Laird v. Gulf Production Co.

64 S.W.2d 1080
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 20, 1933
DocketNo. 4366.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 64 S.W.2d 1080 (Laird v. Gulf Production Co.) 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
Laird v. Gulf Production Co., 64 S.W.2d 1080 (Tex. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Chief Justice.

This suit was filed December 10, 1931, in the district court of Rusk county, by Ivey Melton Laird, joined by her husband, Kirk Laird, Spivey Melton, Estelle Melton, a single woman, and Ada Wood, joined by her husband, J. W. Wood, in trespass to try title, against C. E. Christian and wife, Ida Christian, and numerous parties claiming mineral interests under C. E. Christian, in certain lands located in Rusk county and described in plaintiffs’ petition. Plaintiffs’ third amended original petition, on which they went to trial, contained three counts. First, in trespass to .try title, with allegation of ten years’ limitation, seeking to recover two-fifths undivided interest in the land described, and to recover for a quantity of crude oil alleged to have been removed therefrom. By their second count plaintiffs sought to cancel a judgment of the district court of Rusk county entered on January 24, 1912, in cause No. 5503, styled J. W. Wood et al. v. C. E. Christian. The third count sought to cancel certain powers of attorney and an oil and gas lease on the land executed by plaintiffs to A. D. Allen and E. D. Sessions. So far as is necessary to mention, the defendants, C. E. Christian and those claiming under him, by their answers to the merits, pleaded a-general denial, plea of not guilty, and limitation of four and ten years. The trial -was to a jury. The court at the close of the evidence and on motion of defendants, over objection of plaintiffs, peremptorily instructed the jury to return a verdict for the defendant, and upon which the court entered judgment for the defendants and against plaintiffs. Plaintiffs have perfected their appeal from an order of the court overruling their motion for new trial, and have made a number of assignments of error directed at the action of the court in peremptorily instructing the jury. We will only discuss those presented which appear to be decisive of the case.

The judgment in cause No. 5503 and the receiver’s deed thereunder purports to divest plaintiffs of the title to their two-fifths interest in the land and to vest it in defendant, C. E. Christian, hence plaintiffs’ right to recover it back in this suit is dependent upon either having the judgment declared void, or upon vacating it for alleged invalidity rendering it voidable. The land appears to have been a part of the community estate of one C. L. Christian and wife, M. A. Christian, deceased parents of Mrs. Ada Wood and C. E. Christian, and grandparents of Ivey Melton, Spivey Melton, and Estelle Melton. C. E. Christian had, prior to the institution of cause No. 5503, taken possession of and was asserting title to the entire estate, both real and personal. Cause No. 5503 was a suit for partition of said estate filed in district court of Rusk county on December 3, 1908, by the parties plaintiffs in this suit and against said C. E. Christian, as defendant, and who is also defendant in the present suit. The case was tried before the court on January 24, 1912, and judgment entered, in substance, that plaintiff Mrs, Ada Wood recover of C. E. Christian the sum of 8280.75, less §100 theretofore advanced to said plaintiff out of the estate; and that plaintiffs, Ivey Melton, Spivey Melton, and Estelle Melton, minors, suing therein by next friend, J. S. Melton, recover of defendant, C. *1082 E. Christian, the sum of $280.75; of the land, a one-fifth undivided interest was adjudged to Mrs. Ada Wood, a one-fifth to said minors jointly, and three-fifths to the defendant, C. E. Christian, it appearing that he had acquired interest of other heirs. The judgment then recites:

“It is the further opinion of the court that a fair equitable division of the above described real estate or any part thereof cannot be made, and that it is to the best interest of all the parties to this suit that a sale of said ⅜ interest in said real estate be made, and it is hereby ordered by the Court that J. P. Archer, a competent and disinterested person is hereby appointed Receiver by the Court to sell an undivided % interest of the aforesaid real estate at private sale for cash and report said sale back to the Court at the present term thereof for confirmation or rejection as the Court may deem proper.”

The final judgment further recites report and confirmation of the receiver’s sale of said undivided two-fifths interest to C. E. Christian for consideration of $239.40, cash, and orders the proceeds of the sale, together with the other sums adjudged against defendant, C. E'. Christian, be paid to the clerk of the court and by. him distributed to plaintiffs according to the amounts adjudged to each. Then follows a decree of the court divesting all right, title, and interest in and to the land out of plaintiffs and vesting the same into defendant, C. E. Christian. On margin of the judgment are receipts acknowledging payment .by the clerk in full settlement of the amounts due under the judgment, signed by the attorney for Mrs. Ada Wood on February 13, 1912, and by the other plaintiffs in person after they became of age, and to wit, by Ivey Melton on June 5, 1913, by Spivey Melton on June 12, 1917, and by Estelle Melton on February 28, 1921. The respective amounts received by each and interest thereon were tendered upon this trial, and, under the additional plea that at the time they were received and accepted by the plaintiffs, they did not know of the' alleged invalidity of the judgment, and there was no intention to ratify it.

It is the contention of the plaintiff that the decree of the district court in said cause No. 5503, in so far as it adjudged the several undivided interests in the plaintiffs and defendant, is valid; but that the court, having found the land incapable of fair and equitable division, it was the duty of the court to order all the interest of all the parties in all the land sold, and the proceeds divided; and that the court’s decree ordering the sale of only a part, two-fifths undivided interest, of the land was unwarranted in law, not within the jurisdiction of the court, and void ; that said decree of the court, as to the sale of the undivided interest of said minors, was an unauthorized attempt to usurp the exclusive jurisdiction of the probate court; that the pleadings of the parties constituted cause No. 5503 a partition suit and did not clothe the district court with jurisdiction to enter the alleged unwarranted decree, in that its effect was not to partition the land, but to authorize and confirm a sale of the minors’ undivided interest therein. Among the authorities cited stating the principal rules of law relied upon by appellants is 15 R. O. L. p. 853, quoted with approval in Farmers’ National Bank v. Daggett (Tex. Com. App.) 2 S.W.(2d) 834, 839, which reads: “Even where a court has jurisdiction over the parties and the subject-matter, yet if it makes a decree which is not within the powers granted to it by the law of its organization, its decree is void. Thus a judgment may be collaterally attacked where the court had- jurisdiction of the parties and subject-matter of the action, but did not have jurisdiction of the question which the judgment assumes to determine, or power to grant the particular relief which it assumes to afford to the litigants.”

And in Smith v. Paschal (Tex. Com. App.) 1 S.W.(2d) 1086, 1087, in which Judge Nickel's said: “The most usual statement of wha-t makes a judgment void (distinguishable from voidable) is lack of jurisdiction over the parties, or some of them, or want of jurisdiction over the subject-matter.

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Bluebook (online)
64 S.W.2d 1080, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laird-v-gulf-production-co-texapp-1933.