McFaddin v. Kibbin

288 S.W. 490
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 30, 1926
DocketNo. 1331.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 490 (McFaddin v. Kibbin) 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
McFaddin v. Kibbin, 288 S.W. 490 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

This case originated in an injunction issued by the trial court in favor of appellant against appellee, restraining ap-pellee from employing help in his hunting, fishing, and trapping operations on appellant’s land. When the injunction was originally issued, appellee appealed therefrom without filing an answer. This court affirmed that order, in favor of which the Supreme Court denied a writ of error. This is an appeal from a trial upon the merits of the case. As appellant’s petition on the trial presented the same issues as when he was granted his injunction, we here quote from our *491 opinion on the former appeal, as the same is reported in 259 S. W. 232, and adopt the statement therein made as a part of onr statement on this appeal:

“On the 1st day of November, 1923, appellee presented his petition to Hon. E. A. McDowell, judge of the district court, Sixtieth judicial district, Jefferson county, Tex., complaining of appellants, and praying for injunction. In substance, he alleged that he was the owner, in law and in equity, of all' the right, title, and interest in and to a tract of about 1,000 acres of land in Jefferson county, Tex.; that on the date of his purchase the land was burdened with what he denominated a ‘lease,’ executed by and between his vendors and appellant John Kibbin, running from date for a period of two years, which instrument recited the consideration of $1, which said lease was for the period of time of two years commencing on April' 1, 1923, and ending and terminating on April 1, 1925, on certain conditions and stipulations and granting certain rights and privileges in and to said land to the said John Kibbin; and among the said stipulations and grants of privileges, andallega-tions of appellee’s petition such as are material and relevant to this suit or cause of action, are:
“‘(a) The .said lease was given by the said then owners of the tract of land to the lessee John Kibbin for the purpose of trapping muskrats thereon and other wild; fur-bearing animals and fishing, and for no other purposes.
“‘(b) With the distinct agreement, understanding and contract that the said John Kib-bin should not sublet or assign any right thereby granted him to others or permit others to exercise or use any privilege thereby granted to him personally, without the express written consent of the said lessors.
“‘(c) The exact provisions in said contract and lease applicable and relevant to this suit, and from and in which the above provisions set out in (a) and (b) are set forth in said lease in the following language: “This lease is given to the said lessee for the purpose of trapping of muskrats on said land and other wild fur-béar-ing animals, and fishing, and for no other purposes. And it is expressly understood that the giving hereof shall in no manner interfere with or affect the right of the owners and lessors, and those claiming the privilege under them, to use said land for grazing cattle thereon and hunting ducks and other wild game thereon, and any and all other purposes not inconsistent with the trapping and fishing privileges given to lessee. The said lessee shall not sublet or assign any right hereunder to others or permit others to exercise or use any privilege herein granted to lessee, without the express written consent of the lessors.”
“‘As more fully appears from an'exact copy of the whole of said lease and contract marked “Exhibit A” and attached to and made a part of this petition.
“ ‘ * * * And he, the said John Kibbin, thereby became bound and obligated and owed plaintiff the express and legal duty to use and exercise his said rights on the land aforesaid personally and not to sublet or assign any of said rights to others or to permit others to exercise or use any of said privileges; the said lease providing for and contemplating that the said original lessors to the defendant John Kibbin could and might sell the said land during the life of said lease, and that the said privilege granted therein should also attach to and run with the said land in the event of such sale, and that the said grantee in such sale should succeed to and become entitled to all the privileges and subject to the burdens and protections expressed in said lease, and that the said John Kibbin in such event should and would become bound and obligated to the purchaser and to the same extent as he was to his original lessors, who are plaintiff’s grantors as aforesaid.
“ ‘On or about the date aforesaid, to wit, at the time plaintiff acquired title to said land and prior and subsequent to said date, the defendant John Kibbin, in violation of his express and palpable duty and obligations as is set forth in said lease, both to the said lessors and original owners of said land and to plaintiff herein as the present owner thereof, unlawfully sublet and assigned his rights or parts thereof under said instrument to others and knowingly and willfully permitted others to exercise and use such privileges, without the express written consent either of any or all of said original lessors who are the plaintiff’s grantors, and also1 without the express written consent and without any consent whatsoever, of plaintiff herein, in that he sublet and assigned such rights and permitted others to exercise such rights and to use said privileges to the other defendants herein, to wit, A. T. Damaire, D. J. Hebert, L. Damaire, A. O. Damaire, Henry W. Goss, - Monty, - Monty, and -- Allen, and to others whose names are unknown to plaintiff, and that every and all of said defendants who are the sublessees of the defendant John Kibbin, as above shown, have been and are now unlawfully using and exercising the said privilege of hunting and trapping of muskrats on said land and other wild. Cur-bearing animals, and were and are now also engaged in the occupation of fishing on the said lands and premises and claiming and pretending that they have a legal right so to do by virtue of the pretended grants and. permissions given them by the said John Kibbin; and are unlawfully going upon other adjoining lands for said purposes.’
“ ‘Appellee further alleged that he could not give the terms of the contracts between appellants, that is between Kibbin and those holding under him, but alleged certain terms on information and belief, which do not negative his allegations of subletting and assigning and the use under Kibbin by others of the right granted him under the contract, all of which appel-lee alleged to be in violation of the contract under which Kibbin was holding. Appellee also negatived all facts that would have given appellants any rights on his land except under the contract Kibbin held with his vendors. He further alleged:
“‘(7) The said defendant, John Kibbin, though often requested by plaintiff to desist and to cease his acts of subletting and assigning the said privileges to others and permitting others to operate on said land and to exercise the said privileges therein, has refused, and still refuses, to desist therefrom and to quit and to cease doing said unlawful acts and every and all of the other of said defendants, though often requested to cease and desist from going upon the said lands and premises and from exercising and using the said privileges of hunting, trapping, and. *492

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Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcfaddin-v-kibbin-texapp-1926.