McCampbell v. Durst

40 S.W. 815, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 522, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 106
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 18, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 40 S.W. 815 (McCampbell v. Durst) 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
McCampbell v. Durst, 40 S.W. 815, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 522, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 106 (Tex. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

This action was instituted originally in Cameron County, where the land involved is situated, on the 26th day of October, 1883. The record shows that the venue was changed to Nueces County, in the District Court of which the judgment appealed from was rendered, but does not contain any copy of the pro *524 ceedings by which the change was made. It appears that both parties appeared and participated in the trial, without objection, and appellant, against whom the judgment was rendered, makes no question as to the jurisdiction of that court or as to the regularity of the change of venue.. Because of the omission referred to, and because, it is said, the record does not contain a copy of the former answer of the defendant, which was supplanted, before the trial, by an amendment, appellees have moved to strike out the transcript and dismiss the appeal, but have not asked for a certiorari to bring up the other parts of the record.

In the report of the former appeal of the case (73 Texas, 410) will be found a full statement from which its nature may be seen. It is, in its essential features, the same now as it was then, though there are some differences of detail, which will appear from our conclusions, but which do not materially affect the decision which' we will make. The questions which we regard as the decisive ones arise out of the rulings of the court upon the defendant’s (appellant’s) exceptions and pleas asserting the defenses of stale demand and limitation of four and ten years. The decision of them makes it proper to state the general tenor of the petition and of the exceptions thereto.

The amended petition, on which the cause was tried, showed by its allegations that plaintiffs, except J. B. Armstrong, are the heirs and devisees of James H. Durst, deceased, and that Armstrong has acquired the interest of Mortimer T. Durst, deceased, who was one of such heirs and devisees; that Mortimer T. Durst, in 1869, was appointed, by the court in Nueces County, administrator de bonis non of the estate of his father, James H. Durst; that defendant was his attorney and adviser in procuring the appointment and in the subsequent conduct of the administration; that on the-day of November, 1870, defendant, while acting in such capacity, contriving to defraud the devisees of their land, did, without any just or legal cause therefor, but in contravention of law, procure an order of the District Court of Nueces County purporting to authorize and require the administrator to sell the land in controversy without subdividing same as required by law; that defendant, acting as such attorney and still pursuing his purpose, conspired with Richard Jordan and procured him to bid in the land for defendant, with the understanding that Jordan should not pay any part of the purchase price offered; that, by procurement of defendant, the sale was made January 1, 1871, in the name of the administrator, and the land was bid in by Jordan, in accordance with this agreement, at the sum of $697.84 for 61,992 acres; that defendant on the-day of May, 1871, procured an order to be made by the court approving such sale; that defendant on the-day of May, 1871, prepared and procured to be signed and delivered by the administrator to Jordan a deed purporting to convey said land; that Jordan never paid to the administrator or to any one any part of the sum bid by him for the land, but took the deed in pursuance of such agreement with defendant; that on the-day of November, 1872, defendant, still acting as attorney *525 for the administrator, procured an order to be made by the court approving the final account of the administrator and closing the administration; that on the 23rd day of May, 1873, the defendant took from the administrator and from Mary J. Durst, the widow of James H. Durst, for herself and co-heirs and legatees, a receipt purporting to be for the proceeds of the sale of property belonging to said estate, but in fact for blank deeds to one-half of several tracts of land pretended to have been sold at the sale aforesaid, among them the said interest in the land in controversy, part of such deeds executed by Richard Jordan and part of them by another; one of whicn, signed by Jordan, dated May 31, 1873, purported to convey 30,996 acres of the land in controversy, with blank for the name of grantee, wherein some person, without her knowledge or consent, wrote the name of Mary H. Durst, now one of the plaintiffs, as Mary Armstrong, and caused same to be recorded in Cameron County; that the consideration of §3500 recited in this deed was not paid, but that the deed was procured by defendant without consideration, pursuant to his covinous scheme to defraud said devisees and to impose upon the confidence of his client, and that plaintiffs claim nothing under such deed; that on the 23rd of March, 1875, defendant procured Jordan to execute to him a deed for the upper half of the 61,992 acres of land, for a pretended consideration of §5000, not in fact paid. All of these things were alleged to have been done by defendant in pursuance of his scheme, first alleged, to defraud the devisees of the estate. The petition charges that the deeds have been put of record and cast a cloud upon plaintiffs’ title, preventing them from making disposition of their property and causing them expense, labor and annoyance; that defendant threatens to sue upon such deeds to recover half of the land, and to annoy and harass them in their possession, use, and enjoyment thereof, and they fear he will put his threats into execution. They offer to deliver up the deed to Mary H. Durst, for such disposition as the court may decree, and pray that defendant be required to deliver up the deed from the administrator to Jordan and that from Jordan to defendant, and that they be cancelled and held for naught; that defendant be enjoined from suing on such deeds, and from molesting and interfering with plaintiffs in their enjoyment of their right, title and possession of the land by virtue of such deeds; that the cloud upon the title be removed, and that they be quieted in their title.

The exceptions to the petition raised the questions of limitation and stale demand referred to. No disability of any of plaintiffs was pleaded in any of their pleadings, in avoidance of limitation, nor are there any allegations that, for any time after the administrator’s sale referred to, there was any concealment of the alleged fraud, or that plaintiffs did not at once learn of it.

The answer of defendant is too lengthy for even a summary of its allegations to be given. It admitted that Mary H. Durst and James W. Durst were minors when the transactions alleged in the petition occurred, but averred that they became of age, the former in 1876, and *526 the latter prior to February, 1879. The answer set up the contract and power of attorney of April 22, 1870, as stated in the former opinion, and unnecessary to be restated here, and sought, under them, to show right to half the land in controversy. The allegations failed to show, however, that the services stipulated for in that contract had been rendered, or that the debts had been paid, otherwise than by the procurement of the sale of the lands attacked by plaintiffs, and it was admitted that this was done for the purpose of releasing the land from the claims of creditors of the estate.

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Bluebook (online)
40 S.W. 815, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 522, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccampbell-v-durst-texapp-1897.