Lott v. Van Zandt

107 S.W.2d 761, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 741
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 14, 1937
DocketNo. 4770.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 107 S.W.2d 761 (Lott v. Van Zandt) 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
Lott v. Van Zandt, 107 S.W.2d 761, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 741 (Tex. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice.

This suit was .filed November 16, 1934, by O. W. Sage as receiver of the Security National Bank of Bowie against appellants, Hervey Lott, and his children, Vestal, Warren, Marjorie, Harold, and Bill Lott. C. R. Titsworth and his wife, Daisy Tits-worth, intervened, and appellee, R. L. Van Zandt, who succeeded Sage as receiver, was substituted as plaintiff and the suit proceeded in his name. It was a suit'in trespass to try title, the first count being in the ordinary form of that character of action, and the second count setting out in detail the 'various conveyances pertaining to a section of land in Yoakum county, constituting the chain of title up to and including the conveyance to the appellant, Hervey Lott, and a continuous chain of title from M. L. Kelly, Jr., to the Security National Bank of Bowie.

Plaintiff alleged that on or about the 1st of May, 1924, Hervey Lott executed and delivered to M. L. Kelly, Jr., a deed, conveying the land to Kelly, but that Kelly failed to file the same for record or to have it recorded in the deed records of Yoakum county, and that the deed is now lost and its whereabouts unknown. He alleged that Kelly became vested with all the title to the land by virtue of the lost deed and prayed for title, possession, and restitution of the land and for judgment removing any and all clouds cast upon the same by the claims or assertions of the appellants, and that the title be adjudged to and vested in the appellee as receiver, and for costs of suit.

The interveners adopted the pleadings of the plaintiffs.

By an amended answer appellants pleaded that the action sought to be maintained was not an action to recover land, but was a suit to establish a lost deed, and pleaded the statute of four years’ limitation in bar of same, in addition to the general issue of not guilty.

The trial was before a jury and the case was submitted upon special issues, in answer to which the jury found, in substance, that Lott executed and delivered a deed of conveyance to M. L. Kelly, Jr., on or about May 1, 1924; that in reply to a letter from Titsworth on or about September 17, 1926, inquiring of Lott if he had sold the land to Kelly, Lott wrote in red pencil on the letter of Titsworth, the following words: “Yes, I sold it to Kelly. H. Lott.” That Titsworth relied on the notation in red pencil and paid delinquent interest to the state, it being school land, and that Titsworth and the bank relied upon such notation when they paid subsequent installments of interest. Upon these findings the court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff and interveners against all of the defendants for the title and possession of the land, quieting the same in the plaintiff and interveners, removing the cloud cast thereon by the claim of the defendants, and vesting the title accordingly.

The principal contention of appellants is made under their third, fourth, and fifth propositions, in which they take the position that the alleged lost deed, being an obstacle to recovery, it was necessary, first, to establish it before an action to recover the land would lie, and that an action to restore a lost deed, being a personal action and an equitable proceeding, is barred by the statute of four years’ limitation under article 5529, Revised Civil- Statutes. If appellants’ contention is correct, then appellees were not entitled to recover under their suit in trespass to try title, because, in establishing their title, if, when they arrived at the link in the chain that could be established in no other way than through the lost deed, it became necessary to stop and indulge in an equitable proceeding for that purpose and actually procure a decree of the court establishing such lost deed, and an action for that purpose was barred by limitation, such ancillary action would necessarily fall and appellees would not be permitted to further proceed with their suit in trespass to try title, because *764 more than four years had elapsed after appellees knew the deed was lost and before the suit was filed. In support of their contention in this respect appellants cite and rely upon the case of Deaton et ux. v. Rush, et al., 113 Tex. 176, 252 S.W. 1025, 1031, by the Commission of Appeals, and other cases of the same import-. That decision was made upon a certified question in a suit that had been filed in Stephens county by Deaton and wife against J. M. Rush and the Magnolia Petroleum Company to cancel a conveyance of two tracts of land alleged to have been conveyed to Rush in exchange for land in the Republic of Mexico, on the ground that the exchange had been procured by means of false and fraudulent representations made by Rush, In answer to one of the questions propounded by the Court of Civil Appeals, the. Supreme Court said: “In answer to question No. 4 we have held that no suit for the recovery of the land could have been maintained before the cancellation of the deed. Until such cancellation there could be no such ‘mature right to recover the land as might have been declared upon and maintained subject only to such valid defenses by which it might have been defeated.’ The deed to Rush itself was a. complete answer to any suit for the recovery of the land, irrespective of its voidability, until its power for that purpose had been destroyed by the inquiry into and establishment of the rights of Mrs. Deaton arising out of the fraud by which the deed was obtained. Therefore her cause of action for the recovery of the land in the legal import of that term, did not accrue ‘before the cancellation as title of her deed to Rush.’ ”

To the same substantial effect is the case of Thomson v. Locke, 66 Tex. 386, 1 S.W. 112; McCampbell v. Durst, 15 Tex.Civ.App. 522, 40 S.W. 315, 320; Martin v. Burr, 111 Tex. 57, 228 S.W. 543; Miller v. Rusk, 17 Tex. 170, 171; Hearst’s Heirs v. Kuykendall’s Heirs, 16 Tex. 327, 329.

Under the doctrine announced by the courts in the above and a number of other cases, it is apparent that one who holds the title to land which is sufficient to enable him to proceed directly in a suit for its recovery may join with such a suit a personal action for incidental relief and clear away any objects that appear to disturb or cloud his title. It is further held that the fact that such an incidental feature is added does not destroy the nature of a suit for the recovery of land. On the other hand, it is well established that one may file a suit for the principal purpose of destroying an impediment to his title, such as the cancellation of a deed for fraud or other legal ground, and, as an incident thereto, join with it a suit for the recovery of the land itself. In a suit for the recovery of land it is necessary that the plaintiff, in order to recover, possess a title sufficient to enable him to bring the suit directly for the recovery of the land. In trespass to try title, if he prevail, it is essential that the plaintiff establish his claim. It matters not whether his claim rests in law or equity; but he must establish it. If, therefore, he files such a suit and his proof establishes the fact that the title rests in some other person, it then becomes necessary for the plaintiff to stop and destroy the impediment. If he has theretofore executed a deed which was procured from him through fraudulent representations and it becomes necessary for him to rid his chain of such deed, manifestly he can do so only through a decree of the court in which he establishes the fraud and thus destroy the deed. The reason for this is that the title is not in him to that extent where he can maintain a suit for its recovery.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 S.W.2d 761, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lott-v-van-zandt-texapp-1937.