OPINION
Volunteer Council of Denton State School, Inc. (Volunteer) appeals an instruct? ed verdict awarding Murdine Berry (Berry) title and possession of eleven and one-half acres of land located in rural Dallas County, Texas. 1 The trial court based its instructed verdict in this trespass to try title suit on a finding that Berry had established her unabandoned prior possession of the land as a matter of law, while Volunteer had failed to establish by competent proof any claim of title. Additionally, the trial court based its verdict on a finding that Berry had proved a prima facie case of limitations title under the ten-year statute, which was likewise unrebutted. Volunteer advances seven points of error. 2 Points one through four and point six assert that, for various reasons, the trial court improperly granted the instructed verdict. Point five asserts that section 33.54 of the Texas Tax Code 3 precludes Berry’s limitations *233 claim as a matter of law. Point seven complains that the trial court erred in rendering its judgment based on prior unaban-doned possession because Berry neither pleaded nor proved prior possession. By way of a cross-point, Berry asserts that the trial court abused its discretion in excluding her testimony as a discovery sanction. After examination of the applicable law and the evidence presented at trial, we affirm. Consequently, we do not address Berry’s cross-point.
This case involves a dispute over title to an eleven and one-half-acre tract “smack in the middle” of an approximately seventy-eight-acre tract of land, known as “the Morney place.” Berry, a descendant of Jim Morney, claims possession and title by limitations, and Volunteer claims record title derived through a tax deed dated July 6, 1976, and recorded July 29, 1976. In response to Berry’s petition alleging trespass and damages, Volunteer pleaded “not guilty.” Volunteer also filed a special plea in bar based on limitations pursuant to section 33.54 of the Tax Code. Consequently, we must address issues of the burden of proof in a trespass to try title case, adverse possession, and prior unaban-doned possession.
PRIOR POSSESSION
Initially, we note that Volunteer complains that Berry may not assert a pri- or possession claim because Berry did not specifically plead this claim. We overrule this point of error because, in a trespass to try title case, it is not necessary to specifically plead prior possession. It is only necessary to specifically plead title by limitation.
Walsh v. Austin,
Berry, plaintiff at the trial level, filed her trespass to try title case against various defendants on July 16, 1985, specifically pleading title by limitation. The trial court directed a verdict in her favor, and awarded her title to eighty acres of land in Dallas County. 4 Only Volunteer appeals the judgment, contesting Berry’s title to tract 3, an eleven and one-half acre section.
In any trespass to try title case, the plaintiff must recover on the strength of its own title, not a weakness in its opponent’s claim.
See Land v. Turner,
In this case, the trial court instructed a verdict in Berry’s favor on her claim of prior unabandoned possession, and Volunteer assigned several points to this perceived erroneous ruling. Essentially, Volunteer argues that Berry did not conclusively establish prior possession and that contested fact issues exist. On these two bases, Volunteer alleges that Berry did not prove her right to possession and title as a matter of law. 6 Volunteer states that because Berry failed to establish her right of possession as a matter of law, Volunteer should have had the verdict instructed in its favor. 7
In addressing these points of error, we are mindful of the standard of review for instructed verdicts. At the trial level, a party is entitled to an instructed verdict when reasonable persons may draw only one inference from the evidence.
See Dabney v. Thomas,
In reviewing the case at hand on the issue of prior possession, we will first examine the record to determine whether Berry established a prima facie case. If we conclude Berry established a prima fa-cie case, then we must determine whether Volunteer presented evidence raising a material question of fact on the existence of this prima facie case. Because Volunteer bases its claim to the property on a tax deed, we will discuss the affirmative bar by limitations defense advanced by Volunteer when we discuss the validity of the tax deed as it pertains to material issues of fact.
Berry’s Prior Possession Evidence
The record reflects that when Berry took the stand, Volunteer moved that the trial court limit her testimony, making it inadmissible against Volunteer as a sanction for failing to designate herself as a potential witness in response to Volunteer’s interrogatories. The trial court granted Volunteer’s request for a limitation of the *235 evidence under rules 166b(2)(d) and 215(3) of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. 8 The record and the briefs of the parties discuss at length the propriety of limiting the admissibility of Berry’s testimony. Volunteer asserts that the trial court limited the entirety of Berry’s testimony. Berry disputes the correctness of the ruling, by way of a cross-point, and appears to argue that the limitation went both to her live and deposition testimony. We have examined the record and, because of its lack of clarity as to its limitation, we will set out our reasoning and conclusions in some detail. This analysis and examination is necessary so that we can determine what evidence was before the trial court at the time it directed the verdict in Berry’s favor.
