Stevenson v. Mills

14 S.W.2d 94
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1929
DocketNo. 1772.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 14 S.W.2d 94 (Stevenson v. Mills) 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
Stevenson v. Mills, 14 S.W.2d 94 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

This suit was instituted in the district court of Harris county on April 12, 1926, by the state of Texas against Land Title & Trust Company, appellee, V. W. Mills, and appellant, S. K. Stevenson, and the unknown heirs of Mills and Stevenson, to foreclose a tax lien against the property hereinafter described. Judgment was rendered for the relief prayed for upon the confession of all the defendants. Appellee, Mills, answered by plea in the nature of trespass to try title against his codefendant, appellant, Stevenson, praying for judgment for the land involved in the tax suit of the state, describing it as follows: “All of outlots 81, 46 and 140 to the town of Deer Park, Harris County, Texas; also Lot 26 Block 28 town of La Porte, Harris County, Texas.”

Appellant, Stevenson, answered by the same sort of plea over against appellee, Mills. Appellant’s plea was special, in the nature of a collateral attack against appellee, Mills’, title, and against this plea the court sustained a general demurrer. Between appellant and appellee the ease was tried without a jury, with judgment for appellee, Mills, for the land in controversy. Though reserving no exceptions to the ruling of the court sustaining the demurrers against his answer, appellant has brought forward by objections to the testimony offered by appellee, and by exceptions to the court’s exclusion of certain testimony offered by him, the same legal propositions advanced by his plea.

It was conceded that appellant was the common source of title. Appellee offered in evidence the following record title:

(a) Judgment in cause No. 85344, State of Texas v. S. K. Stevenson and others, dated 12-22-19, foreclosing the tax lien against the following described property: “All of out lot No. 140, being 5 acres, in the town of Deer Park, Harris County, Texas. Also out lots 46 and 81 in the town of Deer Park, Harris County, Texas. Also Lots 26 in Block 28 in the town of La Porte, Harris County, Texas.”

The judgment made the following findings and recitations as to service and foreclosure:

“This day came on to be heard’the above numbered and entitled cause, and this day came the plaintiff, The State of Texas, by its attorney, and the defendants S. K. Stevenson and C. S. Ranck and all persons owning or claiming any interest in the property described in plaintiff’s original petition having been duly cited by publication to answer plaintiff’s petition herein as it fully appeared to the court, and a sufficient time having elapsed after such service, the court appointed E. H. Vasmer, Esq. a practicing attorney of this bar, to represent said defendants so cited by publication to answer plaintiff’s petition. * ⅜ * And it, is adjudged and decreed that a lien against each of said tracts or parcels of land for the amount of the taxes, interest and costs herein adjudged to be due on the same, which lien is hereby foreclosed as against said defendant on each of said tracts of land; and it (is further ordered, adjudged that in default of payment of this judgment, interest and costs an order of sale be issued by the clerk of this court, directed to the sheriff or any constable of Harris County, Texas, commanding such officer to seize, levy upon and advertise for sale as under execution each of said tracts of land, and sell the same to the highest bidder for cash as under execution, but if defendant or their *96 attorney shall at any time before the sale file with the sheriff or other officer in whose hands this order of sale shall be placed a written request that the property therein shall be divided and sold in less tracts than the whole, together with a description of said subdivisions, then such officer shall sell the land in said subdivisions as the defendant may request and in such case shall only sell as many subdivisions as near as may be to satisfy this judgment.”

(b) Order of sale issued on judgment just above described, dated 12-22-19, in all things regular, directing the sale of the property described in the judgment.

(c) Sheriff’s return on the order of sale, in all things regular, showing sale of the property, ■ on the 6th day of April, 1920, to the Commonwealth Land & Title Company;

(d) Sheriff’s deed dated 14th day of April, 1920, in all things regular, conveying the property to the purchaser.

(e) Map of the town of Deer Park and map of the outlots to the town of Deer Park, the lots in controversy being identified on the maps as part of the outlots.

Appellee held title under the purchaser in the foreclosure sale.

Appellant insists that a fatal variance exists between the description of the lots as sued for by appellee and as described in the tax judgment and sheriff’s deed, in that the property was described by appellee in his answer as “out lots to * ⅜ ⅜ the town of Deer Park,” while in the judgment and sheriff’s deed . they were described as “outlots * * * in the town of Deer Park.” No variance or ambiguity'grows out of the use of the word “in” in one description and the word “to” in the other. The lots are definitely located by the description “outlots.” Being “outlots,” they could not be “in” the town of Deer Park in the sense of being part of the original plat of the town. By using the word “in” in the judgment in connection with the words “outlots,” the lots were clearly identified as simply parts of the municipal area of the town of Deer Park, a very common use of the word “in” in that connection. Most towns have outgrown the original municipal area, and in speaking of certain property as being “in” such towns, it is not necessarily understood that the property is a part of the original plat, but the description is meant to identify the property as being a part only of the municipal area. The maps and plats introduced in evidence in this case satisfactorily identify the property under its designation of “outlots,” and that was all that was necessary. The rule was thus stated by the Commission of Appeals in Miller v. Hodges, 260 S. W. 168:

“The sole purpose of a description of land, as contained in a deed of conveyance, being to identify the subject-matter of the grant, a deed will not be declared void for uncertainty if it is possible, by any reasonable rules of construction, to ascertain from the description, aided by extrinsic evidence, what property it is intended to convey.”

By offering the -judgment, the order of sale, the sheriff’s return, and sheriff’s deed, appellee made a prima facie title in so far as the tax suit in the case of the state of Texas against appellant, S. K. Stevenson, was concerned. Harris v. Mayfield (Tex. Com. App.) 260 S. W. 835. As against a collateral attack, the case just cited also holds that judgments in tax foreclosures “have been definitely placed upon the same plane with judgments in general.” And in Brown v. Bonougli, 232 S. W. 490, cited in support of Harris v. May-field, the Supreme Court, speaking through Judge Greenwood, said that a tax sale in consummation of a valid judicial foreclosure is on the same plane “with respect to collateral attack, as other execution sales.”

Appellant seeks to attack appellee’s tax title by the following additional assignments:

(a) As appellant construes the tax judgment, the foreclosure was against all the lots for the taxes due separately on each lot, when it should have been against each lot only for the taxes due against it.

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.W.2d 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevenson-v-mills-texapp-1929.