of said land was the sum of $200 an acre, and that if said land had been fairly sold under said deed of trust without interference on the part of the defendants the same would have brought something like its reasonable value; that on the said 6th day of March, 1923, the said lease value and royalty value of said tract of land depended largely upon the keeping and maintaining of the derrick and oil rig which the defendants Scott and Hunter had placed upon the said Graves land, and upon the day of said sale and prior to the sale of said land, the defendant Hunter, speaking and acting for himself and the defendant Scott, proposed to the plaintiffs that they, Hunter and Scott, would bid for said land the full amount due upon said promissory notes, and notified the plaintiffs, together with a large crowd that had gathered to attend the sale of said land, that, if any one else made a greater bid than that for said land, they, the said Scott and Hunter, would tear down their said derrick and remove their rig from off of said Graves tract of land and abandon the well; that immediately after the defendant Hunter had made said proposition and statement the land was offered for sale by the said F. T. N.

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Bluebook (online)
270 S.W. 1047, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hood-v-askey-texapp-1925.