Mote v. Thompson

156 S.W. 1105, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 26
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 27, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 156 S.W. 1105 (Mote v. Thompson) 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
Mote v. Thompson, 156 S.W. 1105, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 26 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

HALL, J.

T. J. Thompson, joined by his wife, Elizabeth Thompson, née Elizabeth Mote, W. S. Mote, and Isabel Harrison, née Isabel Mote, claiming as heirs of H. O. Mote, deceased, filed this suit in the district court of Hutchinson county against Plora Mote and her husband, J. J. Mote, to recover their interest in section 73, block R, certificate 71, patent No. 72, vol. 40, G. B. & C. N. G. Ry. Co. lands in said county. Thompson and wife claimed one-fifth interest inherited by Mrs, Thompson from her father, and also one-fifth interest purchased from J. J. Mote and Plora Mote, appellants. A one-fifth interest of John C. Mote had been transferred to C. Coffee. No question is made upon the correctness of the court’s judgment decreeing intervener, Coffee, his one-fifth interest. The defendant answered by general demurrer and general denial, pleas of limitation of three and five years, purchase in good faith under the tax title from J. A. King, and for improvements made in good faith thereunder, taxes paid, etc. Trial was before Special Judge 1-Ion. N. P. Willis without a jufy, who rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs against the appellants for the lands as prayed for, and rendered a judgment for improvements made in good faith in favor of appellants. Appellees in the court below filed a supplemental petition, by which they set out substantially the invalidity of the tax title relied upon by appellants for various reasons, and sought to have said tax title set aside and their title quieted, and also pleaded an exchange in good faith between Thompson and wife of their interest with appellants, by which Thompson acquired the J. J. Mote interest in survey No. 73 from appellants for the Thompson interest in survey No. 75. Appellants filed a supplemental answer, by which they excepted to the supplemental petition on a number of grounds, pleaded the statute of four years limitation against the action of plaintiffs in trying to set aside the tax judgment. The exceptions were overruled. It appears from the record before us that two suits were instituted between the same parties, the other involving title to survey No. 75, and by agreement this action in which the title to survey No. 73 is involved alone has been appealed.

Appellees object to the consideration by this court of appellants’ assignments of error for failure to comply with rules of briefing. While the case is not briefed strictly in accordance with the rules on account of the interest involved, we have decided to waive the informalities and give the matters presented full consideration.

■ The first, second, and sixth assignments of error are grouped, and they attack the action of the court in holding that the tax judgment rendered in Hutchinson county, wherein the state of Texas was plaintiff and the unknown owner of the land in question was made defendant, was insufficient and inadmissible as evidence of title. This judgment was rendered for taxes due for the year 1901. The court’s findings and conclusions with reference to this judgment are as follows:

“(5) I find that on April 10, 1903, a suit was filed in the district court of Hutchinson county, Tex., entitled State of Texas v. Unknown Owner, No. 46, the petition setting up that the taxes for the year 1901 were delinquent on the property described in this paragraph, and that on April 6, 1904, a judgment or order was entered in said cause, by the terms of which the rights of the defendant unknown owner of the property described in said judgment, to wit, abstract 258, C. B. & C. N. G. Ry. Co., certificate 7-1, survey No. 73, 640 acres, were declared to be foreclosed, and that an order of sale was issued, not describing the property as described in said judgment and returned, and on July 5, 1904, the said property was bid in at sheriff’s sale by J. A. King, but I find the above proceedings defective in the following particulars: (A) No affidavit was made by the district attorney or any one else that the owners of said property or their residence were unknown to the district attorney or the attorney bringing the suit, nor that the residence of the owner or owners was unknown to the attorney bringing the suit, as provided by law; (B) the aforesaid judgment or order failed to describe the land in that it did not show in what state or county the land was located nor whether it was located in any state, and said description is insufficient to identify the land; (C) no report of the sale was made by the sheriff to the State Comptroller of Texas, nor to the commissioners’ court; (E) the sheriff made no return on the citation to unknown owner and made no showing that he executed the writ; (P) the plaintiffs were not made parties to the said tax suit; (G) the order of sale does not describe the judgment, nor does it show that it was issued on this foreclosure order or judgment.
“(6) I find that neither T. J. Thompson, his wife, Elizabeth Thompson, Isabel Harrison, nor W. S. Mote, were unknown owners of the property in question, but they were known record owners, holding the record title, and that the use of any kind of diligence on the part of the district attorney or those conducting the proceedings would have disclosed said persons as owners. I find that T. J. Thompson for himself and wife and the other *1107 heirs paid taxes to the tax collector of Hutchinson county, Joe Box, during the years 1902, 1903, and 1904, and the owners of said property were thus known to said tax collector at the time of and before the filing of this said tax suit and at the time of the rendition of said judgment.
“(7) I find that neither T. J. Thompson, Isabel Harrison, nor W. S. Mote were made parties to said foreclosure tax suit, nor were they cited therein, nor did they know of the same, nor did they file or waive answer or take any part therein. * * *
“(10) I find that all of'the parties to this suit, both plaintiffs and defendants, were on all the dates herein mentioned, are now and always have been, nonresidents of the state of Texas.
“(11) I find that for the year 1901 the land involved in this suit was assessed and taxes paid thereon in a county other thian the one in which it is located, and that for said year there was a double assessment and taxes paid on one assessment. That for the year 1901 T. J. Thompson for himself and wife, and for all of the other heirs, including all the plaintiffs in this suit, paid the taxes during the month of October, 1901, in Travis county, Tex., and paid same prior to January, 1,1902. I further find that T. J. Thompson, for himself and for all the heirs of H. C. Mote, including all the plaintiffs, paid the taxes on all the property involved in this suit for every year beginning with 1888 and up to and including 1911, and that he so paid all of said taxes prior to delinquency; that he paid all of said taxes for all of said years up to and including 1901 to the Texas ¡State Comptroller at Austin in Travis county, Tex., and that beginning with 1902 he paid them to the tax collector of Hutchinson county, Tex., and that said taxes were never at any time delinquent during said period; that the said foreclosure judgment and tax sale was for taxes alleged to be delinquent for 1901, and that they were not delinquent for said year 1901 on the property involved in this suit, and never were so delinquent.
“From the foregoing facts, I conclude as a matter of law:

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Bluebook (online)
156 S.W. 1105, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mote-v-thompson-texapp-1913.