Mixon v. Wallis

161 S.W. 907, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1036
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 26, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 161 S.W. 907 (Mixon v. Wallis) 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
Mixon v. Wallis, 161 S.W. 907, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1036 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

MOURSUND, J.

This is a suit in trespass to try title, instituted by appellee Wallis against Mrs. C. Bonin and her husband, T. R. Bonin. Masterson Irrigation Company, Geo. D. Childress, H. Yoakum, H. J. Miller, W. G. Richbourg, K. C. Barkley, J. F. McQueen, Thos. B. Mitchell, R. B. Cheshire, adminis *908 trator, H. Masterson, Ingham S. Roberts, D. H. Hardy, the firm of Hardy & Roberts, W. L. Thompson, and Wm. Metzler to recover the Andrew Lawson one-third league of land. Ira Mixon intervened, complaining of plaintiff and all defendants except Bonin and wife, claiming the land in controversy, pleading the ten-year statute of limitation in support of his title, and praying judgment against all of said parties for the title and possession of the land, and further praying that, if his plea for the recovery of the entire tract be not sustained, then that he be allowed to recover 160 acres thereof, to include his improvements, and to be surveyed off for him under the direction of the court. Bonin and wife pleaded not guilty the ten-year statute of limitation, and prayed that if Mrs. Bonin’s title to the entire tract be not sustained, then that 160 acres including her improvements be surveyed under the direction of the court and set aside to her.

All parties took part in the impaneling of the jury, but, after the pleadings were read, all defendants except Bonin and wife withdrew their defenses and admitted that Wallis had title, while Bonin and wife and Ira Mix-on admitted that plaintiff had record title to the land, but claimed 160 acres of the land in controversy under their plea of limitation of ten years. Thereupon the case was submitted upon the following special issues:

"Question 1. Do you find, or do you not, that O. Mixon had ‘peaceable’ and ‘adverse’ possession of any part of the Andrew Lawson one-third of a league, cultivating, using, or enjoying the same for 10 years continuously before the date of the filing of this suit, which was on the 14th day of January, 1910?” To which the jury answered: “We find he did.”
“Question 2. If you answer the foregoing question in the affirmative, you will then answer the following question: How many acres do you find that he so had in possession inclosed, cultivating, using, and enjoying the same?” To which the jury answered: “We find he had five or six acres.”
“Question 3. Do you find, or do you not find, that Mixon recognized the right of Lopez to the barn and the lot or inclosure around it and held the same from the time Lopez left until the time of his (Mixon’s) death, under the permission given him by Lopez or by Converse who was the agent for Richards, the owner, and that Mixon recognized the right of Lopez or Richards to the barn, which was a part of the land?” To which the jury answered: “We find he did not.”

Upon these findings the court, upon motion of Wallis, entered judgment that the Bonins and Mixon recover of Wallis six acres upon which their improvements are situated, to be surveyed off and partitioned to them; that Wallis recover of all defendants and the in-tervener Mixon all of the land except said six acres; that plaintiff might have a writ of possession for the land awarded him at any time after 60 days from date of the judgment, and that all defendants and the-intervener recover of plaintiff all costs. An appeal from this judgment taken by Mixon and the Bonins was dismissed by the El Paso-Court of Civil Appeals because the judgment was not final on account of its failure to dispose of the issue between the intervener and the defendants other than the Bonins. See-146 S. W. 651. On August 9, 1912, on motion of Wallis, judgment was entered nunc pro-, tunc, which disposed of the issue between the intervener and the Bonins as against the-other defendants. Appeal was perfected by Mixon and the Bonins. The court granted the motion of plaintiff Wallis for a judgment in his favor notwithstanding the verdict, on the ground that the undisputed evidence showed that C. Mixon, former husband of Mrs. Bonin and father of Ira Mixon, had, about seven years prior to the trial of the cause, conveyed to William Metzler 160 acres out of the Andrew Lawson survey and had placed Metzler in possession thereof, which was still held by Metzler, who had improvements thereon. The theory adopted by the court was that by reason of the facts so-found C. Mixon had applied his claim to the-160 acres held by Metzler and had exhausted his claim to the Lawson survey.

By various assignments the appellants question the right of the court to enter judgment for plaintiff for all the land except six acres, and contend that judgment should have been entered for appellants for 160 acres to include their improvements. It is not denied that the findings of the jury are such as to warrant and require a judgment in favor of Ira Mixon and the Bonins for 160 acres of land, unless the facts are such as to justify a judgment non obstante veredicto under the theory adopted by the court. It is only when there is undisputed evidence outside of the facts found by the jury, by reason of which a judgment should have been instructed in favor of the party in whose favor judgment was rendered, that a judgment non obstante veredicto can be upheld. Fant v. Sullivan, 152 S. W. 515.

It. becomes necessary therefore to investigate the evidence to see whether it was of such a character as to justify the court in ignoring the findings of the jury and render judgment contrary thereto. Plaintiff on one side and the intervener and the Bonins on the other stubbornly fought out the issues submitted to the jury, and it appears that the intervener put defendant Metzler upon the witness stand for the purpose of showing that O. Mixon had claimed the entire tract of land, and, after denying such to be the fact, he finally admitted it to be true. Incidentally, he testified that he built his first improvements on the land with O. Mixon’s permission, about eight years before the trial, and, being asked to state whether or not he had a contract to buy the land *909 from Mixon, he said: “Yes, we had a hind of contract. As to its being a written contract, will say there was something made, but I don’t hnow what went with it. I have tried to find it and can’t find it. It was before the time of that controversy out there between Childress and Mr. Wallis, and Yoak-nm and Cheshire and all the rest of them; that was about two years before that.” Upon being ashed whether he ever paid Mixon anything on the contract, he replied: “No, sir; I never did pay him anything on it.” On cross-examination he testified: “One hundred and sixty acres I bought from Mr. Mixon, that is what I bargained for. I went into possession of it, and am in possession of it now under my purchase from him; I thought I was going there and getting the land, and it would be all right, and I went to worh. It has been about seven years ago that I bought this 160 acres of land from him. We made a hind of a contract on it. I went into possession and got 160 acres with his permission. I didn’t build on it, but I put a fence on it and farmed there, and I am there now. I later built on it. I have been building on it now, and my house is there now. I claim that 160 acres by virtue of my contract with Mr. Mix-on. Then after that, two years after that, why they came and they claimed it, I mean Mr. Childress, Cheshire, and that crowd, and they went. I got a deed from them, a piece of a deed. Wallis never did come to me; yes, Wallis came and claimed it.

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Bluebook (online)
161 S.W. 907, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1036, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mixon-v-wallis-texapp-1913.