Sweeten v. Park

276 S.W.2d 794, 154 Tex. 266, 1955 Tex. LEXIS 510
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1955
DocketA-4912
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 276 S.W.2d 794 (Sweeten v. Park) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sweeten v. Park, 276 S.W.2d 794, 154 Tex. 266, 1955 Tex. LEXIS 510 (Tex. 1955).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Hickman

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit in trespass to try title broug*ht by respondent, J. F. Park, and others against petitioners, J. R. Sweeten and wife, Gladys Sweeten, for title and possession of 160 acres of land in Real County. Petitioners pleaded the statute of limitation of ten years, Rev. Stats., Art. 5510. Only two special issues were submitted to the jury and they pertained to the plea of limitation. The answers of the jury to the issues were favorable to petitioners, and judgment was rendered thereon in their favor by the trial court. The judgment was reversed by the Court of Civil Appeals, and judgment was rendered in favor of respondent. 270 S.W. 2d 687.

It appears that the record title to the land in suit was in I. I. Hutcherson from 1910 until he died intestate in 1931, but the record is not clear as to the exact nature of his title. The land was deeded to him in 1910 by W. P. Felts and wife. He was a single man at that time and remained single until he married Gladys Taylor, now Mrs. Sweeten, a few months before his *268 death. In 1913 he entered into a contract with his father and mother, W. D. Hutcherson and Mrs. A. J. Hutcherson, in which it was recited that they had deeded to him “* * ** our home, and in return I. I. Hutcherson * * does agree in the presence of witnesses to see after and take care of the said parties of the first part (his parents) until their death and in case he fails to do so all property reverts to said parties of the first part.” There was testimony to the effect that the parents paid the recited cash consideration to Felts but had the deed taken in the name of I. I. Hutcherson, and that the property designated as “our home” in the contract referred to the 160-acre tract in litigation. The Court of Civil Appeals stated that by the contract of 1913 the parents agreed to convey to their son the land in suit, and further stated that “evidently the conveyance was made.” The character of the title of I. I. Hutcherson is not at issue in the instant suit, and reference thereto has been made for the purpose of disclosing that he was rightfully in possession of the property, with the record title thereto standing in his name until his death. Whatever may have been the character of his title, same has been extinguished by the judgment described below, and Mrs. Sweeten, his surviving wife, relies alone, as she must, upon her claim of title by limitation.

The issues in this case stem from a judgment rendered in 1934 and the subsequent possession of the land by the Sweetens. It appears that W. D. Hutcherson, the father of I. I. Hutcherson, died intestate sometime prior to 1920. In 1923, after the death of I. I. Hutcherson and the marriage of his widow, Gladys, to Sweeten a suit was filed by Mrs. A. J. Hutcherson and her children against the Sweetens to try the title to three tracts of land in Real County, one being the 160-acre tract in suit, another being a 480-acre tract, and another a 31-acre tract, and also certain town lots in Camp Wood, Real County. An agreed judgment was rendered in that suit on May 30, 1934. That judgment will be considered in detail later on in this opinion, but for present purposes it is sufficient to state thatt he fee simple title to the 160-acre tract in suit was vested in Mrs, A. J. Hutcherson. A short time thereafter she deeded that tract to certain of here hildren who, in 1938, deeded same to the predecessor in title of the respondent, Park. The Sweetens remained in possession of the land notwithstanding the agreed judgment, and were still in possession when the present suit was filed on December 23, 1947. In answer to special issues the jury found: (1) that the Sweetens had peaceable and adverse possession of the land in suit, cultivating, using or enjoying the same for a period of ten consecutive years prior to the filing of this suit *269 on December 23, 1947, and (2) that they asserted adverse possession for a ten-year period prior to the filing of this suit after the entry of the judgment on May 30, 1934, against the plaintiff and his predecessors in title of such unequivocal notority that the plaintiff would be presumed to have had notice of such adverse claim and possession. The Court of Civil Appeals held that there was no evidence supporting finding (2), and upon that ground reversed the trial court’s judgment and rendered judgment for respondent.

In its well-considered opinion the Court of Civil Appeals discussed the broad question of limitation here involved under three categories: (1) Where the grantor retains possession after the execution of a deed; (2) where the losing party in an adversary suit retains possession after judgment rendered against him; and (3) where a party has consented to a judgment divesting him of title, but nevertheless retains possession. The court concluded that there was no real basis for a distinction between a holding over after the execution of a deed and a holding over after the rendition of a judgment, either adverse or by consent. We do not have before us a case wherein judgment was rendered in an adversary suit, and we shall, therefore, not consider category (2).

In arriving at a conclusion as to the character of the possession of the Sweetens after the entry of the consent judgment of May 30, 1934, it is necessary to consider the nature of that judgment. When we do we find that it is an unusual one in an action of trespass to try title. It more nearly partakes of the nature of a judgment in a suit for partition wherein the property is not divided in kind. The plaintiffs in that suit were Mrs. A. J. Hutcherson and her adult children, and the defendants were the Sweetens. There were three tracts of land and some town lots involved. Apparently all of the property was the community property of Mrs. Hutcherson and her deceased husband, who died intestate many years before the death of his son, I. I. Hutcherson. Mrs. Sweeten owned an interest in the estate as an heir of I. I. Hutcherson. The judgment by agreement of the parties vested in the mother, Mrs. A. J. Hucherson, the fee simple title to the town lots and the 160-acre tract in suit. There was vested in Mrs. Sweeten an undivided one-fourth interest in fee simple in the 480-acre tract and the 31acre tract, and the remaining three-fourths was vested in the plaintiffs jointly. It was ordered that the three tracts of land be sold by the joint owners thereof for the best price obtainable on such terms and conditions as might be agreed upon by them. The *270 judgment then ordered that out of the proceeds of sale there should first be deducted the value of the 160-acre tract adjudged to Mrs. Hutcherson, following which deductions should be made for specified amounts as attorney’s fees, and after that the payment of all just and legal and approved claims against the estate of I. I. Hutcherson. It was finally ordered that the balance remaining should be distributed as follows: One-fourth to Mrs. Sweeten and the balance divided among the plaintiffs, share and share alike, with the further provision that in no event should Mrs. Sweeten receive less than $700.00. The judgment did not direct the issuance of a writ of possession. Whether or not the terms of that judgment were carried out by the parties has no relevancy to the question of the nature of the possession of the Sweetens immediately after its entry.

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Bluebook (online)
276 S.W.2d 794, 154 Tex. 266, 1955 Tex. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweeten-v-park-tex-1955.