Our research has disclosed no instances of a named party being prevented from testifying as a
fact
witness under rule 215 discovery sanctions. However, case law repeatedly states that the failure to comply with a request for witness information results in an automatic loss of opportunity to offer that undisclosed witness’s testimony.
Galvin v. Gulf Oil Corp.,
During the defendants’ case-in-chief, defendants Swidler and Biesel read extensively from Berry’s deposition previously given to Volunteer. At no time did Volunteer object to the reading of the deposition, nor did Volunteer request a limiting instruction. Berry’s attorney requested that the trial court instruct the jury that it could consider this deposition testimony adversely to Volunteer, but the court declined to so instruct the jury. Our study of the applicable case law concerning the import of Berry’s deposition leads us to conclude that the deposition testimony was not limited and, therefore, is admissible for all purposes.
Because of Berry’s violation of the discovery requests, the trial court limited Berry’s live testimony, instructing the jury that they could not consider it against Volunteer. In contrast, Berry’s deposition testimony was offered by other defendants, and Volunteer raised no issue of discovery abuse in connection with these defendants. In
Baluch v. O’Donnell,
Furthermore, the record shows that Volunteer did not request that the trial court impose sanctions or a limitation of the deposition testimony. Even if we assume that the deposition was of limited competence, Volunteer failed to ask the court to limit the use of the deposition testimony by making a timely objection or motion when the other defendant first began to read from
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Berry’s deposition.
See Handel v. Long Trusts,
Although the trial court denied Berry’s request that the court specifically instruct the jury that Berry’s deposition could be considered against Volunteer, we do not construe this denial as an affirmative limitation instruction. The record does not reflect a specific limitation instruction and we refuse to imply one, especially in light of case law that holds that a trial court commits an abuse of discretion if it sua sponte issues sanctions or limitations.
Baluch,
Because Volunteer did not ask the trial court to limit the deposition testimony, we will consider it as admissible for all purposes in support of the judgment.
Scotchcraft Bldg. Materials, Inc. v. Parker,
Through her deposition, Berry testified that she took possession of the entire eighty acres in the mid-1970s. She agreed that witness Zeffer Hull testified correctly when he stated that he repaired fences on the property in 1976 or 1977. At that time, Berry raised hay and ran hogs on tract 3, which was not at that time, and is not now, separately fenced from other tracts. In the 1980s, Berry also grazed her cattle on the tract but could not recall when she first began doing this. The cattle were not confined to tract 3, but wandered throughout the entire acreage. She cleared tract 3 of trees and debris in 1977, and she built more fences in 1982 and 1983.
Other witnesses also gave testimony concerning tract 3. Larry Hardeman, who also claimed an interest in the eighty acres, said that he saw several head of cattle on tracts 2, 3, and 4 in 1986. Sue Ramsey, Volunteer’s executive director, testified that she saw tract 3 in 1984 and that it appeared undeveloped at that time, although it may have had an abandoned structure on it. She testified that Volunteer has never used the property.
Paul Calvin, a longtime area resident, testified that he saw cattle on the tract in the 1980s, and that someone had rebuilt the front fence in 1976 or 1977. He had seen hog pens on tract 3 and recently someone had moved a house onto this tract. On cross-examination, he testified that tract 3 has rocky soil that will not support the grazing of a lot of cattle.
John L. Dawson, Sr. testified that before he bought the acreage at a tax sale, he looked at the tract. He saw no signs of development. John Thompkins, a Volunteer board member, said that he had seen the tract on two separate occasions in 1984. Neither time did he see any evidence of development or cultivation. On cross-examination he indicated that a gate and a fence were on the side closest to the highway.
Zeffer Hull testified that he rented land from Berry and built fences for her. He stated that Berry showed him the boundary of the property, and he fenced the entire *237 acreage. He could not say with certainty how many acres he fenced, but it was close to fifty and certainly more than eleven acres.
Although the evidence presented falls short of overwhelming, it does show that Berry actually, exclusively, and peaceably possessed tract 3. Berry identified the tract by referring to it as the eleven and one-half acres claimed by Volunteer through the Dawson deed. When Dawson took the stand, he identified the land he bought as tract 3, referring to plaintiff’s exhibit one.
9
All parties stipulated that this exhibit depicted the property in dispute; one section of this diagram is numbered “3.” We hold that this evidence sufficiently and specifically identified the tract in question.
