McFaddin, Wiess & Kyle Land Co. v. Texas Rice Land Co.

253 S.W. 916, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 438
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 6, 1923
DocketNo. 612.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 253 S.W. 916 (McFaddin, Wiess & Kyle Land Co. v. Texas Rice Land Co.) 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, Wiess & Kyle Land Co. v. Texas Rice Land Co., 253 S.W. 916, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 438 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

POSTER, Special C. J.

This suit was instituted on January 3, 1916, by Texas Rice Land Company, plaintiff below and appellee here, against1 W. P. H. McPaddin, W. W. Kyle, Mrs. Laura E. Wiess, Percy H. Wiess, Mrs. Ruth Branham and husband, Hal H. Branham, the McPaddin, Wiess & Kyle Land Company, a joint-stock association, and Thomas H. Langham, its receiver, defendants below. Before the cause was tried plaintiff dismissed as to all defendants except the defendants W. P. H. McPaddin, W. W. Kyle, P. H. Wiess, and Mrs. Ruth Branham, who are appellants here; the dismissal as to Hal H. Branham being occasioned by his death.

The action was for damages as for the rental value of 440 acres of land, being an undivided one-half interest in a larger tract in the David Cunningham survey in Jefferson county, Tex., alleged by plaintiff to have been wrongfully and. unlawfully withheld from the possession of the American Oil & Refining Company of Texas, plaintiff’s predecessor in interest, during the years 1901, 1902, and 1903, by the McPaddin, Wiess <& Kyle Land Company, a partnership composed of the said W. P. H. McPaddin, Y. Wiess, and the said W. W. Kyle. It was alleged by plaintiff .that V. Wiess died prior to the filing of the suit, leaving a large estate amounting to more than plaintiff’s demand, and which was received and appropriated by his widow and heirs, the said Laura E. Wiess, P. H. Wiess, and Ruth Branham,Respectively, who thereby became liable upon plaintiff’s demand against the §aid- V. Wiess as a member of the said partnership. Plaintiff alleged and proved that it owned the cause of action for rents in favor of the American Oil <5⅝ Refining Company of Texas, as the transferee of the latter company. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $83,212.60, from which judgment the defendants have appealed.

To suspend the running of the statute of limitations plaintiff alleged fraudulent concealment of the cause of action by the defendants and that it was unable to discover such concealment until less than two years prior to the filing of the suit. The evidence *918 introduced in support of the allegations will be discussed later.

This is the last of a series of suits involving controversies, in one form or another, over the .Cunningham survey, covering" a period of more than 20 years, and to which the litigants here, or their privies, have been parties. In most instances the chief participants have been Charles J. Chaison, an heir of Jef Chaison, deceased, acting for himself and as the representative of the other heirs of said Jef Chaison and his widow, Clara Chaison, and as the representative of their corporations, the American Oil & Refining Company of Texas and Texas Rice Rand Company, on the one side, and W. P. H. McFaddin, acting for himself and as the representative and a member of McFaddin, Wiess & Kyle Land Company, a partnership, McFaddin, Wiess & Kyle Land Company, a joint-stock association, and McFaddin-Wiess Canal & Irrigation Company, a corporation.

A statement at some length of the preceding controversies will lead to a better understanding of the suit.

In 1900 McFaddin claimed 208 acres of the Cunningham survey in a separate tract, through purchase from Hebert and Jef Chai-son, and the Chaisons claimed the balance of the survey. The record title to the survey was in Hyde & Gleises, a partnership, or their heirs, and the only meritorious claim McFaddin and the Chaisons had was based upon limitation.

The dispute between Chaison and McFad-din began in 1901, when on January 10th, the day the Lucas gusher came in, Chaison refused to consummate a contract theretofore made with McFaddin to sell the latter the Cunningham and other lands, and when McFaddin on January 13th purchased the Hyde title, which, Chaison claims, he had theretofore agreed to do for their joint benefit, denied that the purchase was for the joint account, and in the same month took possession of the Cunningham survey, fenced it, and by the fence and threats of physical violence upon the Chaisons kept them out of possession during the period for which rents are herein claimed. Chaison, it appears, had tile legal right, under a provision of the sale and punchase contract, to refuse to consummate the contract by paying liquidated damages, and he exercised such right. But McFaddin was offended, and the parties have been unfriendly ever since.

The Hydes instituted suit in the federal court (140 Fed. 433, 72 C. C. A. 655), in equity cause No. 21, against McFaddin, the Chaisons, V. Wiess, W. W. Kyle, and the American Oil & Refining Company of Texas, to cancel the deed made to McFaddin on January 13th by their attorney in fact and to recover their interest in the Cunningham survey. The deed was canceled and the Hydes recovered an undivided half interest in all of the survey, except the 208-acre tract.

After the recovery by the Hydes of the undivided interest, they sold it to V. Wiess, who, while taking the deed in his name, purchased it for the benefit of McFaddin, Wiess & Kyle Land Company, the joint-stock association, which had been organized on June 27, 1904, and which on that day succeeded to the rights of McFaddin, Wiess, & Kyle Land Company, the partnership, composed of W. P. H. McFaddin, V. Wiess, and W. W. Kyle. The partnership was dissolved on that date.

On February 2, 1901, after. W. P. H. Mc-Faddin had taken exclusive possession of the land under the circumstances above stated, the Chaisons instituted suit against McFad-din in the district court of Jefferson county, Tex., in cause No. 2694, styled Clara Chaison et al. v. W. P. H. McFaddin, for the recovery of all of the survey except the 208 acres and for rents and damages. They alleged that the purchase by McFaddin from the attorney in fact for the Hyde'heirs was made for their joint benefit to perfect their respective titles, and that McFaddin had taken the deed in his own name to defraud the Ohai-sons and refused to recognize their rights under the purchase.

The American Oil & Refining Company of Texas, a corporation, acquired the rights of the Chaisons, and said corporation and its receiver, J. D. Martin, became intervening plaintiffs in said cause No. 2694, and as successors in interest of the Chaisons prayed for the land and rents. Later Texas Rice Land Company, a corporation, became an intervening plaintiff in said cause No. 2694, as the successor in interest of the American Oil & Refining Company of Texas; and V. Wiess, who had purchased the Hyde title after it was established in the federal court, also intervened, praying for said interest. The heirs of Paul Gleises, a member of the firm of Hyde & Gleises, also intervened. They held the record title to an undivided half of the'survey.

The Chaisons and their successors, the two corporations mentioned as intervening plaintiffs, claimed rents on the land at the rate of $6 per acre for the years 1901, 1902, 1903, and a part of 1904. They also filed in said cause a cross-action against the Gleis-es heirs for the land and for rents for the same period.

There were two trials of said cause No. 2694, one in 1909 and the other in 1912; the last resulting in a judgment on March 4, 1912, in favor of the plaintiffs therein for an undivided half of the survey, less the 208-acre tract. They recovered on their limitation plea against the Gleises heirs. V. Wiess-recovered the other half interest.

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Bluebook (online)
253 S.W. 916, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcfaddin-wiess-kyle-land-co-v-texas-rice-land-co-texapp-1923.