70 Tex. 98 | Tex. | 1888
Appellant complains of the ruling of the court in striking out its claim for improvements in good faith, ■ and in excluding from the jury the tax deeds offered by it to support the plea, and as evidence of title under the general issue. The court having stricken out the plea for compensation for improvements, based as it was on the tax deeds, their exclusion from the jury under the plea of not guilty was correct, unless they, together with the evidence of assessment and sale, constituted title to the land.
But should the court have sustained the special exceptions to the plea? It set up that the land was sold for taxes due for the year 18—. Plaintiff’s exception was that the year for which taxes were due was not stated. The exception was properly sustained. The exception specified the defect in the plea, and the court could not do otherwise than sustain it. On géneral demurrer the plea was good, but not on a formal exception. The defect was amendable, but defendant did not amend, but went to trial on the pleadings as they stood after the exception was sustained. Had defendant pleaded simply a claim in good faith under a tax title bought from E. M. Heath & Bro., the plea of title would have sufficed to admit the proof; and then it would have been a question for the jury under appropriate instructions from the court to determine whether the improvements were made under claim of title in good faith. But defendant pleaded specially and particularly that the land was sold for taxes due in the year 18—, and that the sale was made in the year 1878, clearly exhibiting such a defect in title as would not support good faith had the allegation been true. The error in the averment of title was reached by the special exception, and we must hold that there was no error in sustaining it. Defendant should have amended the plea by trial amendment as to the date.
Then it remains to be considered whether the tax title offered could serve defendant as a muniment of title under its plea of not guilty. The defendant offered the tax rolls of Johnson county for 1S77, the advertisement, sale and tax deeds to E. M. Heath & Bro., deed from E. M. Heath for himself and O. S. 'Heath, the brother of the firm, and power of attorney from O. S. Heath to E. M. Heath to sell all his lands in Texas.
The law of 1876 required the assessor to list and assess unrendered lands in the manner following, to wit: First, the name of the owner; if unknown, say unknown. Second, abstract number. Third, number of survey. Fourth, name of' original grantee. Fifth, number of acres. Sixth, the true and full value thereof, and to give such other description as may be necessary to better describe the land. Such assessment was made as valid as if rendered by the owner. (Gen. Laws, 1876, p. 269, sec. 14.) In form the rolls presented followed the statutory direction, except that the column for number of surveys was left blank. It does not appear, however, that these surveys were numbered.
Defendant offered the patents to James H. Poindexter to ■ show that the “numbers of the surveys” were 692, 693 and 694. Such proof would have been fatal to the rolls, as these numbers were, in the rolls, given as abstract numbers. To admit the rolls in evidence there should have been proof that the abstract numbers were correctly given. The abstract number was necessary to a legal assessment and necessary to identify the land. (McCormick v. Edwards, 69 Texas, 106.) The name of the original grantee and these supposed abstract numbers was the only description given of the land in the rolls, and without evidence to show that the abstract numbers were correct, the rolls were inadmissible. There was no attempt to supply this proof. All the law of assessing, advertisment and sale of property for taxes must be strictly complied with to confer upon the collector the power to seize and
It may be that the rolls give the correct abstract numbers, but there is nothing in the record to show it, or to show that there was any attempt to prove it. The, evidence is indispensable. There was no error in excluding .the rolls, the deeds and all the other evidence proposed in relation to the sale of the land.