See Stafford v. Jackson,
Berry also sufficiently proved her prior unabandoned possession of the tract. She testified that she grazed cattle and grew hay on the tract. She enclosed the entire property, including tract 3, with a fence. She improved the tract by clearing it. The record contains no suggestion that anyone other than Berry or her predecessors-in-interest asserted possession, and Volunteer admits that it never made use of the tract. This evidence establishes Berry’s actual and peaceable possession.
See Stafford,
Volunteer’s Tax Deed
We first address Volunteer’s contention that it should have had a verdict instructed in its favor because the applicable statute of limitations precluded Berry’s claim as a matter of law. The record shows that the sheriff of Dallas County sold the tract in question on July 6,1976, to John L. Dawson, Sr. and John L. Dawson, Jr. to pay for taxes owing on the property. This deed shows that it was recorded on July 29, 1976. The Dawsons later deeded this tract to Volunteer by a quit claim deed. Volunteer bases its statute of limitations argument on section 33.54(a) of the Texas Tax Code 10 which reads, in pertinent part:
Limitation on Actions Relating to Property Sold for Taxes
(a) [A] cause of action relating to the title to property may not be maintained against the purchaser of the property at a tax sale unless the action commences within three years after the deed executed to the purchaser at the tax sale is filed of record.
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(c) When actions are barred by this section, the purchaser at the tax sale or his successor in interest shall be held to have full title to the property, precluding all other claims.
Berry did not file her suit against Volunteer until July 16, 1985, more than eight years after the Dawsons recorded the tax deed. Volunteer asserts that, by the plain wording of section 33.54, Volunteer, as the Dawsons’ successor-in-interest, has full title to tract 3. Only one case,
Cook v. Slusky,
Our examination of the exhibits filed in this case discloses that Volunteer introduced the Dawson deed and its own deed; however, Volunteer did not introduce the tax judgment or the order of sale authorizing the sheriff to make the sale. Texas case law has long held that the party relying on a tax title has the burden of proving the validity of that title.
Nagel v. Taylor,
The predecessor to section 33.54 12 indicates that a party relying on the three-year statute of limitations must still show a lawful sale in order to establish the defense. Subsection (a) reads:
No cause of action or defense may be asserted or maintained on a claim respecting any land sold for delinquent taxes at a tax sale pursuant to a judicial foreclosure of a tax lien, unless the cause of action or defense is asserted in an action commenced within three years after the filing of record of the deed executed to the purchaser at the tax sale.
(Emphasis added). Although our research has disclosed no cases interpreting the proof requirements, given the plain wording of the subsection, we fail to understand how the deed proponent could avail himself of this statutory protection without offering proof that the sale was preceded by a judicial foreclosure. In any event, the italicized language was dropped when the legislature recodified article 7345b-3(a) in section 33.54 of the new Tax Code.
We must determine what documents the tax deed proponent must introduce under the present law to take advantage of the three-year statute of limitations. We must *239 determine whether the proponent need only introduce a recorded tax deed or whether the proponent must also introduce those documents that prove that the tax deed is valid. In order to make this determination^ we will first examine other sections of the\ Tax Code in order to supply a context for ' the limitations section. With that context in mind, we will then apply basic statutory construction rules to section 33.54.
(a) Validity of a Tax Deed
Appellant argues that the tax deed constitutes sufficient evidence under the present law to assert the statutory limitations bar, and cites section 34.01(d) of the Tax Code. The present version of the statute reads:
Sale of Property
(d) The officer making the sale shall prepare a deed to the purchaser of real property at the sale or to any other person whom the purchaser may specify. The deed vests good and perfect title in the purchaser or his assigns to the interest owned by the defendant in the property subject to the foreclosure, subject to the defendant’s right of redemption. The deed may be impeached only for fraud.
Tex.Tax Code Ann. § 34.01(d) (Vernon 1982).
Though recently amended, section 34.-01(d) has not changed significantly from the earlier version. The newest version of section 34.01(d) has not been interpreted by any court, but the Texas Supreme Court has addressed a prior version in the
Wright
case. As previously discussed, the Court held that the tax deed proponent must demonstrate that the seller had authority to dispose of the property and that the seller complied with applicable statutory provisions.
Wright,
(b) Limitations Under Section 33.5⅛
Basic rules of statutory construction provide guidance in determining the
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prerequisites to invoking section 33.54 limitations protection. The dominant and fundamental aim of statutory construction is to give effect to the legislative intent.
