Johnson v. Dickey

231 S.W.2d 952, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2253
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 24, 1950
Docket9861
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 231 S.W.2d 952 (Johnson v. Dickey) 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
Johnson v. Dickey, 231 S.W.2d 952, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2253 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

ARCHER, Chief Justice.

Appellees, George O. Dickey, Frank C. Dickey, W. B. Wardlaw, Mrs. L. B. Newman, and Maewin A. Scott, joined pro forma by her husband, H. P. Scott, filed this suit in the district Court of Coke County, Texas, against the appellants, A. C. Johnson and wife, Joe Irma Johnson, and Jewell S. Dickey. This was a suit by each plaintiff, save H. P. Scott, for an undivided interest in four tracts of land in Coke County, Texas, to-wit:

First Tract: B. Brown Survey No. 1, Abstract 1218, containing 143.3 acres of land;

Second Tract: Part of S. Ackelson Survey containing 45.5 acres;

Third Tract: Ella Ackelson Survey No. 3, containing 65.3 acres; and

Fourth Tract: All of the J. D. W. Dickey Survey No. 1, containing 81 acres. The estimated total of the land was 336 acres.

The interest sought by each plaintiff was as follows: George O. Dickey, an undivided interest of one-sixth, in fee; Frank C. Dickey and his vendee, M. B. Wardlaw, an undivided one-sixth of the minerals which was reserved to Frank C. Dickey in his deed to A. C. Johnson and wife, executed January 1, 1925; Mrs. L. B. Newman (a feme sole) and Maewin A. Scott each sought to recover title to the minerals reserved to them each in their respective deeds to the defendants, A. C. Johnson and wife, executed in the year 1920. These plaintiffs contended that the interest reserved in such deeds was a one-sixth; while the defendants A. C. Johnson and wife contended that such interest was one-twelfth. These plaintiffs also sought to set aside for fraud their respective deeds to the same land and same grantees, made in the year 1941, which did not contain any mineral reservation.

The defendant Jewell S. Dickey answered that he had conveyed his interest in such land to the defendants "A. C. Johnson and wife, and had no interest, and prayed that he recover his costs.

A. C. Johnson and wife plead a general denial, plea of not guilty, the statute of frauds, and the statute of conveyances, and the statute with reference to trusts, and the two, three and four-year statutes of limitation; also the ten and twenty-five-year statutes of adverse possession and limitation as to land. They also contended that the land had been partitioned between them and Frank C. Dickey, he taking the 81-acre J. D. W. Dickey tract:

The court sustained a motion of the plaintiffs, George O. Dickey, Frank C. Dickey, and W. B. Wardlaw, to withdraw the case from the jury and render judgment in their favor, and did render judgment for such plaintiffs for the interest sued for by them.

Judgment was also rendered for the plaintiffs, Mrs. L. B. Newman and Maewin A. Scott, for the interest of a full one-sixth of the minerals to each of them, based on the verdict of the jury in answer of special issues as to fraud. The court refused to submit issues as to adverse possession in favor of defendants, A. C. Johnson and wife, as to such plaintiffs.

It was undisputed that the land involved in this suit was the comniunity property of Mrs. D. W. Dickey, who died intestate in Coke County, Texas, in the year 1906, and of her husband, J. D. W. Dickey, who died intestate in Coke County, Texas, in the year 1910. At the death of Mrs. D. W. Dickey and J. DI W. Dickey, the title vested in their grandchildren, George O; Dickey, only child of the first marriage of Joseph S. Dickey, deceased son of Mrs. D. W. Dickey and J. D. W. Dickey, and in the plaintiffs, Frank C. Dickey, Mrs. L. B. Newman, Maewin A. -Scott, and the defendants, Joe' Irma Johnson and Jewell S. Dickey, children of the second marriage of the said Joseph S. Dickey. Joseph S. Dickey died in the year 1897.

*954 This appeal is’predicated on thirty points assigned as error in the trial of the case.

The case may be disposed of on six main divisions: the first, involving assignments Nos. 1 to 5, inclusive, the error of the court in sustaining the motion of George O. Dickey to withdraw his case from the jury and render judgment in his favor, because as a matter of law the statute of limitation never commenced to run against him.

We do not believe that there was error in the action of the court in sustaining the motion. George O. Dickey inherited from his grandmother in 1906 ta 1/12 interest in the lands, and from his grandfather in 1910 a 1/12 interest, and became a cotenant with his three half sisters and his two half brothers, and had made no conveyance of his interest.

The adverse claim of the defendants (Mr. and Mrs. Johnson) would not be effective to set in operation the statute of limitation, in view of the uninterrupted use of the property by the other heirs, who had taken turns in working the land prior to 1920, and particularly since the notice of adverse claim was not brought home to the cotenant before the prescriptive period started running against him. 11 Tex.Jur. 445. The evidence shows that up to the year 1920 the five Dickey heirs in Texas rotated the use of the land on an annual basis. In 1925 Frank C. Dickey wrote to the appellants that he only owned a ⅛ undivided 'interest, and' that they could not beat Oil (meaning George O. Dickey) out of his share.

Aside from the oil lease in 1918, there was nothing of record to indicate any character of adverse claim to George O. Dickey’s land, and Frank C. Dickey did not acknowledge the signing of this instrument.

The Johnsons testified that they claimed the land, used it by farming and grazing since 1920; that they paid taxes and made improvements; that they purchased the land from Mrs. Johnson’s brothers and sisters, and “bought Oil’s interest — when I bought each one of them out they sold me a one-fifth.”

In June 1948 Johnson went to Alabama to see George O. Dickey about the land, but testified that he was claiming it then; that Dickey told him that the first he knew of Johnson’s adverse claim was “in ’43 — no, in ’23,”; that Frank told him, Johnson testified, that “I didn’t need to let him know nothing. He already knew.” George O. Dickey testified that Mr. Johnson told him that he (Dickey) owned a part of the Dickey estate, and that he came to buy him out, and suggested that Dickey come out and they could get together; that he went to Johnson’s home, spent two nights and three days; that he wanted to get together and sell, that Johnson said, “Well, you haven’t got any part, I have decided you haven’t got any part.” There was testimony about what Frank Dickey said and did.

This is substantially the basis for the limitation claim adverse to George O. Dickey’s-interest in the land.

We do not believe that the defendants-were entitled to prevail in this case as a matter of law, and overrule the first five-points. 11 Tex.Jur., 445-448 and 500.

In Bruni v. Vidaurri, 140 Tex. 138, 166 S.W.2d 81, 86, the Supreme Court held that:

“In our opinion Bruni, by the conveyance to him in 1885 of undivided interests in the grant owned by certain of the descendants-of Manuela Vidaurri, became a tenant in-common with the descendants of Manuela Vidaurri, whose interests he had not acquired.

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Bluebook (online)
231 S.W.2d 952, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-dickey-texapp-1950.