Poland v. Risher

88 S.W.2d 1106
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 31, 1935
DocketNo. 2855.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 88 S.W.2d 1106 (Poland v. Risher) 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
Poland v. Risher, 88 S.W.2d 1106 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

O’QUINN, Justice.

September 19, 1933, appellees sued W. I. Poland, Mrs. W. I. Poland, Charlie Patton, Mrs. Charlie Patton, R. J. Mann, Mrs. R. J. Mann, Walter Hough, and Mrs. Walter Hough, in the district court of Montgomery county, Tex., in trespass to try title to' 1,307.57 acres of land (in two tracts, one of 396.91 acres and one of 910.66 acres), a part of the W. B. Bridges survey in said Montgomery county. They prayed for judgment for title and possession of the land, and for a temporary injunction to restrain the defendants from removing any houses, wire fences, posts, or timber from the land. The injunction was issued as prayed.

October 12, 1933, the defendants R. J. Mann and Mrs. R. J. Mann answered by general demurrer, general denial, and a plea of not guilty. By their first amended original answer, filed February 12, 1934, they answered by general demurrer, plea of not guilty, and disclaimed as to all of the lands sued for except a specific described 160 acres, to which they asserted *1107 title by the ten-year statute of limitation which they especially pleaded. They prayed judgment for the specific 160 acres claimed, and in the alternative for 160 acres of land to be located so as to include their improvements.

The defendants Walter Hough and wife, Mrs. Walter Hough, answered by general demurrer, general denial, and plea of not guilty.

The defendants W. I. Poland and Mrs. W. I. Poland filed no answer. The defendants Charlie Patton and Mrs. Charlie Patton answered, disclaiming any interest in or to the land in litigation.

June 1, 1934, the case was regularly called for trial, and the plaintiffs, appel-lees here, appeared and announced ready for trial. None of the defendants or their attorneys appeared, and the case was tried to the court without a jury, who, after hearing the pleadings read and the evidence adduced, rendered judgment discharging the defendants W. I. Poland and Mrs. • W. I. Poland, and Charlie Patton and Mrs. Charlie Patton, on their disclaimers; and rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendants R. J. Mann and Mrs. R. J. Mann, on their disclaimer, for all of the land except the 160 acres claimed by-them by the ten-year statute of limitation, and against them for the 160 acres thus claimed; and in favor of plaintiffs and against the defendants Walter Hough and wife, Mrs. Walter Hough, for all of the land, and perpetuated and made permanent the temporary injunction theretofore granted restraining the defendants and all of them from removing any houses, wire fences, posts, and timber from the land involved.

July 19, 1934, R. J. Mann and. Mrs. R. J. Mann, Walter Hough, and Mrs. Walter Hough filed what they denominated a motion for new trial and bill of review, seeking to set aside the judgment above mentioned. In their petition they prayed for an injunction to restrain appellees, and each of them, from interfering with or molesting them in the reasonable enjoyment and use of “said property” (the 160 acres and improvements thereon), pending hearing of their motion for a bill of review, which was granted and the writ duly issued.

October 29, 1934, appellees filed motion to dissolve the injunction granted appellants, and that appellants take nothing by their suit.

On January 28, 1935, the matter still pending, R. J. Mann and his wife, Mrs. R. J. Mann, filed their first amended motion for a new trial and bill of review in which they alleged: (a) That on September 9, 1933, appellees sued appellants and others in trespass to try title to certain described lands; (b) that defendants Poland and wife and Patton and wife disclaimed any interest in the lands involved, and that defendants Hough and wife filed answer, but failed to appear and defend;' (c) that these appellants, Mann and wife, answered by general demurrer, general denial, plea of not guilty, and special plea claiming a certain 160 acres of the land sued for by the ten-year statute of limitation, describing the 160 acres by metes and bounds, with an alternative plea that, if not entitled to the specific 160 acres, then to 160 acres to be selected under the orders of the court; (d) that the 160 acres so claimed by appellants was a portion of a 417.41 acres in the W. B. Bridges survey in Montgomery county described in appellees’ (plaintiffs below) petition; (e) that appellant R. J. Mann and his father,- R. B. Mann, took possession of the land under a contract with Mrs. Laura L. Bryning and Dan Stewart, wherein it was agreed that said R. J. Mann and said R. B. Mann would go into possession of, and look after, the lands in said 417.41 acres in said Bridges survey owned by said Laura Bryning and said Dan Stewart, and prevent trespassing upon said land, in consideration of which said Bryning and Stewart “would give to the said R. J. Mann 160 acres of land which was to be surveyed off of said survey south of and -adjoining said thirteen and one-half acres thereof, occupied and owned by said R. B. Mann”; (f) that “said Laura Bryning and Dan Stewart owned an interest in said Bridges Survey amounting to more than 400 acres, which interest was then undetermined, but that they claimed at the time of the making of said contract an acreage in said survey far in excess of 400 acres,” and that appellant R. J. Mann and his father R. B. Mann- complied with their agreement and were entitled to the said 160 acres of land; (g) that they entered upon and took possession of the 160 acres agreed to be given them by said Laura Bryning and Dan Stewart, and occupied, cultivated, and enjoyed same for a period of more than ten years next before the filing of this suit by appellees, and that, by virtue of said occupancy of and claim to said land, they acquired title *1108 thereto and were entitled to recover same as against appellees; (h) that said R. B. Mann was now deceased, that he died testate, and that under the terms of his will R. J. Mann succeeded to his interest in said land.

Appellants, in their said amended motion and petition, further alleged: (a) That on May 3, 1934, Crawford & Crawford, a law firm whose office is at Conroe in Montgomery county, and who represented ap-pellees, who' were then plaintiffs in this cause, No. 177SS, then pending on the docket of the district court of said county, advised David E. O’ Fiel, an attorney representing appellants in said cause No. 17755, and who resided-at Beaumont, Tex. that said cause was set for trial in the fifth week of court which began on Monday May 28, 1934, and requested his (O’Fiel’s) assent to said setting, to which said O’Fiel agreed and notified said Crawford & Crawford, that appellants would be ready for trial at said date; (b) that on May 24, 1934, appellant R. J. Mann was present in the district court of Montgomery County “for the purpose of ascertaining whether or not this cause would be tried and that while he was present in the court room during said day, he heard said cause sounded by the court, and inquiry was made as to whether or not said cause, as well as other causes, set for trial during the succeeding week would be tried, and that one of the firm of Crawford & Crawford, who was then present in court, announced that the said case would not be tried during said week and that he, the said R. J. Mann, did, on the 25th day o.f May, 1934, write the said David E.

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Related

Collins v. National Bank of Commerce of San Antonio
154 S.W.2d 296 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1941)
Mann v. Risher
116 S.W.2d 692 (Texas Supreme Court, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
88 S.W.2d 1106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/poland-v-risher-texapp-1935.