Strong v. Strong

66 S.W.2d 751
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 19, 1933
DocketNo. 4419.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 66 S.W.2d 751 (Strong v. Strong) 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
Strong v. Strong, 66 S.W.2d 751 (Tex. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

*752 JOHNSON, Chief Justice.

This is a suit brought by plaintiffs in error, children of Nancy Strong, deceased wife of Manuel Strong, as plaintiffs, against Manuel Strong and his present wife, Minnie Strong, and the Sun Oil Company as defendants in an action in trespass to try title seeking to recover the undivided interests which plaintiffs had inherited from their mother, Nancy Strong, deceased, in 50.5 acres of land located in Gregg county. Plaintiffs specially pleaded that 'defendants had knowledge and notice of plaintiffs’ rights in the land. Defendants Manuel Strong and wife, Minnie Strong, admitted the allegations of plaintiffs’ petition and joined them in their prayer. Defendant Sun Oil Company pleaded not guilty, a general denial, and that it was an innocent purchaser for value and without notice of plaintiffs’ rights.

The land in question was conveyed to Manuel Strong as grantee in a deed dated November 12, 1900, during the marriage of Manuel Strong and his first wife, Nancy Strong, and was their community property. Thus the legal title was placed in Manuel Strong; and Nancy Strong as his wife became the owner of the equitable title to an undivided one-half interest in the land, which upon her death in 1913 descended to her children, plaintiffs in this suit. On April 19, 1929, Manuel Strong, joined by his present wife, Minnie Strong, executed an oil and gas lease conveying to N. M. Wilson seven-eighths of the minerals in and under the land. The lease was assigned by N. M. Wilson to the Sun Oil Company. The controversy is between plaintiffs and the Sun Oil Company concerning plaintiffs’ rights to an undivided one-half interest in the minerals purported to have been conveyed by the lease to Wilson and. by Wilson to the Sun Oil Company ; and the burden was on plaintiffs, owners of the equitable title, to prove that the Sun Oil Company, holder of the legal title, was not an. innocent purchaser for value without notice, that is to say, in or'der to recover against Sun Oil Company, plaintiffs must show by, competent and sufficient evidence one or more of the following facts: (1) That. Sun Oil Company purchased with notice, either actual or constructive, of plaintiffs’ rights, or (2) that it did not pay valuable consideration for the lease, or (3) that it purchased in bad faith. The ease was tried to a jury.

' In response to' special issues submitted, the jury found: (1) That plaintiffs had failed to show that at the time N. M. Wilson bought the lease he' was purchasing same for Sun •Oil Company-; (2) that plaintiffs had failed to show that Wilson did not pay a fair price •for the lease; and (3) that plaintiffs had failed to show that Sun Oil Company did not pay a fair price for the lease. But the jury did not answer any of the issues submitted to it relative to notice and of bad faith on the part of Sun Oil Company. The court rendered judgment for the Sun Oil Company on the findings of the jury, notwithstanding their failure to answer the issues relating to notice and bad faith. Presumably this action was taken by the court upon the theory that, though the court had submitted such issues to the jury, there was no evidence in the case which would have supported an affirmative answer charging the Sun Oil Company with notice or with bad faith. Plaintiffs have brought the case to this court by writ of error, and, under assignments off error properly presented, contend: (1) That the findings of the jury to the issues answered are contrary to the evidence; and (2) that there was evidence before the jury relating to the unanswered issues showing that Sun Oil Company had notice of plaintiffs’ rights, and that it purchased in bad faith; and that by reason of which evidence plaintiffs were entitled to have the issues answered by the jury, or by another jury upon a new trial. Support is found in the record for the findings of the jury in response to the issues answered by them, and the assignments of error presented in this respect are respectfully overruled. Plaintiffs assert that Sun Oil Company had notice imputed to it as a matter of law, in the absence of actual notice to it, resulting from the evidence before the jury of the existence of the following facts: (1) Joint possession and acts of ownership of the land with Manuel Strong by his son, T. B. Strong, one of the plaintiffs; (2) the common reputation and understanding in the community in which the land was located that plaintiffs claimed an interest in the land; (3) the recital in the record of an expired oil and gas lease on the land executed by Manuel Strong to A. M. Clark in March, 1919, wherein it is recited that Manuel Strong was then a “Widower.”

On the proposition that notice of plaintiffs’ rights in the land was imputed as a matter off law by reason of the possession and acts of ownership by one of tihe plaintiffs, T. B. Strong, a son of Manuel Strong, of the land at the time Wilson bought the lease from Manuel Strong and at the time Sun Oil Company purchased from Wilson, the evidence, in substance, shows: That the land has been continuously since its purchase occupied by Manuel Strong as the homestead of himself and respective wives and their children, and at the time in question, April, 1929, it was so occupied by Manuel and his wife, Minnie Strong, and seven children — five by Minnie and two (T. B. and Arzola) by Nancy. The son, T. B., was grown, but unmarried, and continued to live in the house with his father and stepmother as a member of the family, helping to cultivate the farm,, “through and. through,” in like manner as did the other *753 children, except that in the years 1927 and 1928 his father set aside to T. B., separated by a turn row, a patch of three to five acres of the cotton crop, which was worked “through and through” with the other crops by the family, but of which patch T. B. was “boss” and received the cotton therefrom, sold it, and kept the proceeds as his own. Ini 1929 no separate patch was set aside for T. B., but he received one-fourth of all the cotton grown on the place, and none of the other crops. It is also testified that at times during the years 1927, 1928, and 1929 T. B. cut some timber on the place, from which ties were made and sold and the proceeds appropriated by T. B.; he paid Manuel for his team with which to haul the ties, but that Manuel did not direct him to cut the ties and had nothing to do with their sale.

It does not appear that Sun Oil Company or any of its agents went upon the land prior to its purchase of the lease, or that they in fact had actual notice of any of the facts referable to possession of the land, further than is reflected by an affidavit of Manuel Strong made at the time of executing the lease to Wilson, stating: “That he and his tenants are now and have been in the continuous possession and occupancy of the land for at least twenty years last passed * * ⅜ and that no adverse claims have been made to said land or any part thereof, by suit or otherwise.”

Possession imputes constructive notice to a purchaser of land of the rights of the person-in possession, and the Sun Oil Company is charged with notice of the rights of the plaintiffs by reason of the possession of T. B. Strong of the land at the time it purchased the lease, regardless of whether or not any of its agents knew of its possession, if in fact T. B. Strong (had possession, and it was that “character of possession” meant when it is stated that “possession is notice.” In Hodge v. Amerman, 40 N. J. Eq. 104, 2 A.

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.W.2d 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strong-v-strong-texapp-1933.