Lasater v. Premont

209 S.W. 753, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 306
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 19, 1919
DocketNo. 6157.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 209 S.W. 753 (Lasater v. Premont) 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
Lasater v. Premont, 209 S.W. 753, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 306 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

COBBS, J.

Appellee filed this suit against appellant to compel the specific performance of an alleged oral agreement to exchange land, or, in the alternative, for recovery of land and damages. We find in the transcript plaintiff’s original, first 'amended, and second amended original petitions. The pleadings are very lengthy, but, condensed, plaintiff sets out an oral contract for the exchange of lands. It is alleged on or about May 21, 1912, and for more than ten years prior thereto, Claudio Solis, deceased, was seized and possessed and in peaceable actual possession and adverse possession, under actual inclosure, etc., of a certain tract of land containing 1,36S.65 acres described by métes and bounds, not necessary here to set out at length, out of Palo Blanco Ramireno grant, originally granted by the state of Tamaulipas, republic of Mexico, to Matías Ramirez, in the year A. D. 1830, and subsequently confirmed and patented to Isidoro Guerra by the state of Texas, by virtue of patent No. 7, vol. 18, dated the 12th day of February, 1809, in accordance with act of Legislature approved February 10, 1852.

It is averred that on said 21st day of May, A. D. 1912, Jas. T. Maupin, the alleged agent of Ed. C. Lasater, entered into an agreement whereby Ed. C. Lasater would take possession from and thenceforth hold and forever possess and enjoy the possession and fee-simple title of 848.4 acres off and out of the southern portion of the above-described 1,-368.65 acres of land of the said Claudio Solis, deceased, described by metes and bounds out of the same grant. It was agreed that Ed. C. Lasater would convey’ to Claudio Solis, deceased, and place him in possession of the same number of a res of land lying immediately north and west and adjoining the lands of the said Claudio Solis, who was to ever thereafter hold, enjoy, and possess the same in fee simple. It was further agreed, that neither party should question the other’s title; that at the time of making the proposed exchange neither party had surveyed the land to be exchanged, but as a part of the consideration of the said parol agreement to exchange the land Ed. C. Lasater was to cause each tract to be surveyed so that each party could within a reasonable time take possession of his particular tract, and Lasater immediately employed a surveyor to survey same and write field notes thereof; that the surveyor at once surveyed the S48.8 acres of land owned l y Claudio Solis, deceased, for Lasater, who immediately fenced and went in possession of same under said contract; that said surveyor surveyed the Lasater 848.8 acres for Claudio Solis, deceased, but that he refused to deliver said field notes to appellee and refused and refuses to permit him to go in possession thereof, whereupon appellee demanded to be restored to his possession of the land that Lasater went into possession of.

It is alleged that it was agreed at the time of making trade that Claudio Solis, deceased, was to erect fences round the land he was to receive from Lasater, but Lasater refuses to permit him to erect fences or go in possession thereof.

Plaintiff alleged the reasonable rental value of the 848.4 acres to be 15 cents per-acre.

Appellant filed exception to the pleading: First, on the ground that the alleged contract, not being in writing, was in violation of the statute of frauds, and not enforceable ; second, without equity, etc.; and, third, without equity and mutuality. He answered by denying agency of James T. Maupin, but it is not sworn to. He further answered that Claudio Solis, in his lifetime, never performed the obligations on him, but repudiated same and brought vexatious suits against him, causing him to pay large sums of money in defense thereof, and in such suits denied the existence of such agreement, and breached the contract in his lifetime. He pleaded the statute of four years .against the suit for specific performance of the contract and plea of not guilty against the recovery of the land.

The evidence tends to establish the oral contract for the exchange of lands. Lasater caused the two tracts to be surveyed as agreed, and field notes of each tract made as agreed. -

The land was held in common between Claudio Solis, E. C. Lasater, and others at time of the agreement. The verbal agreement was made and intended' as a partition between the parties. In pursuance of that agreement Lasater took possession of the portion he was to receive, to wit, the 848.8 acres described in plaintiff’s petition off and out of the southern portion of the 1,368.65 acres of the land of said Claudio Solis, giving the metes and bounds thereof as caused to be surveyed and segregated by said Las-ater.

In this partition Ed. C. Lasater was to survey, have field notes made, and place Solis in possession of the same number of acres of land- of said defendant, lying immediately north and west and adjoining the lands of Claudio Solis containing 848.8 acres. Ed. C. Lasater refused to further comply with his part of the agreement. I-Ie *755 caused the land to be surveyed and refused ¡ to deliver to Solis his field notes. ¡

While it was alleged that the parties were to make conveyances to the land, the proof does not establish that there was to be any written conveyance. Nor do we think it was necessary in this verbal partition that there should be. Lasater partly performed the contract, fenced his part of the land, went in possession thereof, has used and enjoyed it ever since, and he has enjoyed 'and used the portion he was to put Solis in possession of, with field notes, since then, but refuses to j>ut Solis or his representative in possession of his land.

The agreement between the .parties was that no question of title was to be raised between them.

On the 21st day of June, 1912, Claudio Solis filed a suit in Brooks county, to which he swore, seeking to recover the land from appellant, in which he averred, among other things, “The defendant, Ed. Lasater, disregarding the legal right and legal title of plaintiffs in and to the said premises, and without the consent, but over the protest of the said plaintiffs, did, without color of title or title, or right or color of right, unlawfully enter and trespass in and upon your petitioner’s lands as above described,” etc., and prayed for an injunction to prevent Lasater from fencing the land and for its recovery as in an action in trespass to try title. Notices were issued, and a hearing was had by the court on the application.

The hearing was held in Corpus Christi, ■ and Ed. C. Lasater filed a full sworn answer thereto, and, among other things, said “that this defendant did, on or about the 1st day of May, begin the construction of said fence, which, as aforesaid, was constructed according to the said agreement of partition so made as aforesaid with the said Claudio Solis,” and further on pleaded, “and all that he has done or is doing is in keeping with the agreement as aforesaid, which was made and entered into in good faith by all the parties thereto.” Upon the hearing the injunction was refused. This record does not show what became of that suit.

The position of the parties since that hearing has changed. Appellee now seeks specific performance and in the/ alternative for the land. The appellant defends upon all the grounds, denies the agreement, and sets up the plea of not guilty, and in effect seeks to hold both tracts of land.

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Bluebook (online)
209 S.W. 753, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lasater-v-premont-texapp-1919.