The defendant set up in the answer that plaintiff’s suit, as originally brought, was for condemnation of the land in use by the railroad for road bed, right of way and section house, and for value of the same, and for damages to the residue of the land; that more than two years had elapsed from time of the trespass to the time suit was brought, which it had pleaded in bar of the damages, and that plaintiffs had abandoned the suit so brought and changed it into a suit of trespass to try title after invoking the jurisdiction of the court, and asked that the plaintiffs be held by their original pleadings. To this part of the answer the court sustained a special exception. The answer was inaccurate in the statement as to the nature of the original suit and the first amended petition. The suit, as originally brought, was for the recovery of the land and damages for rents and profits and special injury to the same, with an alternative prayer that if such relief could not be granted, for condemnation of the land appropriated by the road, and damages to the remainder. The first amended petition was in the same form. The second amended petition, upon which the case was tried, merely abandoned the alternative prayer, leaving the main suit for the recovery of the land as it originally was. This was plaintiffs’ right. (Rule 33; 47 Texas, 633.) Defendant had pleaded the statute of limitations of two years as a bar to the recovery of the damages in case of a condemnation, but this was only a defense, and gave defendant no right to prevent an abandonment of that part of the plaintiffs’ suit. It could not prejudice the defendant in any right; it simply dispensed with the necessity on the part of the defendant to make defense to that part of the writ abandoned.
A wrong direction was given to the case by an erroneous ruling of the court. Defendant asked that the land appropriated by the railroad be condemned without the usual damages, because the damages were barred by limitation. This was
The plaintiffs had their option to sue for the land, or for the value of that portion of it in use by the railroad and damages to the remainder. They elected to sue for the land, abandoning the prayer in the alternative before adverted to, doubtless because the trespass was committed by the defendant September 1, 1881, and the suit was not filed until December 30, 1883, the time being ample to bar the right to recover damages under a proceeding to condemn. (H. & T. C. Railroad Co. v. Chafin, 60 Texas, 553.) The court had no jurisdiction without the consent of the plaintiff to change the suit to a proceeding to condemn on behalf of the defendant. Plaintiff had asked for no such relief, and defendant could only seek it through the tribunal and in the manner prescribed in the statute for the benefit of railroads.
The court heard the evidence as in a suit to condemn under the statute, instructed the jury to find the land for plaintiffs, and submitted special issues to them requiring them to find the value of the land in use by the railroad, the damages to the remainder of the land, and the damage by the taking of the land upon which the section house is built; and upon the findings of the jury the plaintiffs moved for judgment in their favor for the land in controversy, and if this could not be done, then for judgment for the two acres upon which the sec
The jury found the two hundred dollars as “damages,” not as “value.” We think the verdict for one thousand seven hundred dollars included all the damages done to the land not taken by the defendant. The questions propounded to the jury by the court on these points were as follows: “What damage, if any, has been done to the remainder of plaintiff’s said three tracts by the taking and appropriating said land by defendant?” The jury answered “one thousand seven hundred dollars.”
“What damage, if any, has plaintiff suffered by the taking of the land upon which the section house is built and the building ,of the same?” The jury answered: “Two hundred dollars.” /There was evidence tending to show that the damages to the land would be increased by having a house in the middle, of ,the three tracts of land, occupied by railroad hands. And this was doubtless what was meant by the interrogatory and the ,-verdict; but it seems from the questions and the verdict that ¿the one thousand seven hundred dollars was intended as the ¡aggregate amount of damages done to the land, and the two
As to the statute of limitations pleaded and insisted on by the defendant all through the trial, even after it was stricken out by the court, it may be necessary to state that in suits of trespass to try title the general law of limitation as to injury to the estate of another does not apply. When the suit is strictly for damages to an estate, or to land, the general law of limitation is applicable, but when the suit is in trespass to try title, the statute regulating such suits governs. (Revised Statutes, arts, 4809, 4814, 4815.)
There was no error in excluding the evidence of E. M. Heath as to his agency. The plea of estoppel set up by defendant was that defendant entered upon the land by consent of the plaintiffs. The evidence offered in support of the plea was that E. M. Heath was agent of plaintiffs to negotiate sales for the land—but there was a stipulation in the power that he was not to make deeds. By such an agency he had no authority to deed the right of way to defendant with or without consideration. He had no power or authority to dedicate any of the land to the railroad as a right of way. His authority was limited, and he could not exceed it so as to bind his principals. (Reese v. Medlock, 27 Texas, 120; McAlpine v. Cassidy, 17 Texas, 462.)
We conclude the judgment ought to be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded,