Houston Oil Co. of Texas v. Votaw

184 S.W. 647, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 334
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 17, 1916
DocketNo. 72. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 184 S.W. 647 (Houston Oil Co. of Texas v. Votaw) 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
Houston Oil Co. of Texas v. Votaw, 184 S.W. 647, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 334 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

BROOKE, J.

This is a suit in trespass to try title for H. T. & B. section 4 and H. & T. O. section 224, in Hardin county, Tex., and for damages for timber cut and removed therefrom, brought in the district court of Hardin comity, Tex., by áp-pellee, J. N. Votaw, against the appellants, Houston Oil Company of Texas, Kirby Lumber Company, and Maryland Trust Company. Two suits were originally filed, one involving H. T. & B. section 4, and the other involving H. & T. C. section 224, in the Ninth district court, but afterwards consolidated by agreement, and transferred to the Seventy-Fifth district court. Appellants filed plea of not guilty and general denial of the allegations of damages for timber cut and removed. W. D. Gordon, of Jefferson county, intervened, claiming an interest in both the land and the claim for damages for timber cut, but this intervention was dismissed by the intervener. The case was tried before the court without a jury, resulting in judgment in favor of appellee against all of the appellants for the two sections of land, and against Houston Oil Company of Texas and Kirby Lumber Company for damages in the sum of $8,183.70, as the value of the timber cut therefrom. Appellants filed in due time formal motion for new tidal, and afterwards amended motion for new trial, which were overruled, exception saved, and notice of appeal given in open court. Supersedeas bond was filed in due time, and this appeal perfected.

The district judge found the timber had been cut in good faith, and with the belief that title was in appellants, and therefore found against appellee on the issue of appellants’ liability for the manufactured value of the timber cut, and found for appel-lee the reasonable market value of such timber. Appellee is complaining of this by cross-assignment

Appellee offered in evidence certified copy of patent from the state of Texas to J. N. Votaw, assignee of J. B. - Wallace, of date March 7, 1912, covering the following described land: 640 acres in Hardin county, known as section 4, H. & T. B. R. R, Co. certificate No. 561, on the headwaters of Pine Island Bayou, a tributary of Neches river, about 12 miles south 82° west from Kountze, said land having been purchased and fully paid for in accordance with an act of 1895 (Acts 24th Leg. c. 47) and the amendment thereto by the act of May 19, 1897 (Acts 25th Leg. c. 129) (describing the land). The above patent was recorded on the 23d day of October on volume 60, page 97, Deed Records of Hardin County, Tex.

Plaintiff offered and read in .evidence certified copy of patent from the state of Texas to J. N. Votaw, of date May 7, 1902, for the following described land: 640 acres of land, situated and described as follows: In Hardin county, known as section No. 224, H. & T. C. R. R. Co. certificate No. 508 on the waters of Cypress creek, a tributary of Big Sandy creek, about 16 miles N. 68° W. from Kountze, said land having been purchased and fully paid for in accordance with an act of 1895 and the amendment thereto by the act of May 19, 1897 (setting out the description). The above patent was recorded on the 23d day of October, 1914, in volume 65, page 98, of the Deed Records of Hardin County, Tex.

The following agreement was entered into by counsel: It is agreed that between the 1st of August, 1913, and the last day of December, 1913, that the Kirby Lumber Company cut from H. & T. C. section No. 224 in Hardin county, Texas, under the contract between the Kirby Lumber Company and the Houston Oil Company, 2,950,926 feet of pine timber. It is also agreed that in September, 1912, the Kirby Lumber Company cut from section 4, H. & T. B., 238 ties, which they purchased from the Houston Oil Company, of the value of and for which they paid the Houston Oil Company $22.88.

Plaintiff rested, and the depositions of Clark M. Votaw were offered in evidence. It is necessary that this testimony be set-out practically in full, same being as follows:

“My name is Clark M. Votaw; age, 44; residence, Dominican Republic, West Indies. I am a son of J. N. Votaw, the plaintiff in this cause. I have been a resident of the state of Texas from some time in the year 1875 up to and including the early part of the year 1907. My business during said years and since has always been connected with the timber and lumber business, and during the years 1898, 1899, 1900, 1901, 1902, 1903, and a portion of 1904 I was employed by Mr. John H. Kirby and some of his allied interests. My duties in connection with said employment were with reference to handling and looking after his lands. I am acquainted with John H. Kirby of Houston, Harris county, Tex., and have been acquainted with him a little over 20 years. Ves, sir; -I had business relations with John H. Kirby during the years 1898, 1899, 1900, 1901, 1902, 1903, and a portion of 1904; my relations and duties being the purchase of lands and the handling of the same after purchase, and generally my duties were in connection with Mr. Kirby’s large landholdings in Hardin and other counties in East Texas.
“During the latter part of the year 1899, or the early part of the year 1900 I was employed by Mr. Kirby in the manner described in my preceding answer. The general terms of my employment and business relations with Mr. Kirby were that I was to purchase and handle his large landholdings, and the details and terms of my employment and arrangement with him were to the effect that he paid me a salary for my time, and when I made a certain class of extra good and cheap purchases of land he divided with me the profits of such transactions. There never was any written contract between us as to the division of such profits; each transaction standing on its own basis. Purchases made by me for Mr. Kirby in the ordinary run of business and *649 at current prices I did not participate in any of the profits thereof, but, as above stated, when some extraordinary bargains were made, he often gave me a portion of the profits, and said arrangements began in, as I have previously stated, some time about the year 1898, and terminated some time in the year 1904.
“Yes; during the period embraced in the years 1898, 1899, 1900, 1901, 1902, 1903, and a portion of 1904 I was engaged in the purchase of lands in Hardin county, Tex., for Mr. John H. Kirby. During such period I also purchased on my own account quite a few tracts of land. The details and arrangements between myself and Mr. Kirby for the purchase of said lands have been fully set out in my answer to the preceding interrogatory, No. 7.
“During the years 1898, 1899, 1900, 1901, 1902,1903, and a portion of 1904 I had arrangements with Mr. Kirby by which I purchased for his account many tracts of land in Hardin and other counties in the state of Texas, the general terms of which said acquisitions were made with the funds of and for the account of Mr. Kirby; but, as I have stated in a previous answer, in some exceptional cases Mr. Kirby allowed me to participate in the profits derived from purchases.
“I paid money for all lands purchased in Hardin and other counties in Texas. Said money was furnished to me by Mr. John H. Kirby as in each case was required by the terms of the transaction in question.
“It was our custom, in order to keep prices from going skyward, to take all original purchases in the names of persons other than John H.

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184 S.W. 647, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-oil-co-of-texas-v-votaw-texapp-1916.