Stephenville Oil Mill v. McNeill

122 S.W. 911, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 252, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 57
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 23, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 122 S.W. 911 (Stephenville Oil Mill v. McNeill) 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
Stephenville Oil Mill v. McNeill, 122 S.W. 911, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 252, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 57 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

SPEER, Associate Justice.

Appellees as the heirs-at-law of John M. Stephens, deceased, instituted this suit in trespass to try title to recover certain lands in Erath County from the Fort Worth' & Rio Grande Railway Company; Stephenville Oil Mill, J. H. Ott and G. R. and Mattie Fagan. The case was submitted to a jury on special issues, and the answers to these issues supplemented by findings of the court were made the basis of a judgment for the plaintiffs. The Fagans and the railway company appealed, but the latter has not assigned error, so that in speaking of appellants we will be understood as referring only to the Fagans.

Appellants’ first assignment of error is: “The court erred in ren *254 dering a judgment in favor of appellees and against the Fagans for the land described in their second amended original answer.” This is manifestly too general to require consideration, and besides is not a copy of the assignment filed in the court below. The assignment as filed below consists of some three and One-half pages of typewritten matter, whereas the assignment presented in the brief consists only of as many lines. The generality of the assignment is- illustrated when it is seen that as many as twenty-one propositions are submitted under it, complaining of various errors of the court, including numerous rulings on the admission of evidence. In fact, appellants virtually have presented their whole case under this one general assignment, which points out no error at all. To consider such assignment in this case would be, we think, to put a premium on laxness and needlessly to consume the time of this court in doing the work which the statute and rules contemplate should be done by counsel.

The second assignment is: “Defendants moved the court on the findings of fact by the jury and the findings of fact by the court for a judgment in pursuance of such findings. The motion was overruled. In this the court erred.” We can not consider this assignment because it is not followed by a statement from the record showing the ruling complained of, or showing what the findings upon which a judgment was asked were. Furthermore, the assignment' can not be sustained, if considered, because there is neither bill of exception nor order of the court to indicate that such motion for judgment was ever made and overruled. Hot only does the brief fail thus to point out error, but the record itself is equally silent.

There are some assignments complaining of the court’s ruling in admitting evidence, but a sufficient answer to these is that the issues which the evidence admitted tended to support were not submitted to the jury, and the contention that appellees failed to connect themselves with the sovereign of the soil coinés to naught in view of the court’s finding of prior possession in appellees’ ancestor, both parties claiming, as they do, under him as a common source of title. It may be as insistently urged by appellant that justice has not been done by the judgment of the lower court in this case, but if so, though we are not intimating such to be the case, we have no power to revise errors in the absence of a brief properly presenting them, there being no fundamental errors requiring a reversal.

The judgment of the District Court is in all things affirmed.

OH RESUBMISSIOn.

The judgment in this case was affirmed at the last term of this court, but the affirmance was afterward set aside and a resubmission of the case allowed in order that appellants might be afforded an opportunity to amend their brief in certain particulars. The amended briefs have been filed, but appellees still insist that we should not consider the amended assignments. In the court below the present appellants filed their assignments of error, of which the following is a copy of the first:

“1st. The court erred in rendering a judgment in favor of plain *255 tiffs and against these defendants for the land described in their second amended original answer:

“1st. Because the plaintiffs failed to connect themselves by regular chain of title with the sovereignty of the soil.

“(a) The patent shows on its face that it was issued to the heirs of John Blair.

“(b) Because the alleged power of attorney does not prove heirship, and there was no proof of heirship independent thereof.

“(c) Because there was no preof of the execution of the alleged power of attorney.

“(d) Because the alleged attorney was wholly without authority to pass or attempt to pass title of the said land to Stephens, the alleged purchaser.

“(e) Because the certified copy of the alleged power of attorney was simply a copy of a copy, the original of which had never been filed, as required by.law, in the records of deeds for Erath County, or the county to which it was attached originally for judicial and land purposes.

“(f) Because there is no provision of law authorizing certified copies of either originals or exact copies of instruments from the Land Office of the character of the one in question to be used in evidence in trespass to try title.

“(g) Because the alleged copy of the power of attorney was incompetent, inadmissible, and should have been by the court excluded from the consideration of either the jury or himself in the respective findings.

“2d. The application of W. W. McNeill to have the estate partitioned is void on its face:

“(a) Because it did not recite the names or the residences of the heirs or the distributees, nor that their residences were unknown.

“(b) Because it is alleged that there were 660 acres of the Blair survey of 17 2/3 labors that belonged to said estate that was ready for partition, without giving any further or better description.

“(c) Because the petition or application is absolutely void for the want of description of the land and such description as would enable the court to intelligently render a judgment thereof.

“3d. The judgment or order of the court on the application or petition for proceedings is likewise void:

“(a) Because there is no description in the judgment or order ordering the partition and appointing partitioners.

“(b) The partitioners were wholly unable to partition the land from the order of the court, and were necessarily required to make independent investigations as to its locality, and this they were . . . without authority to do.

“4th. The order of the court confirming or approving the partition of the commissioners is void:

“(a) Because the map or plat did not become a part of the record of the probate proceedings, and without that the whole matter of partition and division of the property is unintelligible.

“(b) Because the judgment of the court does not undertake to divest the title and invest it respectively as required by statute.

*256 “(c) Because there was nothing in the record to put a purchaser or occupant upon notice.

“5th. The judgment is void and the entire partition proceedings are void:

“(a) Because there does not appear to have been any pending administration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 S.W. 911, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 252, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephenville-oil-mill-v-mcneill-texapp-1909.