Jewell v. Hart

244 S.W. 827, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1328
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 19, 1922
DocketNo. 1358.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 244 S.W. 827 (Jewell v. Hart) 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
Jewell v. Hart, 244 S.W. 827, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1328 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Statement of Case.

HIGGINS, J.

Alice Jewell, Mary Stephens, Lee McTyer, Sallie Tribble, Jane Cade, Annie Truman, joined by their respective husbands, and Mrs. Mattie Magers, a widow, for herself and as next friend for her minor children, the heirs of W. P. Magers, deceased, brought this suit to recover an undivided seven-ninths’ interest in 120 acres of land in Stephens county and for partition. W. P. Magers and the named plaintiffs were seven of nine children of Nancy Magers, who is alleged to have died in 1893. The defendant, J. W. Magers, is another child of Nancy Magers. Frank Magers was another child, and died in September, 1918. M. C. Magers, the wife of Frank Magers, is also dead.

This suit was filed November 22, 1919, against J. W. Magers and the heirs at law and legal representátives of Frank Magers and his deceased wife, M. C. Magers. The Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company and Mid-Kansas OR & Gas Company were joined as defendants, it being alleged that they claimed some interest under an oil and gas lease executed by Frank Magers before his death.

The oil companies answered by general demurrer, general denial, and that they were innocent purchasers for value and the three, five and ten year statutes of limitation.

J. W. Magers filed no answer in his individual capacity, but did answer as guardian of two children of Frank Magers and wife. Edgar T. Hart answered as administrator of the estate of Frank Magers and wife. Willie Mae Hart, the wife of Edgar T. Hart, was a daughter of Frank Magers and wife. Hart and wife also answered individually.

The amended answer of the Harts and of J. W. Magers, as guardian, set up a general demurrer and various special exceptions, one of which (eleventh paragraph of answer) was to the effect that the cause of action was barred by the two and four years’ statutes of limitation; also pleaded not guilty, a general denial, various statutes of limitations, and other special pleas.

The court sustained the general demurrer and the special exception relating to' limitation, and rendered judgment that the plain tiffs take nothing and discharged the defendants without day as if the case had been tried upon the merits.

The plaintiffs appeal assigning as error the action of the court in sustaining the general demurrer and special exception.

The material facts shown by the petition, in addition to what has been stated above, are as follows:

That prior to December 17, 1883, Nancy Magers, the mother of Frank Magers, placed $750 in his hands and sent him to Stephens county with authority to purchase in her name the land in controversy; that Frank Magers purchased the same and took a warranty deed therefor to Nancy Magers; that Frank Magers, since the purchase of said land in December, 1883, used, occupied, ■ and enjoyed the same until his death in September, 1918, since which time his said children have used, occupied, and enjoyed the same; that Nancy Magers reposed the greatest confidence in her son, Frank Magers, and left the use, management, and control of the land and the live stock thereon, purchased with her funds, entirely to him, and arranged for a division of the profits; that the land was public school land, and at the time of the purchase there was a balance owing the state of Texas upon the purchase price, and Nancy Magers left to Frank Magers the matter of paying and attending to the payment of same as it became due; that Frank Magers conceived a plan and scheme to permit the payments to become in arrears so that the purchase of the land would be forfeited by the state so that he could purchase the same in his own name' and in pursuance of such scheme deliberately permitted the payments of the debt to the state to lapse; that on September 14, 1894, and after the death of Nancy Magers, the state filed suit against Frank Magers and E. J. Lovitt, the vendor of Nancy Magers, to forfeit the sale of said land, and Frank Magers permitted a default judgment to be rendered forfeiting the sale, which judgment of forfeiture was rendered in May, 1895, and thereafter on December 18, 1895, Magers repurchased the land from the state and took the title in his own name; that Magers, as a part of his scheme and plan, to obtain the title in his own name and for the purpose of defrauding the plaintiffs and the said Nancy Magers, did not advise any of the plaintiffs that such a suit of forfeiture had been filed, and, if they had known of the same, that they would have paid off the small debt due against the land and would not have permitted the judgment of forfeiture to have been rendered.

The plaintiffs knew nothing of the suit and in furtherance of his scheme to defraud the plaintiffs, Frank Magers immediately after *829 tiie purchase from the state conveyed the land by quitclaim deed to his wife, M. C. Magers, and that said deed was a sham and for the purpose of covering up his scheme to defraud plaintiffs out of their interest in the land; that from the date of the deed to Nancy Magers for the land, Frank Magers had had the use thereof and has openly used and enjoyed and occupied thh lands to the date of his death and paid the taxes thereon as he had agreed to do; that he deliberately permitted the payments due the state to lapse, and permitted the forfeiture suit to be filed and judgment rendered, and deliberately concealed the facts from the plabvtiffs for the purpose of getting the title out of his dead mother’s name and repurchasing from the state in his own name, and carried out said scheme for the purpose of defrauding plaintiffs ; that plaintiffs reposed confidence in him and did not discover the fraud until after the death of Frank Magers; that by reason of the acts and conduct of Frank Magers as above set out and the fact that plaintiffs reposed confidence in him and in his manage-^ ment of the estate of Nancy Magers, the said Magers and his said wife held the title to the land as cotenants of the plaintiffs and for their use and benefit as well as his and in the proportions to which each are entitled as heirs of Nancy Magers.

It was averred that plaintiffs are the owners of and entitled to seven-ninths of the land and J. W. Magers and the heirs' of Frank Magers and his deceased wife are entitled to the remaining two-ninths’ interest in the land.

It was prayed that the court rendered judgment decreeing the land to be owned jointly by the plaintiffs, J. W. Magers, and the said heirs of Frank and M. O. Magers, and the same partitioned so as to set aside to the plaintiffs their seven-ninths’ interest and, to said last-named defendants, their two-ninths’ interest. That the deed from Frank Magers to his wife, M. C. Magers, be held to -be a sham and subterfuge and not to pass title to M. O. Magers and that the leaseholds held by said oil companies be canceled and held for naught, and removed as a cloud from the title, and that the plaintiffs be vested with title to an undivided seven-ninths’ interest in the land and divesting the defendants of the title to said seven-ninths’ interest’ claimed by plaintiffs and for general relief.

Opinion.

The theory upon which appellees seek to uphold the action of the trial court in sustaining the general and special exception is that the cause of action is barred by limitation and the allegations of fraudulent concealment by Frank Magers insufficient to suspend the operation of the statutes.

The defense of limitation must be specially set up.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
244 S.W. 827, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jewell-v-hart-texapp-1922.