Horst v. Lightfoot

132 S.W. 761, 103 Tex. 643, 1910 Tex. LEXIS 270
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1910
DocketNo. 2108.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 132 S.W. 761 (Horst v. Lightfoot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horst v. Lightfoot, 132 S.W. 761, 103 Tex. 643, 1910 Tex. LEXIS 270 (Tex. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Williams

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff in error Horst was the defendant and the defendants in error were the plaintiffs below and the other plaintiffs in error were impleaded by Horst as his warrantors.

The defendants in error will be referred to as plaintiffs and the plaintiffs in error as defendants.

The action was one of trespass to try title to recover 1280 acres of land in Grimes County, patented to Valentine Snider, October 1, 1841, and conveyed by him to Abraham McMillan by deed executed September 7, 1842, but not recorded until July 11, 1853.

The plaintiffs claim as heirs of George Resley, to whom McMillan conveyed Rovember 7, 1854.

The defendant Horst claims 812 acres of the tract, disclaiming as to the rest (1) under the patentee, Snider, by execution sale of the land as his made during the interval between the date and the registration of the deed from him to McMillan; and (2) under a conveyance made by an attorney in fact for Resley after the conveyance to him by McMillan.

The execution sale was made July 5, 1853, in pursuance of a levy made May 30, 1853, the writ having issued May -5, 1853, on a judgment against Valentine Schneider, the same person as the patentee, rendered September 6, 1850, in favor of Conrad Meuly, who purchased at such sale. The judgment recited that the defendant failed *646 to appear and was silent as to service on the defendant. The petition, on which it was based, claimed only an indebtedness from the defendant to the plaintiff, alleging that the defendant was “absent from the State so that the ordinary process of law can not be served on him,” and praying for service by publication. The affidavit for service by publication was that “the facts set forth in the foregoing petition are correct and true, and further, that said Schneider is not a resident of the State.” The citation issued and published recited that Snider was a nonresident. A further statement of its contents is unnecessary.

The facts as to the other claim of title of the defendants are as follows:

They produced from the records of Montgomery County a copy of a power of attorney from George Resley, of the county of Milam, to Lemuel G. Clepper, of the county of Montgomery, of date August 4, 1855, empowering him “to sell and dispose of absolutely in fee or otherwise the above described land (that in controversy) as not less than one dollar per acre in such quantities and to such persons as my said attorney shall think proper, and also for me and in my name and as my act and deed to sign, seal, execute and deliver such deeds for the absolute sale of the same or otherwise as my said attorney shall deem proper; hereby ratifying and confirming all such conveyances, deeds, bargains and sales while shall at any time hereafter be made by my said attorney, touching the premises.”

They also produced the records of Grimes County, showing a deed from George Resley, of the county of Milam, by his attorney in fact, Lem G. Clepper, of the county of Montgomery, to James Mitchell, reciting the consideration to be $615 paid and $615 secured to be paid. The statement of facts does not give the description of the land conveyed, but recites that it is that described in the plaintiffs’ petition, which is the entire 1280 acres. It is stated in the findings of the trial judge that the deed conveys that tract less fifty acres, and this was admitted to be correct in the argument in this court. So that we may assume that the attempt was to sell and convey twelve hundred and thirty acres at $1 per acre, half cash and half on credit.

The plaintiffs, in rebuttal, produced the record in Grimes County of a power of attorney from George Resley to Samuel G. Clepper, which otherwise, with the exception that it fixes the minimum price of sale at $3 per acre, is in the exact language, of same date, witnessed by the same persons and acknowledged before the same officer on the same day (August 4, 1855), as that first stated. The first appears to have been filed for record in Montgomery County, August 20, 18.55, and the latter to have been filed in Grimes County at 10 o’clock a. m. of October 20, 1855, which was also the day and hour of filing the deed executed by the attorney in fact to Mitchell. The evidence shows no effort of either party to explain whether there were, first, really two Cleppers, with a power to each, or, second, only one, with two powers with conflicting provisions as to the minimum price, or, third, only one attorney and one instrument, changed in recording, or otherwise. The trial court found that there was a power *647 to Lemuel G. Clepper and another to Samuel G. Clepper, and that the deed to Mitchell was executed by the former under the first named power and that the title passed by such deed.

It further appears that on March 23, 1860, Conrad Meuley recovered judgment against James Mitchell for the land in controversy, with writ of restitution and possession, the verdict of the jury, recited in the judgment, allowing Mitchell $500 as the value of improvements and Meuly the same amount for use and occupation of the land; and that on appeal this judgment was affirmed by the Supreme Court in March, 1870.

The first contention of counsel for the defendants is that Meuly, by the levy of his execution on the land, secured a lien as creditor superior to the unrecorded deed to McMillan, and that, therefore, the title acquired by his purchase at the execution sale was also superior, whether the facts existed to make him also an innocent purchaser or not. We think, and the opposing counsel concede, that this would be true if the judgment under which the levy was made were valid. But we must sustain the contention that the judgment was void because the record in that cause shows that the court never acquired jurisdiction over the person of Schneider. The judgment itself being silent as to jurisdictional facts, other parts of the record supplying them may be consulted, and they show that Schneider was a nonresident of the State and, therefore, not to .be brought within the jurisdiction of the court by any process it could issue. Treadway v. Eastburn, 57 Texas, 209. The allegation of the petition that the defendant was absent from the State, by itself, would "not be inconsistent with the existence of power in the court to reach him with its writ, since one may be absent from the State and yet be a citizen of and resident in it, and therefore amenable to the process of its courts. But his absence may be because of nonresidence, and this is what the petition and the affidavit for publication, construed together, show to have been true of Schneider; and it follows that jurisdiction over his person could not be obtained by constructive service. Northcraft v. Oliver, 74 Texas, 169.

It is true that the court, in the appeal of Mitchell v. Meuley, 32 Texas, 460, expressly decided, in accordance with previous holdings in this State, that the judgment against Schneider was valid, but the law has been settled to be otherwise by many subsequent decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States and of this court. By that decision the question became res judicata between Meuley and his privies on the one hand, and Mitchell and his privies on the other.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 S.W. 761, 103 Tex. 643, 1910 Tex. LEXIS 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horst-v-lightfoot-tex-1910.