Mecom v. Ford

252 S.W. 491, 113 Tex. 109, 1923 Tex. LEXIS 141
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1923
DocketNo. 3810.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 252 S.W. 491 (Mecom v. Ford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mecom v. Ford, 252 S.W. 491, 113 Tex. 109, 1923 Tex. LEXIS 141 (Tex. 1923).

Opinion

. Mr. Presiding Judge GALLAGHER

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section A.

This case is based on a certificate presenting certain facts and propounding certain questions, which certificate is submitted by the Honorable Court of Civil Appeals for the Ninth Supreme Judicial District.

The certificate shows the following facts, the parties being designated as in the trial court:

Mrs. Josephine Ford and others as plaintiffs instituted suit in the District Court of Liberty County against H. Mecom and others as defendants in form of trespass to try title to recover one acre of oil-hearing land in said county. In addition to the usual allegations in such suits plaintiffs specially pleaded that on December 6, 1897, Mrs. Josephine Ford and her husband, C. W. Ford, now deceased, were the owners of the land sued for; that on said date they executed and delivered to the county judge of Liberty County a deed conveying said land to him conditionally as trustee for common school district No. 5 of said county, to be used for school purposes; that the use of said land for school purposes ceased long before the institution of this suit and that the fee simple title to said land reverted to and revested in said Mrs. Josephine Ford and the heirs of her said deceased husband.

Plaintiffs further pleaded that the defendants in said suit had no title to said land in that they were all claiming under a deed dated January 2, 1906, from T. C. Crane, who was the county judge of said *111 county, to one G. J. Stovall attempting to convey said one acre of land; that said Crane had no authority as county judge or otherwise, so far as shown by the record, to execute such deed and that the same, for such reason, conveyed no title to said laúd to the grantee therein.

They further pleaded that if for any reason the fee simple title to said land did not revert to and revest in said Mrs. Ford and the heirs of her deceased husband, such title was still vested in said school district or in the school authorities controlling the same; that plaintiffs, Mrs. Ford, and the heirs of C. W. Ford, deceased, had already entered into an agreement with the school trustees of said district whereby the issue of title had been compromised and adjusted between them and that they have joined in making a contract with an oil company for the immediate development of said land.

Defendants pleaded general denial and not guilty and in addition thereto presented a special plea, the substance of which was as follows: That on said date of January 2, 1906, L. Carr, S. M. Stovall and Louis Fregis were the duly qualified and acting school trustees of said common school district No. 5 of said county; that said one acre of land sued for herein was not then being used for school purposes; that it was deemed by said board of school trustees to the best interest of said common school district to sell the same; that they, as such board, agreed that said land should be sold and the money received therefor used for other school purposes, and that $10.00 was an adequate price therefor; that said trustees went before the Commissioners’ Court of said county and advised said court and the members thereof of their determination to make a sale of said property; that said court concluded and ordered by an order duly passed, which order for some reason unknown to them was not entered on the written minutes of said court, that $10.00 was an adequate consideration for said land and that the same should be sold for said sum to be paid cash and that the county judge should execute a deed therefor; that said trustees- produced said G. J. Stovall, who agreed to purchase said land at said price, and acting through said L. Carr, one of their number, requested T. C. Crane, who was then the duly qualified and acting county judge of said county and the holder of the legal title to said land, to malee a deed thereto to said purchaser; that said county judge, in accordance with said request and said order of the Commissioners’ Court of said county did make, execute and deliver a deed conveying sai'd land to the said G. J. Stovall who, upon delivery of said deed to him, paid to said L. Carr the consideration of $10.00 agreed upon therefor; that said money was by said Carr delivered to said T. C. Crane, county judge and ex officio county superintendent, for the use and benefit of said school district.

*112 To this pleading the plaintiffs excepted on the ground that the same “did not plead any defense whatever to plaintiffs’ cause of action that should be recognized in law or in equity.”

The court sustained said exception. The defendants filed no further pleadings but went to trial on their general denial and plea of not guilty.

Defendants offered under their plea of not guilty to prove by parol evidence the facts alleged in their special plea as will be hereinafter more fully shown. The court excluded the evidence so offered.

The trial resulted in a judgment for the plaintiffs and the defendants appealed to the Court of Civil Appeals. That court, on the facts set out in said certificate, certified for answer the following questions:

“Question 1. Did the trial court err in sustaining the special exception to appellants’ special answer, as copied above?”

‘1 Question 2. When the proponent of a deed executed by a county judge, purporting to convey lands belonging to a common school district, specially pleads that the Commissioners’ Court duly passed an order authorizing the sale, fixing the terms of sale and transfer, and directing the county judge to execute the deed, but also specially pleads that such order was not of record in the minutes of the Commissioners’ Court, under Article 2276, Vernon’s Complete Statutes, is it permissible to prove by parol evidence that such order was duly passed by the Commissioners’ Court, over the objections that orders of the Commissioners’ Court directing the sale of land belonging to a common school district can be shown only by its minutes, and when it is affirmatively shown that such orders were not on the minutes of the court, parol evidence is not admissible to show that such orders ' were made and passed ? ’ ’

“Question 3. We have set forth in our certificate the parol evidence offered by appellants to show that the Commissioners’ Court duly passed the orders necessary to sustain the deed from the county judge to Stovall. Did the trial court err in excluding this evidence?”

The Revised Statutes of 1895 in force at the time Ford and wife " conveyed the acre of land sued for to the county judge of said ‘ county so far as specially applicable to the issues herein, provided that all conveyances of property for the benefit of the public schools of any school district, should, when not otherwise directed by the ' grantor, vest said property in the county judge as trustee for those to be benefited thereby. Art. 3909. By the terms of said statutes in case of the erection of a new school house “a suitable piece of land shall be donated as a site and a deed therefor shall be executed and delivered conveying a good and sufficient title in fee simple in and to such land to the county judge and his successors in office in trust for public free school purposes.” Art. 3984. Said statutes by article *113

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Bluebook (online)
252 S.W. 491, 113 Tex. 109, 1923 Tex. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mecom-v-ford-tex-1923.