Stewart Oil Co. v. Lee

173 S.W.2d 791, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 529
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 9, 1943
DocketNo. 14540.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 173 S.W.2d 791 (Stewart Oil Co. v. Lee) 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
Stewart Oil Co. v. Lee, 173 S.W.2d 791, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 529 (Tex. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

SPEER, Justice.

Stewart Oil Company, a co-partnership composed of M. E. Stewart, A. E. Stewart, and Lola I. Stewart, hereinafter called plaintiff, sued Roy Lee, Trustee, hereinafter referred to as defendant, in trespass to try title to recover an undivided Moth interest in and to an oil and gas leasehold estate in and under an adequately described tract of land of 1027 acres in Clay County, Texas.

Plaintiff claims title to the interest under a lease dated May 11, 1942, from a guardian of named minors, the guardianship proceedings pending in Dallas County, Texas,, and plaintiff alleges further that defendant is claiming the interest sued for under a lease dated March 4, 1940, from a guardian-of the minors, in a proceeding pending in Probate Court o-f Clay County, Texas, but that the Clay County proceeding was void because, (1) the application for guardianship disclosed that applicant resided in Tillman County, Oklahoma, (2) that applicant was not the mother, but the grandmother of the minors who owned the property, and (3) that the application does not show that the minors resided in Clay County, Texas. Defendant, answered by general denial and plea of not guilty.

The record indicates that defendant claimed the whole title to the leasehold interest in the land, had developed it and had' taken large quantities of oil and gas from, the land; hence the l/40th interest in controversy has a substantial value.

Trial was had to the court without a jury and a take nothing judgment was-entered against plaintiff, from which judgment it has appealed.

Plaintiff concedes that its suit involves a collateral attack on the judgment of the probate court in Clay County, appointing a guardian for the minor owners of the estate sued for, under which appointment and subsequent orders plaintiff’s pleadings assert that defendant claims the title. It was stipulated upon the trial that the guardianship proceedings in Clay County were had approximately two years prior to similar guardianship proceedings had in Dallas County, under which plaintiff claims title to the l/40th interest here involved. It also appears that defendant had developed the tract of land for oil and gas production, under his claims, when the guardianship proceedings were had in Dallas County, under which plaintiff claims.

*793 Where, as in this case, an action in trespass to try title is predicated upon the invalidity of a judgment by another court of record, under which the defendant claims, it will generally be regarded as purely a collateral attack on the judgment of such other court. 25 Tex.Jur. 758, sect. 287.

In such collateral attack as we have here, the sole question for our determination is: Were the probate proceedings in Clay County void? We think not. Here are our reasons for having reached this conclusion :

Section 15, Art. 5, of the State Constitution Vernon’s Ann. St. provides for the establishment in each county of a County Court, which shall be a court of record. Section 16 of Art. 5 provides that such county courts shall have general jurisdiction in all probate matters arising in that county; this involves the appointment of guardians of minors, as in this case. The plaintiff does not question the correctness of these principles. But plaintiff does attack the judgment of the probate court of Clay County, in which the guardian was appointed and the conveyance by that guardian of the oil lease under which defendant claims, asserting it to be void for lack of jurisdiction of the court.

The jurisdiction of the court is attacked upon the ground that the application for appointment of the guardian recites that applicant resides in Tillman County, Oklahoma ; the application further recites: “That your applicant is in no way disqualified and is a proper person to act as guardian of the persons and estates of the said minors.” No question is raised as to notice in the proceedings, nor to any subsequent orders and decrees concerning the execution of the lease under which defendant holds. More than two years after the grandmother of the minors was appointed guardian by the Clay County Court, the mother of said minors filed in that court a waiver of her preferential right to guardianship of the two minors and specifically assented to the prior appointment of the grandmother as such guardian and ratified and confirmed the acts of the grandmother as guardian in all matters pertaining to the estate of the minors.

About two years after filing the waiver and ratification last above referred to, the mother made application in Dallas County for letters of guardianship of the person and estate of said two minors, and after appointment, procured an order from that court to lease the interest of said minors to plaintiff, and under that lease plaintiff claims the 1 /40th. interest sued for.

The judgment of the probate court of Clay County, which is here collaterally attacked, among other things recites that the matter of application for letters of guardianship of the named minors came on to be heard, that notice thereof had been given and that the applicant is qualified to receive letters of guardianship. The judgment then proceeds to make the appointment and names the amount and nature of the bond required.

As we read the judgment, it contains all of the requisite findings by the court to make it valid in every respect. It is true, as contended by plaintiff, the application recites that applicant resides in Tillman County, Oklahoma, and while Sect. 6 of Art. 4111, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St, provides no guardian shall be a nonresident of Texas, yet since that article of the statute is designated as one of venue, and there is no finding of the court that applicant is a non-resident of the state, but finds that the applicant is qualified to receive letters of guardianship, we think the judgment is not ambiguous, nor does it disclose a lack of jurisdiction, but affirmatively shows jurisdiction.

It is a universally settled rule of law in this state that a judgment regular on its face, rendered by a domestic court of general jurisdiction, cannot be collaterally attacked by evidence aliunde of any fact which the court must have passed upon in rendering the judgment. Farmer v. Saunders, 60 Tex.Civ.App. 197, 128 S.W. 941; Redmond v. Crowley, 123 Tex. 315, 41 S.W.2d 274, 70 S.W.2d 1113.

It is only when the judgment collaterally attacked is ambiguous and not complete within itself that resort may be had to former pleadings or to what is sometimes called the "record” or the “judgment roll”. Permian Oil Co. v. Smith, 129 Tex. 413, 73 S.W.2d 490, 107 S.W.2d 564, 111 A.L.R. 1152.

Plaintiff cites and relies upon what was said in Balfour v. Collins, 119 Tex. 122, 25 S.W.2d 804, to sustain its contention that the appointment of the Clay County guardian was void. The cited case is readily distinguishable from the instant one. There, an application for ad *794 ministration was made in a county other than the one having venue of the estate of deceased.

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173 S.W.2d 791, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-oil-co-v-lee-texapp-1943.