Dailey v. Killebrew

Opinion.— During the progress of the cause the plaintiff filed four amended petitions, resulting in obscuring the grounds, to some extent, of his action, and leaving it rather indistinct to our perception upon what facts precisely he proposed to rely as affording him a cause of action. In the original petition, and in some of his amended petitions, the determination of the Shields litigation is treated as a final adjudication of the controversy between the parties on its merits, and the plaintiff bases his right to recover upon that theory and assumption. In another amendment the plaintiff alleges that the judgment was a mere dismissal of the suit by Shields, induced by a fraudulent and covert intention on the part of Fortune thereby to secure an advantage against the plaintiff by thus procuring himself to be left in possession of the land under his title under the Morgan grant, and thus to evade the obligation in his contract which required him to reconvey the one-half of the land which plaintiff "would have been entitled to demand, provided the merits of the plaintiff’s chain of title under the Man chaca grant had been tested, and an adjudication had been made establishing its superiority over that of Shields. Such conflicting statements of facts, in the connection tkgy occupy to the plaintiff’s action, present directly opposite theories, and require for their adjudication, in respect to the contract sued on, different remedies. The fraudulent device referred to might afford the appropriate basis for a suit for damages on the bond for failing to have the title adjudicated; but one of his amendments distinctly disclaims asking for any such redress, but attempts to lay the basis for the recovery of stipulated damages by reason of there having been such an adjudication of the titles of the parties *730in the Shields suit, whereby, under the contract here sued on, he claims that he was entitled to recover one-half of the land, or to have in lieu thereof the alternative moneyed consideration provided for in Fortune’s obligation. It will doubtless be most favorable to the interest of the plaintiff, on this appeal, for the court to treat his numerous amendments as not, in effect, varying the allegations of his original petition.

The amended petition referred to, in effect, assailed the integrity of the cause of action declared on in the original petition without superseding it with a different one; for the disclaimer by him of the only remedy appropriate to the facts under the amendments rendered the variation made as to the facts merely irrelevant for any of the purposes of this suit, and can have no other tendency, if construed as. supplanting the allegations on the same subject contained in plaintiff’s previous pleadings, than to neutralize the original allegations and thereby to leave the plaintiff with an insufficient petition under a cause of'action based upon either of the supposed theories of plaintiff’s right to recover.

The defendants tiled a general and a special demurrer to the original and amended petitions; the grounds of special exception were: 1. That plaintiff does not allege that he ever complied with his undertakings and obligations in the bond. 2. That he does not allege that the Barr title, mentioned in said bond, was a good or superior title to said land.

The court'sustained the demurrer and rendered judgment ' for the defendants. The appeal by the plaintiff presents the action of the court in thus ruling as the only ground of error.

A synoptical statement of the contents of the plaintiff’s amended petitions is pretermitted because of their length; they could not be properly abbreviated to any considerable extent for the due consideration of the demurrer, and it is thought best to refer the court to the record itself.

*731Considering the plaintiff’s suit as being, in effect, an action to enforce the specific performance of the obligation given by Fortune to him, or, in default thereof, to enforce the alternative remedy of a judgment for $4,000, the sufficiency of the cause of action must rest upon the proposition that the petition shows that the state of facts exists contemplated by the contract, from which the duty was imposed upon Fortune to convey to the plaintiff one-half the tract of land involved in the Shields law suit.

Fortune, by the bond which he executed, stipulated not to recon vey to the plaintiff one-half of the land which he might be able, in any event, to maintain his right to, but to reconvey one-half thereof, in case his (Fortune’s) right thereto should be adjudged to him by virtue of the Barr, Oundiff and Dailey chain of title under the iVlanchaca survey.

The converse of this proposition or construction is, that if Fortune’s right to the land under the adjudication which was contemplated turned out to depend upon his own propér title, derived from the Morgan heirs, and not upon Dailey’s title, that Dailey would not be entitled to share the benefit of such a result, and Fortune would not be obligated to reconvey. It was, therefore, the initial point of Dailey’s cause of action to allege that first, the adjudication had been in fact made, whereby Fortune had recovered the land; second, that the recovery thus had was due to, and by virtue of, not the Morgan title, but the title with which Dailey had invested Fortune.

The plaintiff’s petition, as has been seen, was so amended as to deny the truth of the first, and to ignore the second of these propositions; but if it had not been thus amended the plaintiff -does not allege in any of his pleadings that the defendant Fortune, in the Shields litigation, prevailed, or recovered therein, by virtue of the Dailey deed, and the title which' it conveyed. Fortune, indistinct terms, expressly provided that those portions or lots of land on the .Morgan survey, the title to which he had derived from the *732heirs of George Morgan, should continue, in every contin, gency, to remain his property, even though they, with other parts of the Morgan league, should be recovered in the Shields suit, under and by virtue of Dailey’s chain of title and deed to Fortune.

Thus the contract, in plain, unmistakable language, forbids any attempt to engraft upon it the idea, for a single moment, that Dailey’s right to any portion of this land, under the contract or bond sued on, could be acquired by demanding Fortune’s reconvejmnce, unless the obligation to make it was derived through the efficiency of the Dailey title, and its availability to sustain Fortune’s right to recovery of the land.

The plaintiff’s petition and amended petitions wholly failed to allege facts which, under the view we take of the contract between the parties, entitled him to recover either land or damages in the manner and form plaintiff has seen proper to sue.

Judgment affibmed.