DocketNumber: No. A-654.
Judges: Brewster
Filed Date: 1/16/1946
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This is a suit in trespass to try title brought by L.C. Greer, petitioner, against Rosetta Greer, respondent, in the district court of Wood County, Texas, to recover an undivided one-half interest in 70 acres of land lying in that county.
In her answer respondent alleged that in 1942 she sued petitioner in the district court of Muskogee County, Oklahoma, for a divorce and an adjudication of the title to the land involved in this suit; that petitioner appeared and answered; that the trial court decreed that the land was her separate property, which judgment was thereafter affirmed by the Supreme Court of Oklahoma,
Petitioner excepted to all allegations regarding the Oklahoma judgment, contending that it is void because the courts of that state have no jurisdiction of lands in Texas and urging that the allegations "are immaterial to any issue in this case and are calculated to and will prejudice" the jury. On the same grounds he also moved to strike them.
The trial court instructed a verdict for respondent in deference to the Oklahoma judgment, holding that its adjudication "in substance that the land involved in this court had been purchased and paid for out of the separate funds of Rosetta Greer, and, in effect, that title to the land involved in this suit was held in the name of L.C. Greer in trust for the benefit of Rosetta Greer," is binding on the courts of Texas. The court of civil appeals approved that view.
The judgment roll in the Oklahoma suit reveals that the land in controversy there was described in all the pleadings as "70 acres of land in Wood County, Texas." In the judgment it was described as "70 acres of land in Wood County, Texas, described as follows, to-wit: 70 acres of land, more or less, out of the A.N. McKnight Survey, Patent No. 736, Volume 3, Abstract No. 400." (Italics ours.)
When the judgment roll was offered in this case petitioner objected to its introduction for the reason, among others, that the description of the land was not sufficient to identify it under the Statute of Frauds, Art. 3995, R.S., 1925. He assigned the error in his motion for a new trial and both in his appeal and in his motion for rehearing in the court of civil appeals. He presents the same question here as his point of error No. 15.
1 The office of description in a deed, judgment, or other writing is to furnish means of identification of the land. Trout et ux. v. Grubbs et ux. (Civ. App.),
2 Since the A.N. McKnight Survey contains more than 70 acres, it is quite obvious that the description in the Oklahoma judgment is not so definite and certain that the land can be identified with reasonable certainty. Nor does it refer to any writing from which such identification can be effected. Therefore, we must hold the judgment void in so far as it relates to the land involved here.
Both judgments below are reversed and the cause is remanded to the district court.
Opinion delivered January 16, 1946.
Rehearing overruled February 13, 1946.
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