City of West Tawakoni v. Williams,
Consequences following from possible construction stand as another factor bearing on the determination of legislative intent.
Hunt v. Heaton,
With these guidelines in mind, we turn our attention to section 33.54. A former version of this section contained language which indicated that a tax deed proponent needed to show the sheriffs authority to sell before proving a valid deed. This language is missing from the present statute, requiring us to decide whether this change in language signifies a substantive change in proof requirements. Aiding us in this determination is our previous conclusion that another section of the Tax Code, section 34.01, still requires documentation of the sheriffs authority before title vests under a tax deed. Section 34.01 and section 33.54, governing limitations, must be construed together to determine legislative intent; furthermore, we must search for a reasonable and harmonious construction of the sections. It would be absurd and inconsistent to say that section 34.01 requires documentation of authority, but that a deed holder can simply wait three years after recordation, present only the deed, and then claim the limitations projection due only to a valid deed under section 34.01. As a result, we hold that in order to invoke limitations protection, a partly must produce the same documentation that proves a valid tax deed. To hold otherwise would extend the protection of limitations to an invalid or void deed that conveys no title. I
Because Volunteer did not introduce a valid tax deed under section 34.01, Volunteer cannot take advantage of the three-year statute of limitations provided by section 33.54.
14
Further, as a matter of law, Volunteer did not produce evidence that showed any legal entitlement or right to the property. The Texas Supreme Court has unequivocally stated that, absent a show of authority, a tax deed “does not affect title.”
Wright,
In any trespass to try title suit, the plaintiff has the burden of establishing a title superior to that of the defendant.
*241
Should the plaintiff fail, the effect of a take-nothing judgment against the plaintiff is to vest title in the defendant.
Gillum v. Temple,
Adverse Possession and Limitations Title Volunteer asserts that the trial court erroneously directed a verdict for Berry on her claim of title through her ten years of adverse possession. Volunteer argues that Berry did not establish limitations title as a matter of law; that contested fact issues exist on this subject; and that Berry failed to make a prima facie limitations case. A trespass to try title action is a proceeding whereby the court resolves competing claims of title or rights of possession.
Yoast v. Yoast,
*242 [[Image here]]
Notes
. Berry was actually awarded title and possession to approximately 78 acres of land, but only 11.5 acres are the subject of this appeal.
. Volunteer actually originally asserted eight points of error, but later conceded that the eighth point complaining of an incomplete record was mooted by the inclusion of plaintiffs exhibits 1 and 26 in the appellate record.
. Tex.Tax Code Ann. § 33.54 (Vernon 1982), hereafter referred to as section 33.54.
. The evidence indicated that Berry’s family had actually farmed the entire acreage for three generations. No evidence showed anyone other than the Berry family living on the eighty acres.
. Volunteer lists the elements of a prior possession claim and cites three cases which' purport to hold that possession must also be held under a regular chain of title. These cases are:
Walsh,
. Volunteer claims that the trial court instructed in Berry’s favor solely because she established a prima facie case, asserting that the court confused a prima facie case with a case established as a matter of law. These contentions are incorrect. As we will explain, Berry’s
uncontro-verted
prima facie prior unabandoned possession established her right to tract 3 as a matter of law.
See Walsh,
. Volunteer makes the same complaints regarding the instructed verdict on Berry’s adverse possession claim; however, we address this issue separately in the latter portion of this opinion.
. Tex.R.Civ.P. 166b(2)(d) and 215(3).
. Plaintiffs Exhibit One appears as an Appendix to this opinion.
. Tex.Tax Code Ann. § 33.54(a) (Vernon 1982).
. Cook v. Slusky was decided under article 7345b-3 of the Texas Revised Civil Statutes, predecessor to section 33.54, which also had a three-year statute of limitations running from the date of recordation.
. Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 7345b-3(a) (Vernon 1960).
. The
Wright
Court traced the constitutional provision through its various statutory incarnations, from Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 518 (1895) (repealed 1946) to TexRev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 1059 (1911) (repealed 1978).
Wright,
. Volunteer attempts to dodge the effect of the void tax deed by pointing out that it claims title under the Dawson deed, which is not a tax deed. The Dawsons acquired their interest in tract 3 through a tax deed, and section 34.01(d), which governs valid tax deed title, applies to the purchaser and his assigns. The Dawson deed does not exempt Volunteer, Dawson’s grantee, from the benefits or the inconveniences of section 34.01(d).
