Nugent v. Wade

132 S.W. 883, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 218, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 75
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 3, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 132 S.W. 883 (Nugent v. Wade) 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
Nugent v. Wade, 132 S.W. 883, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 218, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 75 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

TALBOT, Associate Justice.

This is an action of trespass to try title, brought by the appellee, J. W. Wade, and the widow and heirs of Dr. E. J. Hallum, deceased, to recover 220 acres of land situated in Henderson County, Texas. The land is a part of the Nancy Lovell survey, and the suit was instituted on the 26th day of August, 1908. The defendant pleaded not guilty, and that he had acquired title to tho land in controversy by adverse possession for more than ten years. In reply to the defendant’s claim of title by limitation, the plaintiffs alleged that the possession upon which defendant relied for such title was acquired and held by him as a tenant of the plaintiff Wade and of the said Dr. E. J. Hallum, deceased. The case was tried September 14, 1909, and, upon the conclusion of the evidence, the court instructed the jury to return a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs for all the land sued for and described in their petition, unless they found for the defendant for some part of said land under his plea of limitation of ten years. The jury returned a verdict in favor of plaintiffs for 120 acres of the land, and in favor of the defendant for 100 acres thereof. Judgment was entered in accordance with the verdict and the defendant appealed.

The appellant presents but one assignment of error, which is as 'follows: “The court erred in charging the jury to find for the plaintiffs for all the land sued for, unless -they find for the defendant under Ms plea of limitation," and in failing to give special charge No. 2 requested by the defendant, to the effect that, since there was no evidence connecting the plaintiffs’ claim with that of Nancy Lovell, the patentee, or that she was dead, the jury should find for the defendant.” We think the assignment is well taken. The record fails to disclose any evidence whatever connecting, by deed or otherwise, the claim of the plaintiffs with that of Nancy Lovell, the patentee of the land. In proof of their title to the land the plaintiffs only offered in evidence: (1) the patent issued by the State to Nancy Lovell, July 2, 1852; (2) a judgment rendered in the District Court of Henderson County on January 15, 1907, upon service of citation by publication in a suit, No. 2551, styled V. F. Hallam et al. v. Unknown Heirs of Nancy Lovell, purporting to divest such title as Nancy Lovell’s unknown heirs had in and to the land and vesting it in plaintiffs; (3) deed from S. A. Erwin to Ed Hallam conveying an undivided half interest to the land in controversj1, dated December 13, 1881, acknowledged March 2, 1885; (4) deed from Thos. and Frances McKee by their executors to John W. Wade to an undivided interest in one-half of the land in controversy, dated January 1, 1872. The record shows no effort made by the plain *221 tiffs to prove that Nancy Lovell was dead, or that she had heirs living at the time the suit above referred to was instituted or at the time the judgment therein was rendered. Nor was it shown or attempted to be shown, so far as the record discloses, that Nancy Lovell had ever voluntarily parted with the title to the land, or that it had been divested out of her by suit or otherwise. Neither was it shown that the plaintiffs’ claim is based upon some right acquired from Nancy Lovell, nor from some real or supposed heir of hers. But it does appear that the appellant was not a party to the suit of Hallam and others against Nancy Lovell’s unknown heirs, but that he was a stranger to said suit and the judgment therein rendered. It follows that said judgment was, as to appellant, res inter alias acta, and that the evidence offered by the appellees was insufficient to show title in appellees from and under the sovereignty of the soil.

This, we think, is made certain by the decision of our Supreme Court in the case of McCamant v. Boberts, 66 Texas, 360. In that case, following the rule laid down by elementary "writers in regard to the admissibility and effect of verdicts and judgments, it is held that to establish the mere fact that a particular verdict was given or judgment pronounced, and the legal consequences which result from that fact, the judgment is always admissible, even as against strangers to it; but when offered with the view of establishing some collateral fact, that is, not to prove the mere fact that such a judgment has been pronounced but, as a medium of proving some fact as found by the verdict or upon the supposed existence of which the judgment is founded, they are not admissible. “in the determination of matters of private right as against strangers to the proceedings in which they are rendered, except in those matters of a public nature in which the proceeding is termed in rem, and from public considerations held to be binding on all persons.” '

Instancing a case in which a judgment will be admissible against a stranger to the proceeding in which it was pronounced, it is said: “That if one seeks to deraign title through sale under an execution, he may and must show that a judgment was rendered which authorized that execution to issue.” In the case cited, W. B. Baker claimed to be the owner of the land certificate on which the grant was made, through conveyances made by several persons, including Charles Chamberlain, down to himself, and the opinion declares that the vital question in the case was: Did the Wm. T. Evans, to whom the land was patented, sell the land certificate to Charles Chamberlain? And it is pointed out that to make that proof, the plaintiff, over objections, was permitted to introduce in evidence a judgment rendered in the District Court of Shackelford County, upon service of citation by publication, in a suit instituted by W. B. Baker against the unknown heirs of Wm. T. Evans, to remove cloud from the title. In holding that this judgment was inadmissible and ineffective for the purpose for which it was offered, the court said:- “It was offered, evidently, to show that Wm. T. Evans, to whom the land was granted, was dead, for a judgment could *222 not be rendered against his heirs, known or unknown, so long as he lived; for until his death he had no heirs. It was not admissible for any such purpose, and was utterly ineffective upon one who claims through him; while, had it been proved that he was dead when the proceeding in which the decree was rendered was instituted, if the court acquired jurisdiction over his unknown heirs, then'it would have been not only admissible against one subsequently purchasing from such heirs, but conclusive of the rights of the person in whose favor the decree was rendered. Proof of the death of W. T. Evans, and, as a result, that the persons brought before the court represented the title which it was admitted he once had, and so, as his heirs, could not be thus made.” So, the judgment in favor of Y. F. Hallam and others against the unknown heirs of Fancy Lovell, was not admissible to show that Fancy Lovell was dead, and as there was no other evidence that she was dead, and as no judgment could be rendered against her heirs so long as she lived, said judgment constituted no link or muniment of title upon which appellees could rely in deraigning their title from the State.

But appellees contend that appellant entered upon the land in con-troversy under an executory contract of purchase of their title, and hence it was not necessary for appellees to show title from the State. Without stating it in detail, we think the evidence insufficient to sustain this contention.

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Bluebook (online)
132 S.W. 883, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 218, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nugent-v-wade-texapp-1910.