73 Tex. 450 | Tex. | 1889
This suit was brought by the State to-
There is error in the judgment of the court. In the case of The State v. The Stone Cattle and Pasture Company, 66 Texas, 363, it was held that the venue of suits for the recovery of lands by the State growing out of the Act of April 12, 1883, was regulated by the general laws and not by the special provisions of the subsequent Act of April 14th of the same year. The land in controversy lies in Archer County, and the District Court of that county had jurisdiction of the suit. Rev. Stats., art. 1198, sec. 13. It was also held in the case cited that the limitation of one year for the institution of the suit did not begin to run until the discovery of the fraud. This suit was brought within less than twelve months from the time of the discovery of the fraud as alleged in the petition.
But it is insisted by counsel for appellee that the allegation “that the plaintiff did not learn and could not have learned by the use of due diligence of the fraudulent purchase by said defendant, but that the fraud was first learned and discovered about the 14th day of February, A. D. 1885,” is too general, and we are cited to the case of Bremond v. McLean, 45 Texas, 10, in support of the proposition. In that case a similar allegation was held bad upon general demurrer. But that was a very different case. The ground of the action was that a certain note which had been received by plaintiff for work done by him upon the Houston & Texas Central Railroad was fraudulently represented to plaintiff by defendant at the time it was received as being convertible into the stock of the railroad company. The suit was not brought until ten years had nearly elapsed from time the note matured. The opinion holds in effect that upon the failure to pay the note at maturity diligence required that the plaintiff should have presented the note to the company and demanded the stock,
But it is also urged that if the court erred in sustaining the exceptions .setting up the want of jurisdiction and the bar of limitation, the judgment is nevertheless correct because the exception that the fraud was not .specifically alleged should have been sustained. But in this proposition we do not concur. The petition avers that Jones was “the hireling and tool” of the defendant company; that he made the purchase at its instance and for its benefit, and that he had transferred all his interests in the lands to the defendant corporation. Under the act a corporation could purchase but one section in any one county. Laws 18th Leg., ch. 88, sec. 6, p. 87.
The allegations show clearly the device that was adopted in order to ■evade the law, and they make the fraud apparent.
It is also claimed that the exception should have been sustained for want of proper parties. It was held in the case of The State v. Rhomherg, 69 Texas, 212, that in suits of this character by the State the persons in whose names the purchases were made should be made parties. That ruling is undoubtedly correct as applied to a case where the title remains in the name of the original purchaser. But it having been alleged .in the petition in this case that Jones had transferred the lands to the -defendant, he had no interest to be affected by the result of the suit and was not a necessary party to it.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Delivered April 9, 1889.