Nelson v. Thompson

64 S.W.2d 373, 1933 Tex. App. LEXIS 1201
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 1, 1933
DocketNo. 11567
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 64 S.W.2d 373 (Nelson 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
Nelson v. Thompson, 64 S.W.2d 373, 1933 Tex. App. LEXIS 1201 (Tex. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

JONES, Chief Justice.

In a suit in the 101st judicial district court of Dallas county, in a case styled Walter H. Wilson et al., Plaintiffs, v. R. C. Chastain, Trustee, et al., Defendants, Robert Thompson, appellee, was appointed receiver to take charge of a small tract of land situated in Gregg county, said to contain four acres of land, more or less, and described by metes and bounds. Appellee duly qualified as such receiver, and took possession of the said tract of land. It appears from the record that ap-pellee, as receiver, was holding the said land under a CQrtain oil and gas lease from Ida Waldon and her husband, George Waldon, to Guy Stumpf, and under the orders of the district court was operating an oil well on tBe land. This oil well is not the one whose title is in question in the instant suit.

On May 11, 1933, appellee filed a petition in the suit in which he was appointed receiver, against J. M. Lapin, L. P. Stumpf, Clarence McFall, Ida Waldon and husband, George Waldon, and W. A. Browne, alleging his actual and constructive possession of the land as receiver, and further alleging that on or about July 15, 1932, the above-named parties entered upon a small described strip of land, ousted appellee therefrom, drilled, and have since operated, an oil well on said strip of land; that they extracted therefrom “large amounts of oil and have purported to sell said oil and have refused to account to plaintiff for said oil, or the proceeds therefrom, all in defiance of the rights of the receiver, and in contempt of this Honorable Court.”

On June 3, 1933, an amended petition was filed by appellee in said suit, in which it is alleged that, upon a hearing in said district court, under the original petition, “It was shown that C. H. Murray, Burt Wrather, Leon Griffith, J. g. Nelson (appellant herein), were in possession of the property herein (the small strip of land), and were exercising control and dominion of same.” The amended petition complained of the same parties named as defendants in the original petition, and named as additional defendants the parties above named. The amended petition, in effect, made the same allegations as to appellee’s ouster, the entry upon the described acre of land by these parties, the boring and operating of an oil well, and a refusal to deliver the oil, or its proceeds, from the oil well on said strip of land, to appel-lee. Following the allegations and the prayer of the amended petition, which was duly verified, the court entered the following order, without notice or hearing; and with no evidence, other than the allegations of fact contained in the verified petition:

“Upon consideration of the foregoing petition, it is ordered by the Court that upon the plaintiff executing a bond in the sum of $1,-000 conditioned, approved and payable as provided by law, that a writ of injunction issue as prayed for restraining and enjoining the defendants herein, their agents, attorneys, associates, servants and employees, from taking any further proceedings, filing further proceedings, procuring the issuance ■of any orders, serving or attempting to serve any writs of process in the cause filed in the district court of Gregg County, 71st Judicial District, Cause No. 8747-A, or from in any way further prosecuting said suit, or any [375]*375cross action, or plea in reconvention therein, and from in any way going upon the premises or operating the oil well described in this petition or in any way molesting or interfering with the possession of plaintiff and the operation of said oil well by him, or disturbing plaintiff in his possession and occupancy of said land; all until the further order of this court.
“It is further ordered that the defendants, and each of them be notified and cited to appear in this court in the city and county of Dallas, State of Texas, on the 24th Day of June, 1933, at nine o’clock A. M., and show cause why they should not be compelled to account to plaintiff for- the oil extracted from said well and lease, and be compelled to set up their title, claim and interest, if any, in said land and said lease, and fully' and finally restore possession to plaintiff, and to show cause why the additional relief prayed for by plaintiff should not be granted; at which time the matter will be fully heard and determined.
“[Signed] Claude M. McCallum, Judge.”

The bond was filed, the injunction issued, and appellant alone has duly perfected an appeal from this judgment. It thus appears that appellant, without a day in court and without notice, is effectively prohibited from prosecuting a suit filed by him and those who were made codefendants by appellee’s amended petition, previous to the filing of the amended petition, but subsequent to the filing of the original petition, and that appellant is effectively prohibited from going upon the property, of which he and his codefendants held possession for. approximately a year, and also are effectively prohibited from operating the oil well he had been jointly operating with his codefendants, and also prohibited from interfering with the possession of appel-lee and his operation of such oil well. In other words, on the filing of a suit to try title, by a proceeding summary in effect, appellant has been ousted of possession of said acre tract of land, and the producing oil well operated thereon, and appellee, as plaintiff in such suit, is placed in possession to operate same, notwithstanding appellee’s amended petition shows that appellant and his codefendants had gone upon said tract of land under a claim of ownership, and was holding same under such claim at the time the said petition was filed, and the summary proceedings had.

Two questions arise upon this appeal, viz.: (a) Does the record clearly show that the district court of Dallas county had acquired jurisdiction oí the subject-matter of appel-lee’s complaint against appellant, previous to the filing by appellant and his codefendants of the suit in Gregg county against the receiver to try title to the same strip of land? (b) Appellant and his codefendants, being strangers to the receivership proceedings m Dallas county, and having been in possession of, and claiming title to, the oil and minerals in said one-acre strip of'land, can appellant be ousted of such possession by the summary proceedings above described?

While the allegations in appellee’s amended petition show that when he was appointed receiver he was placed in actual and constructive possession of the entire property described in such petition, these allegations also show that, for approximately twelve months preceding the filing of such petition, actual possession to the narrow strip of land in question was in appellant and his code-fendants ; and that during the time the actual possession of the property in question was in appellant and his codefendants, an oil-producing well was brought in by them on said property, and was being operated at the time the petition was filed. The only conclusion warranted by these allegations is that appel-lee knew appellant and his eodefendants were asserting a claim of ownership to the property in question, and under such claim had taken possession of this one-acre tract of land, were operating an oil well thereon, and had instituted suit in a district court of Gregg county to establish their claim of title to the property. Both the suit by the receiver in the Dallas county district court, and the suit by appellant and his codefendants in the Gregg county district court, are in form of trespass to try title to the same property.

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Bluebook (online)
64 S.W.2d 373, 1933 Tex. App. LEXIS 1201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-thompson-texapp-1933.