Ross v. Jarrett

146 S.W.2d 219
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 29, 1940
DocketNo. 14143.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 146 S.W.2d 219 (Ross v. Jarrett) 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
Ross v. Jarrett, 146 S.W.2d 219 (Tex. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

BROWN, Justice.

This suit presents another chapter in the litigation begun by defendants in error against plaintiff in error, J. W. Ross, and *220 two other parties, namely, Ancil H. Ross and Frank Morris, Jr.

The first chapter is concluded with the opinion of our Court, as published in 132 S.W.2d 286-291, and the action of our-Supreme Court in dismissing an application for a writ of error from our judgment with the notation: “Correct .judgment.”

We shall take cognizance of the judgment heretofore rendered by us in so far as it affects any phase of the instant suit*

In the prior suit the Jarretts and Jarrett heirs recovered title to the 95-acre tract and the 50-acre tract as against the defendants, the Rosses and Morris, Jr., and expressly cancelled the deed executed by the administrator to Morris and the deed executed by Morris to J. W. Ross, and removed the cloud cast upon plaintiffs’ title by reason of the execution and recording of such deeds, but said judgment expressly fixed a lien against an undivided one-half interest in the 50-acre tract to secure the payment of an indebtedness owed by Turner Jarrett, deceased, on whose estate an administration was had- and through which a sale of both tracts of land was made, to satisfy such indebtedness (and taxes paid by Ross), and expressly fixed a. lien against both tracts to secure the payment of the taxes, delinquent and current, that were paid by Ross on same.

The trial court, in - an effort to deal kindly with the plaintiffs, expressly stayed execution and order of sale for six months.

The plaintiffs below, who are the plaintiffs in the instant suit, appealed because they thought they were awarded insufficient relief and we affirmed the judgment of the trial court. Jarrett et al. v. Ross et al., Tex.Civ.App., 132 S.W.2d 286, writ dismissed — correct judgment. The judgment of the trial court, so affirmed by us, is dated November 27, 1937. The judgment in the instant case seems to have been rendered May 8, 1939.

Defendants in error (plaintiffs below) pleaded, in substance, the identical allegations that they set up in the former suit, with respect to the title to' the property, the complaints as to the administration had upon the estate of Turner Jarrett, deceased, its invalidity, etc., and the same complaints as to the sale of the properties to Morris and his conveyance to J. W. Ross and said Ross” lack of good faith in respect to the title and in respect to his paying the delinquent and current taxes, and that no consideration passed at the administrator’s sale, and then the pleading alleges that the recording of the said deed cast a cloud upon their titles and prevented them from selling an oil and gas lease on the lands and from selling a portion of their royalty, for all of which they prayed recovery of damages.

The petition alleges that the acts of the defendants were done with malice, but just before the cause was tried, they, in writing, withdrew all allegations of malice, and in writing declared that they sought only actual damages occasioned by the wrongful clouding of their titles by the defendants, and in. this writing they assert that they decline to read to the jury the abandoned allegations.

We confess that never before have we seen such a procedure as was had in this suit. Instead of requiring the plaintiffs to replead and eliminate the allegations that they say they are abandoning, the trial court permitted them to file the following pleading: “Come now the defendants and before the pleadings are read to the jury in the above-styled and numbered cause, and expressly abandon their pleading and prayer for exemplary damages, and expressly abandon their allegations that the acts of the defendants and each of them were malicious, and expressly decline to read and present to the jury all their allegations that the acts of the defendants and each of them were maliciously done and expressly decline to, read to the jury their allegations and prayer for exemplary damages and expressly present to the jury by their pleadings only their allegations as to the wrongful clouding of their title to the lands involved, and expressly present to the jury only their plea and prayer for actual damages herein, which said abandonment was expressly permitted by the court, this the 1st day of May, 1939.”

The fact still remains that the petition on which the plaintiffs went to trial is in the record, intact, with nothing stricken from it, and with the many allegations that import malice, as well as allegations expressly charging malice.

What was read to the jury, as constituting the plaintiffs’ pleading, this court does not and Cannot in the .very nature of these unheard-of proceedings know, but we feel that the cause should have been tried on amended pleadings that actually show the very allegations on which the *221 plaintiffs wish to stand. In no other way ■ can a trial court know what issues are sought to be raised and an appellate court is in no better position than the trial court under such circumstances.

We find that the plaintiffs not only pleaded the judgment in the former suit as a part of their cause of action here, but they introduced the judgment obtained in that cause as a part of their evidence.

In an effort to defeat the pleas of limitations that were set up by the defendants below, the plaintiffs, in their amended pleadings, alleged that they were not negligent in discovering that their titles had been clouded and pleaded ignorance and no want of diligence on their part.

A jury having been demanded, no issue touching upon malice was requested by the plaintiffs and no issue on the question of diligence on the part of the plaintiffs in discovering that their titles had been clouded and in bringing their suit for damages was requested, or given.

Plaintiffs below pleaded that they had made a tentative sale of an oil lease on the properties to one McCullough, which sale was lost because of the cloud cast upon their titles by the defendants. They pleaded no other prospective sale but merely alleged that they .could have sold a lease to other unnamed parties. They pleaded a loss of sale of royalty, but alleged no certain would-be purchaser. They pleaded that they could have sold the lease to McCullough at $35 per acre, and that the royalty was of like value per acre.

The verdict of the jury absolved Ancil H. Ross and Frank Morris, Jr., of all damages, and the jury found that McCullough was willing to buy the lease but was unable to pay for it, and found that the plaintiffs would have sold one-half of their royalty hut for the cloud on their titles and that they could have sold an oil lease on the properties to some other person than McCullough, and found the reasonable value of the lease at $35 per acre, and the value of the royalty the same.

On this verdict the trial court rendered judgment for the plaintiffs against J. W. Ross for $35 per acre, bottomed on the value of the lease, and for -$17.50 per acre bottomed on the value of one-half of the royalty.

J. W. Ross complains of this judgment and presents twenty-three assignments of error, hut we do not believe it is necessary to discuss all of them.

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Bluebook (online)
146 S.W.2d 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-v-jarrett-texapp-1940.