Perry v. Venable

112 S.W.2d 1069, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 768
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 6, 1938
DocketNo. 3616.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 112 S.W.2d 1069 (Perry v. Venable) 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
Perry v. Venable, 112 S.W.2d 1069, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 768 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

NEALON, Chief Justice.

This suit was filed originally by J. M. McDavid against Cloteel Perry, Louise Womack, who are his sisters, R. H. Venable, and others. The husbands of Cloteel Perry and Louise, Womack were joined as party defendants. The suit involved certain described land in Rusk county, Tex. McDavid sought partition of the surface estate among himself and his said sisters. He also sought recovery of alleged interest in the property from several defendants, including R. H. Venable. The suit as against all defendants, except Mrs. Perry and Mrs. Womack, was in the usual form of trespass to try-title. Plaintiff also sought an accounting for the proceeds of the sale of oil produced by certain defendants from the land involved. Cloteel Perry and Louise Womack, joined by their husbands, filed an answer to plaintiff’s suit and a cross-action against R. H. Venable, the appellee. In their answer they consented to a partition of the surface rights as prayed by Mc-David. By their cross-action they sought to recover title to royalty interests and to-have a certain instrument by which their mother, Mrs. Eula McDavid, conveyed a-one-fourth interest in the minerals in and under said land to R. H. Venable removed as a cloud upon their alleged title. They also sought an accounting. By their cross-action they joined with said plaintiff, J. M. McDavid, and adopted those portions of his petition “which set out a cause of action against the defendant R. H. Venable,” etc.

Venable filed a general denial and a plea of not guilty, and invoked the two and four year statutes of limitation. Vernon’s Ann. Civ.St. arts. 5526, 5527.

*1071 The case was tried to the court without the intervention of a jury. The court by its judgment awarded ½8 of the surface estate to J. M. McDavid and x%8 jointly to Cloteel Perry and Louise Womack as their separate property, all subject to „oil leases owned by Humble Oil & Refining Company and R. G. Storey. The judgment further provided that McDavid should recover from defendants a 21⅜432 undivided interest in and to the minerals under said land, subject to said oil and gas lease. A further provision of the judgment was as follows:

“It is further ordered that said oil, gas and mineral estate in, to and under said above-described land and premises is owned by the following and in the proportion set ■out after their names, subject to the two oil and gas leases aforesaid; J. M. Mc-David 21%432nds undivided interest; R. H. Venable, 60%432nds undivided interest; Louise Womack, as her separate property,, 20%432nds undivided interest; Cloteel Perry, as her separate property, 51%432nds undivided interest — making a total of 154%432nds undivided interest owned by the parties aforesaid, and the balance of said mineral estate, to-wit, 88%432nds undivided interest, is owned (subject to the two oil ■and gas leases aforesaid) by grantees and assignees of the said J. M. McDavid, Cloteel Perry, Louise Womack, and Sarah McDavid, as shown by instruments duly recorded in the Deed Records of Rusk •County, Texas.”

It was also adjudged that Louise Womack and Cloteel Perry should take •nothing on their cross-action against R. H. Venable, and Venable was quieted in his title and possession of a one-fourth undivided interest in and to the minerals in and under said land as against Louise Womack and Cloteel Perry and their hus'.bands.

Cloteel Perry and husband and Louise Womack and husband have appealed from so much of said judgment as was recovered by R. H. Venable against them. No findings of fact or conclusions of law were ■filed and none were requested.

Opinion.

Appellants’ brief contains eleven .assignments of error. The first nine complain of the admission of various written instruments “over the objection of cross-plaintiffs, appellants herein.” None of them is followed by a statement showing upon what grounds objections were made or that appellants excepted to any of said rulings. Nor is there reference to any pages of the record upon which this information appears. To excuse this lack, appellants invoke article 1844, R.C.S., as amended in 1931, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 1844. The only change made by said amendment was to relieve appellants and plaintiffs in error of the duty of filing assignments of error in the trial court. Otherwise the law with reference to the presentation of assignments by litigants and their consideration by appellate courts remains as it was before the enactment of the amendment. These assignments, thérefore, will not be considered. Southern Casualty Co. v. Vatter, 115 Tex. 148, 278 S.W. 177.

Assignment No. 10 challenges the alleged action of the court in holding that said division orders and an “agreement as to interest” ratified their mother’s sale to Venable and estopped appellants “from setting up the fact that they had never conveyed their property to the defendant R. H. Venable,” or, “if the court did not” so hold as to ratification, it did “hold such instruments to be conveyances and * * * committed an error in so holding.” As stated, findings of fact and conclusions of law were neither filed nor requested. Nor did appellants follow their tenth assignment with a statement. It will not be considered. Rule 31; Brigman v. Holt, Tex.Civ.App., 32 S.W.2d 220; Southern Rock Island Plow Co. v. Williams, Tex.Civ.App., 80 S.W.2d 340.

The eleventh assignment is general in its nature, charging that the court erred in rendering judgment in favor of Venable and against Mrs. Perry and Mrs. Womack, because in so holding, as appellants charge, the court construed a certain instrument, heretofore denominated an “Agreement as to Interests,” to constitute a conveyance of. interest.

Appellees insist in reply to the eleventh and all other assignments of error that the judgment should be affirmed, because it affirmatively appears that not all of the facts have been brought forward in the statement of facts. Unless there has been a substantial compliance with the statute in the preparation and approval of the statement of facts, it is, of course, our duty to presume that there was evidence to support the judgment of the trial court and affirm that judgment. This brings us to a consideration of the ap *1072 plicable statutes, and to whether there has been compliance with their provisions.

Article 2238, R.C.S. as amended in 1931, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 2238, provides that, when any party to a suit shall desire a transcript of the reporter’s notes, he may apply to the stenographer, who shall thereupon file an original and duplicate copy in question and answer form among the papers in the cause, and it then becomes the duty of the court to approve this transcript, if it be found correct, after having given notice to interested parties in order to permit them to make objections. If the objections are found to be material and well founded, they are to be allowed. Such a transcript, when approved and signed by the judge, shall be filed among the papers and become a record therein.

Article 2239, as amended in 1931, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art.

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Bluebook (online)
112 S.W.2d 1069, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-venable-texapp-1938.