68 Tex. 418 | Tex. | 1887
This suit was before this court on a former occasion, and is reported in 63 Texas, 213. The case was then reversed in favor of the present appellees, because the court.below ruled out the sheriff’s deed under which the appellees claimed, and because certain testimony as to the pay
It was held that the plaintiff could not recover in the state of the case then presented to this court, whether his action was to be treated as one of trespass to try title, or as a suit in equity to cancel a deed and remove clouds from title. If an action of trespass to try title, he could not recover because he was collaterally attacking a sheriff’s deed, which was not void, but, under the proof, voidable; if a suit to remove the cloud caused by the deed, he could not succeed because more than ten years had elapsed since the right to sue accrued, and no excuse for the delay had been alleged and proved. When the cause was remanded Walet amended his petition to meet the decision of this court upon the question of stale demand, alleging certain reasons and excuses for not commencing his suit at an earlier day. Upon a demurrer to the amended petition the court below held these excuses insufficient, and the plaintiff, refusing further to amend, the cause was dismissed. From this judgment of dismissal the present appeal is taken.
It is admitted by the appellant that he has no ground for reversal unless his petition has alleged some sufficient excuse for his delay in bringing the action, all other questions having been settled by the former decision. As to this matter the petition showed that before and down to the seventh day of May, 1867, the plaintiff was the owner of the land in controversy. On that day it was sold under an execution against the plaintiff in favor of H. H. Brockman and others, and was purchased by the ancestor of the appellees. Facts are alleged'in the petition tending to show that this sale was voidable at the suit of the plaintiff.
This suit was commenced in 1881, more than ten.years after the adoption of our State Constitution. As reasons why it was not begun earlier, the plaintiff stated that at the time the judgment, under which the execution sale took place, was rendered, he resided in Louisiana, and that he did not know that the judgment had been rendered against him, nor that the land had been levied on and sold to Haskins till some time in the year 1877. It seems that Walet had, in 1857, brought suit against Brockman and Buckman for damages for cutting timber off of this land; but that two years afterwards his attorney abandoned the suit, and he employed another firm of lawyers to take charge of it. That this firm having also abandoned the cause, and removed to
When the appellant came to Texas in 1877, he soon ascertained from the records of Karnes county all about the sale of his land, but was told by an attorney—whom he proposed to employ to have the sheriff’s deed canceled—that he could do nothing towards this without the original title papers. The plaintiff then details with great particularity his search for his deeds amongst the papers of the attorneys who had been previously employed by him in reference to the land, which shows considerable diligence in attempting to find them. After a search of several years they were found in the possession of the widow of one of those attorneys, in 1881, and this suit was immediately commenced.
The above are substantially the excuses offered by Walet for not bringing this suit within proper time, and we think the bare statement of them is enough to show that they are insufficient. Whilst it is shown that the attorneys last employed to represent him in his suit against Brockman et al. abandoned his cause without his knowledge, it appears that he had agents who paid the taxas on his land, and who must have known the condition of the title. It further appears, too, that the entire proceedings under which the appellees claim title were on record in Karnes county, and open to inspection.
The plaintiff was chargeable with notice of what occurred in court in reference to a suit which he himself had instituted and prosecuted for years. His absence from the State did not relieve him from the necessity of following up his case. If he trusted it to attorneys who abandoned the suit, it was his misfortune, and the appellees should not suffer for this misplaced confidence on his part. The very fact that his frequent letters, making inquiry about the suit, met with no answer, was a cir
When he did, after the lapse of ten years, come to Texas to look after this land, his only diligence was in looking up his title deeds, for whose possession by him there was no special necessity. He could have brought this suit as well without as with them. He could doubtless have proved their contents by other evidence—at least, it is not shown that he could not; but, if he could not ha.ve done so, there was no necessity for him to offer in the case a single title paper. The deed which he seeks to cancel was one conveying his own title to Haskins. The latter claimed under him, and there was no-necessity for his establishing his own title in this proceeding. Yet the appellant spent almost four years in a search for papers which could not profit him in the least. Nothing is alleged throughout the entire petition tending to show that the appellees or their ancestor, threw any obstacle in the way of the plaintiff’s commencing suit, or did anything towards concealing their claim or the evidence that, would overthrow it. “ Equity always refuses relief to stale demands. When a party has slept upon his rights for a great length of time, nothing can call forth this court into activity but conscience, good faith and reasonable diligence. Laches and neglect are always discountenanced. ” (Smith v. Clay, 4 Bro. Ch. Rep., 640.) The reasons for this statutory rule are well illustrated in the present case.
The grounds upon which Walet sought to set aside the deed to Haskins were inadequacy of price, accompanied by unfairness in making the sale. Any circumstance tending to show that the land sold for a reasonable price, or that the sale was fairly made, would naturally, rest only within the knowledge of witnesses, who might die or remove beyond the jurisdiction of the court, and the purchaser be deprived of their testimony should the delay in bringing the suit be unreasonable.
It certainly was against equity and good conscience to allow him, when he was charged with notice of the deed that clouded his title, and was apparently in possession of all the evidence he
Affirmed.