Minus v. Doyle

141 Tex. 67
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1943
DocketNo. 8006
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 141 Tex. 67 (Minus v. Doyle) 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
Minus v. Doyle, 141 Tex. 67 (Tex. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Judge Brewster

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

This is a partition suit filed on January 13, 1941, by F. C. Doyle against the other respondents and petitioners, J. C. Minus and wife, in which it was alleged that the parties were tenants in common as to 640 acres of land in Dimmit County, as stockholders of a dissolved corporation, the J. C. Minus Land and Irrigation Company, which originally owned the land in fee simple. The corporate charter had expired by operation of Jaw on December 7, 1937. The interest owned by each alleged cotenant was set out in the proposition that the amount of stock he owned at dissolution bore to the total outstanding capital stock. It was alleged that the corporation owned no other assets and that the land was not susceptible of partition in kind.

Minus answered adopting Doyle’s allegations and then alleging that the other parties, as his cotenants in the ownership of the real property described by Doyle, “are indebted to him as a claim against said real estate which he is entitled to have allowed and adjudged herein, and which he here presents in cross action against them, in the following amounts which he paid out to preserve and improve and discharge lawful taxes against said estate.” Then he specified seven items of expenditure, as follows: (1) salary paid a caretaker for the years 1934 to 1940, total, $1,680.00 “which was necessary to preserve and maintain said estate intact”; (2) franchise tax paid for the corporation for the year 1932 to 1937, total, $172.80; (3) taxes paid to Dimmit County for the years 1934 to 1940, inc., $1,-349.26, with the amount paid for each year specified; (4) capital stock tax paid for the corporation for the years 1934 [70]*70and 1937, $49.04; (5) promissory notes due by the corporation to one Mrs. Perry, $1,280.50; (6) “miscellaneous payments on behalf of said estate and corporations made by J. C. Minus out of his own funds, $122.04”; and (7) interest paid on the corporation’s indebtedness for the years 1934, 1936, and 1937, $238.80, with the ámount paid each year stated. Then he admitted that between 1930 and 1938 he had received and kept, from sales of cattle belonging to the corporation, a total of $2,681.07, which had been applied by him to the indebtedness ábove described, leaving “a balance due him out of said property and tenancy in common the sum of $2,089.69, with lawful interest as alleged.”

In answer to this cross action, John J. Bader et al, part of the defendants named in Doyle’s petition as cotenants, interposed nine special exceptions, the first two of which were on the ground that the cross action “shows on its face” that it constituted a misjoinder of causes of action. The other seven special exceptions were leveled at the seven items of expenditure alleged by Minus as above outlined, one exception being directed to each of them, on the ground that it appeared from the face of the pleading that Minus’ claim for reimbursement therefor “is barred by both the statute of two years and by the statute of four years of limitations.”

By order entered in the minutes and appearing in the transcript, the trial court sustained all nine exceptions, noting that to this action “said J. C. Minus then and there in open court duly excepted.”

Thereafter the court, in a trial without a jury, heard the testimony and found that the corporation, at its dissolution, “owed no debts now enforcible” but owned the land described by Doyle which became the property of the several parties, its then stockholders, in the proportion alleged by Doyle, and that it was susceptible of partition in kind. Commissioners were appointed, and in due course they filed their reports dividing the ' land among the parties in designated tracts. From this judgment and the subsequent proceedings, Minus appealed to the Court of Civil Appeals at San Antonio, which affirmed the same, in an opinion not yet published.

Minus is here on four points of error. The first three challenge the correctness of the holding by the courts below that his cross action constituted a misjoinder of causes of action. The fourth complains that it was error for the trial court to sustain [71]*71the limitation exception to his claim for contribution on the tax item of $1,349.26 paid by him. No point is assigned on the trial court’s order sustaining the limitation exceptions to the other six items.

We think the trial court was clearly wrong in sustaining the special exceptions based on the claim that Minus’ cross action constituted a misjoinder of causes of action. The rule is firmly established that a tenant in common, sued for partition of common property, can maaintain a cross action for money expended by him for the benefit of such property. This is in adjustment of equities. The application of the principle is well illustrated in what may. be called the Hanrick litigation. See Hanrick v. Gurley,, 93 Texas 458, 54 S. W. 347, and Hanrick et al v. Hanrick et al, 110 Texas 59, 173 S. W. 211, 214 S. W. 320.

But respondents contend that the action of the trial court was not based on the theory that Minus was not entitled to his accounting and adjustment of equities but on the ground that since at least a part of his demand showed to be against the corporation, which was not a party defendant, there was to that extent a misjoinder of causes of action. Art. 1391, R. S., 1925, which they cite, does provide that the Minus Land Company, although dissolved, could have been sued for demands against it. However, they seem to overlook the fact that an alternative procedure is provided by the very next article (1392, ibid.), which expressly 'states that such demands may be asserted “against any person or persons who were stockholders at the time of such dissolution, without joining the corporation in such suit.” (Italics ours.) This latter procedure is manifestly what Minus attempted to invoke in his cross action. Doyle’s petition-alleged that the several parties owned the land in question because they were the sole stockholders of the dissolved corporation. Minus adopted that pleading but said that he had spent money for designated purposes in preserving the common property and that the parties were bound to reimburse him in proportion to their respective interests before receiving their shares. Certainly, therefore, his cross action must be considered as a suit against the stockholders of the dissolved Minus Land and Irrigation Company, as contemplated by Art. 1392, supra, and there was no misjoinder of causés of action on that account.

The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the action of the trial court for the reason .that Minus’ only complaint was that the sustained exceptions were not presented in due order of pleading and “having based his complaint on appeal at the ruling [72]*72thereon upon an untenable ground, the cross-action went out of the record for any purpose.” We cannot agree to this interpretation of the record. As already stated, the trial court’s order shows that when the exceptions were sustained, Minus “then and there in open court duly excepted.” Looking to his brief filed in the Court of Civil Appeals, we find that the.very first point of appeal is the error of the trial court in sustaining the exception on the ground that his cross action constituted a misjoinder of causes of action, “the suit being one for accounting in partition, and the plea of misjoinder being presented after a general demurrer to the appellant’s cross petition.” (Italics ours).

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Bluebook (online)
141 Tex. 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minus-v-doyle-tex-1943.