Ramirez v. Smith

59 S.W. 258, 94 Tex. 184, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 231
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1900
DocketNo. 930.
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 59 S.W. 258 (Ramirez v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ramirez v. Smith, 59 S.W. 258, 94 Tex. 184, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 231 (Tex. 1900).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

Defendant in error brought this suit against F. O. Skidmore to recover the amount due on certain promissory notes of which he was the maker and to foreclose a vendor’s lien on two tracts of land, one known as the “Retaches” and the other as the Robert Moore survey, for the purchase money of which the notes were given. Plaintiffs in error were made defendants as claimants of an interest in the land. Plaintiffs in error pleaded their rights as they will hereafter appear. Skidmore defended the action on the notes, alleging that by reason of the claim of his codefendants (plaintiffs in error), who were in possession of the land, he had been unable to obtain possession thereof, and prayed, among other things that if such codefendants *187 should recover the land or any part thereof as against plaintiff, the notes be canceled.

The title of plaintiff to the whole of the land was derived through the foreclosure of a deed of trust on the two tracts, executed to Francis Smith & Co. on the 9th day of April, 1892, by Antonio G. Ramirez, in whom the legal title was then vested, to secure a loan of money made to him by Smith & Co. Plaintiff had also acquired the interests of certain ones of defendants through sale under execution prior to his sale to Skidmore, and as to this there was no dispute. The defendants in error, at the time of execution of the deed of trust from Antonio Ramirez to Francis Smith & Co., and of the foreclosure thereof, held the equitable title to interests in the land, the legal title being vested in Antonio in trust for them; and the chief question in the case was and is whether or not the mortgagees were chargeable with notice of such equitable title, there being no pretense that the purchaser at the foreclosure sale acquired any right superior to that to which the mortgage attached.

The history of the two titles is as follows: Lino Ramirez, the father of Antonio and the other plaintiffs in error, was, in his lifetime, engaged in stock raising and conducted a number of separate ranches upon land which was the community property of himself and his wife, Lucia, one of which was called Las Comitas. He extended his fence around this ranch across a vacant tract of 1280 acres, now the James Moore survey, and onto the Retaches, and inclosed within his ranch all of the former and about 1500 acres of the latter, believing all of it to be included in Las Comitas or to be vacant land. He located certificates upon and procured patents for some of the land embraced in the Retaches tract. John L. Haynes was then the owner of the Retaches, and in 1886 he brought suit against Lino Ramirez to recover that tract and to cancel the junior patents and surveys. Pending this suit, a verbal agreement was made between Haynes and Ramirez that surveyors should be appointed to survey the Retaches and that, if it should be found that the lands claimed by the latter were covered by that grant, Ramirez would buy the whole of the Retaches at an agreed price. Before this agreement could be carried out, Lino Ramirez died, leaving a widow and children, all of the latter being minors except Antonio and a daughter. His death was suggested of record May 18, 1887, and an order entered that his heirs and legal representatives be made parties, and on May 21, 1887, it having been ascertained by the survey that the Retaches grant did include lands claimed by Ramirez, the following agreement was reduced to writing for the purpose of carrying out the prior oral agreement made by him:

“In the above entitled and numbered causes, pending in the District Court for Starr County, Texas, it is agreed by and between the respective parties hereto that due and proper process shall issue to cite the heirs at law of Lino Ramirez, deceased, to appear therein, and that as said plaintiff Haynes has conveyed said lands in controversy to An *188 tonio Ramirez, one of said heirs at law, and said parties have agreed to entry of judgment herein in accordance with said fact, at the next term of court, said Haynes has agreed to and has executed said conveyance to said Ramirez as agreed upon between said parties, and it is therein and hereby expressty stipulated and agreed that said cause shall be finally adjusted at the next term of District Court for Starr County by entry of judgment in cause No. 374 in favor of said Haynes, and by such judgment in cause Ho. 373 as may be desired by said Ramirez heirs at law, the same in no way or manner to entail cost, damage or expense to said Haynes. As to costs already paid, no account shall be taken thereof. Defendants, however, are to pay all further costs connected with said suits and their final termination. This determination of these said two causes is understood to fully end and determine all matters and causes of litigation for damages, etc., etc., or other causes arising by the after acts of each and every of said defendants in and about the subject matter of litigation in said two causes. Ho judgment to be rendered for damages, and judgment to be rendered for cancellation of survey made thereon to be only to extent of conflict as shown by the pleadings herein as far as same actually conflict.

“Witness our hands this. 21st day of May, 1887.

“R. B. Rentero, Atty. for Plaintiff.

“Wells & Hicks Defts. Attorneys.”

At the same time, Haynes executed to Antonio Ramirez a deed conveying the Retaches land in consideration of the price agreed on by Lino, for which Antonio executed his note, which was subsequently paid out of the estate of Lino and Lucia Ramirez. The transaction took this form because Haynes did not wish to contract with minors and wanted a decree canceling the junior surveys and settling the boundaries of the Retaches, and Antonio acted as representative of the other heirs. The widow and children of Lino Ramirez were made parties to the suit by Haynes, and, at the next term of the court, Antonio was appointed guardian ad litem for the minors. All the defendants filed general denials, and a judgment was entered reciting that the parties produced the above agreement, setting it forth, and adjudging the Retaches land to Haynes, fixing its boundaries and canceling the junior surveys so far as they conflicted with it..

During the same year Lucia, the widow of Lino Ramirez, qualified as survivor, inventorying the land in controversy as part of the community estate, and she and Antonio formed a partnership for carrying on the stock business upon all the ranches, including Las Cemitas, Antonio having the general management and supervision.1 This partnership continued until her death in September, 1888.

Having learned that the land now included in the Robert Moore survey was vacant, Antonio, in the early part of 1888, bought, with funds *189 of the estate, a certificate, taking the transfer in his own name for convenience, which he located upon this land, and on May 29, 1888, received. a patent to himself as assignee. The nncontradicted evidence shows that this, also, was done for the benefit of the estate. In 1888, after the death of Lucia, Antonio became guardian of all the heirs except his adult sister, and inventoried the property in controversy as part of the estate, and continued in such guardianship and management of the stock business upon all of the ranches until-the mortgage was given to Smith & Co., but never resided upon or otherwise held possession of Las Comitas.

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Bluebook (online)
59 S.W. 258, 94 Tex. 184, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramirez-v-smith-tex-1900.