Lovelace v. Overton

147 S.W.2d 920
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 16, 1941
DocketNo. 11088.
StatusPublished

This text of 147 S.W.2d 920 (Lovelace v. Overton) 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
Lovelace v. Overton, 147 S.W.2d 920 (Tex. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

This appeal, by writ of error, is from a judgment of the Tenth District 'Court of Galveston County, in ultimate purport and effect determining: (1) That the title and right of possession to a certain 10 acres of land, more or less, out of the W. K. Wilson League in Galveston County, Texas, which formed the subject matter of this controversy between the parties hereto, lay —as between them — in the defendant in error, T. V. Overton, as against plaintiffs in error, Claribel Lee Bays Mitchell Lovelace, and husband, Chas. D. Lovelace; (2) that no controverted issues of fact for a jury remained therein; (3) that a prior judgment in the same court in cause No. 42,530 between plaintiffs in error and defendant in error’s predecessor in title was res adjudicata of such title in favor of this defendant in error, Overton; (4) that plaintiffs in error’s claim thereto should be removed as a cloud upon the title to the land in the defendant in error, Overton; and (5) that, by specific description thereof, a recovery of the 10 acres should be decreed to him.

The record is long, the pl.eadings and procedural reaches labyrinthian, but the correctness of the judgment may be said to depend, it is thought, upon whether or not inhering prejudice is pointed out in any of these three assignments by the plaintiffs in error:

“(1) That the District Court erred in sustaining Overton’s general demurrer to cross-defendants’ pleadings in cross-action seeking the title to the lands involved, upon the ground that such cross-action was a collateral attack upon a prior judgment for foreclosure against the same party, of the same property, in the same court, because this was a suit in equity to recover the same property from the Trustee who was holding same in Constructive Trust.
“(2) That the District Court erred in refusing to dismiss plaintiffs’ original suit, in its entirety, because the motion for non-suit was timely filed and submitted, and that there were not filed by the defendant, up to that time, any pleadings for affirmative relief, as would entitle defendant thereafter to maintain any prayers for affirmative relief to quiet his title.
“(3) That the District Court erred in awarding its judgment in behalf of the original defendant, because the original plaintiffs had timely deposited and requested that such case be docketed as a jury case, and the same was so docketed. That in the rendition of the court’s judgment (there having been in such case many disputed issues of fact), the Court did not impanel a jury or submit it such disputed issues, but rendered judgment in behalf of the *921 original defendant, as cross-plaintiff, without requiring such cross-plaintiff to offer or submit any evidence and without the im-panelment of or the aid of a jury.”

As these quoted presentments indicate, the trial court arrived at its final determination by sustaining demurrers in Overton’s cross-action to Mrs. Lovelace’s suit against him for the property, which she calls “a suit to recover the title and possession, through a constructive trust, to said lands, thereby bestowing jurisdiction of said suit in said district court in Galveston County”, thereby holding it to be an unmaintainable collateral attack upon such prior judgment in No. 42,530, at the same time holding Ov-erton’s cross-action to quiet his title to be sufficient basis for such affirmative relief to him, and, in consequence of these two determinations, further holding the resulting case as so developed to be without jury issues left.

Without undertaking to recapitulate them, the defendant in error defends the judgment so rendered in his favor, in substance, upon these considerations:

“That he purchased two notes; one for $300.00, and one for $325.00,» secured by a deed of trust on the 10 acres, all executed by Mrs. Lovelace and dated April 9, 1925, and paid cash therefor, after the title had been approved by his attorneys, Bryan, Dyess, Colgin and Suhr; he denied under oath that O. L. Hubbard, W. O. Daily, or T. H. Mmims, were ever his agents; that, on the 14th day of August, 1926, he trans-. ferred the notes and mortgage to J. L. McShan; and that, on the 8th of February, 1926, Mr. McShan filed suit thereon against Mrs. Lovelace in the 10th District Court of Galveston, in cause No. 42,530, and recovered a judgment on the 21st day of February, 1927, ordering the property sold for a foreclosure of such deed of trust lien; that, on May 3, 1927, the sheriff, by foreclosure, deeded the property to Mc-Shan; that, on the 27th day of May, 1927, McShan deeded the property to this defendant-in-error,- Overton, and he has had absolute peaceable, and adverse possession of the property since the 27th day of May, 1927, until the filing of this suit — more than ten years; further, that, under the facts alleged, there is no constructive trust on the land inuring to the benefit of plaintiff-in-error, Mrs. Lovelace, but there is res judicata and judicial estoppel, and limitations against her thereon, and the record title in his favor against her remained undisturbed for more than ten years; he also claims judicial estoppel, in that he placed himself in a worse position by having had an oil well drilled on the property, and, because of this fact, there is an equitable estoppel against the plaintiff-in-error.

“The court dismissed the cause of action of plaintiff-in-error,-and retained for trial the defendant’s petition to remove cloud from title. Upon, the trial, the defendant-in-error urged special exceptions and general demurrers to plaintiff-in-error’s petition; the court, after hearing the same, sustained the material ones, because there was no attempt to set aside the judgment in the McShan case, in cause pending, No. 42,530; such judgment had become final, and could not be attacked collaterally, the plaintiff-in-error admitting to the court that she did not intend to attack it directly, and, since there was nothing for either the court or the jury to find, as facts, which were already admitted, in the plaintiff’s pleadings, the court correctly rendered a verdict and judgment in the case, removing such cloud from his title, because of res judicata, judicial, and equitable estoppel and the statutes of limitation.”

The main if not the controlling question the appeal presents is whether or not the plaintiffs in error’s suit was an unmaintainable collateral attack upon the prior judgment in cause No. 42,530, as the learned trial court in effect held in sustaining the general demurrer thereto, or whether it was, as they contend, a permissible action to recover the title and possession of the land through establishment of a constructive trust in their favor thereon in the hands of the defendant in error, arising from his alleged fraud in juggling the title and possession out of them, without first, by direct action, seeking to set aside the adverse judgment to themselves in such cause No. 42 — 530.

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147 S.W.2d 920, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lovelace-v-overton-texapp-1941.