In the view we take of this case, the following statement of the facts will be sufficient to an understanding of the point upon which this decision rests.
On the 5th day of July, 1890, Stewart Newell brought a suit in the United States Circuit Court at Galveston, Texas, against Eliza Cooper, B.P. Cooper, and Fannie Westrope to recover of them 177 acres of land in Harris County, Texas, of which the land in controversy is an undivided one-half. During the pendency of the suit in the Federal court, Stewart Newell died testate, and on the 5th day of March, 1895, his executors, Edward S. Newell and Clarence B. Smith, were made parties plaintiff to that suit. In the original petition and in the first amendment filed by the executors, the entire tract of 177 acres was sued for. The executors filed second and third amended petitions, in each of which they claimed only an undivided half of the land. While these amendments were pending in the Federal court, the plaintiffs in this suit, Elizabeth Cooper, B.P. Cooper, and J.C. League — the last named claiming the interest of Fannie Westrope — filed this suit in the District Court of Harris County against Charles H. Mayfield for an undivided half of the 177 acres for which suit had been brought in the Federal court. After the suit was filed in the State court, the executors filed another amended petition in the Federal court, in which they claimed the entire tract of land, 177 acres. The defendants in that suit pleaded in various forms the pendency of the suit in the State court against Mayfield; that Mayfield owned half of the land, setting up his title specifically under the same instrument which is presented in this case for construction, and pleading that the Federal court was without jurisdiction to try the title to the one-half which was owned by Mayfield. They also pleaded Mayfield's title as an outstanding title against Newell's executors. Charles H. Mayfield was one of the attorneys of Newell and his executors during the pendency and prosecution of their suit in the Federal court and his name was signed to their pleadings. Upon the issues presented by the claim of the plaintiffs, Newell's executors, to all of the land and the pleas of the defendants in that suit denying jurisdiction in the court and setting up Mayfield's title, the case was tried and a judgment was rendered by the Federal court in favor of Newell's executors against the defendants in that suit for the title and possession of the entire tract of land. Upon appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals at New Orleans, that judgment was affirmed.
In this suit, the defendant Mayfield pleaded the judgment of the Federal court in bar of this action, and also set the same judgment up as an outstanding title in Newell's estate superior to the title of the plaintiffs in this suit. This case was tried before the court without a *Page 110 jury and judgment entered for the defendant Mayfield, which has been affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals.
The defendant in error claims that the judgment of the Federal court rendered in the case of Newell's Executors v. Eliza Cooper, B.P. Cooper, and Frances Westrope, divested all title to the land in controversy out of the defendants in that suit and vested it in the estate of Newell, and that the judgment constitutes an outstanding legal title to the land in Newell's estate superior to the title of the plaintiffs in this suit, for which reason the plaintiffs can not recover in this action. Whether correctly or not, the Federal court adjudged the title and possession of the entire tract of 177 acres to Newell's executors upon issues framed by the pleadings of the parties. The very question of Mayfield's title under the instrument here presented was decided by that court adversely to the contention of the plaintiffs in error in this case and judgment was given in favor of the executors of Newell against the defendants for the entire tract of land. But the plaintiffs in error seek to avoid the force of that judgment upon the following grounds: (1) Because Mayfield was neither a party to that judgment nor in privity with the plaintiffs in that suit, for which reason the judgment has no binding force as between the plaintiffs in this suit and Mayfield; (2) because this suit was pending in the District Court of Harris County, Texas, at the time the plaintiffs in the Federal court amended their petition so as to embrace all of the land contained in the tract instead of one-half, for which reason it is claimed that the Federal court had no jurisdiction to determine the controversy as to half of the land and the judgment of the Federal court is, to that extent, void; (3) because Newell's executors recovered one-half of the land for the benefit of Mayfield during the pendency of this suit against him for the title to it, and Mayfield occupies the place of a purchaser pendente lite.
Conceding, for the sake of argument, that Mayfield was neither party to the suit in the Federal court nor in privity with the plaintiffs, it would follow that the judgment could not operate as a former adjudication of the issues between the plaintiffs in this suit and Mayfield, and would not constitute a bar to this action; if, however, the judgment of the Federal Court is binding between Newell's estate and the plaintiffs in error, then, although Mayfield may have no title, it constitutes an outstanding title superior to that of the plaintiffs, and, having no title to the land, they can not recover.
Mayfield being neither a party to the suit in the Federal court nor in privity with the parties thereto, this suit in the State court in favor of Cooper and others against Mayfield did not constitute a former suit pending at the time, because Newell's estate was not a party to this and Mayfield was not a party to that suit. 1 Enc. of Pl. and Pr., 757, note 3; Langham v. Thomason, 5 Tex. 128. It would be a strange rule that A, having sued B for a tract of land, C could not, during the pendency of the suit, bring a suit against A for the same land. It seems to *Page 111 us that the proposition of the plaintiff in error embodies that conclusion.
It is claimed that Newell's executors, in the suit in the Federal court, recovered half of the land for the benefit of Mayfield during the pendency of his suit in the State court, and that Mayfield is therefore in the position of a purchaser pendente lite. A purchaser from a party to a pending suit takes with notice of the rights asserted against the subject matter of litigation. We do not see the analogy which is so earnestly urged by the learned counsel for plaintiffs in error between a purchaser pendente lite and the attitude of Mayfield; but, conceding his proposition, it is, as we understand it, that Mayfield, by getting the title of the defendants through the judgment of the Federal court during the pendency of this suit, was affected in the same way as if defendants in that suit had conveyed the property to Newell's executors, one-half for the benefit of Mayfield. If that were the case, then Mayfield would take title to the land charged with notice of the controversy; but the grantors would not be permitted to dispute their deed by which the title passed. A solemn judgment, although involuntary, is not less binding than a deed. The fact that Mayfield was charged with notice of the claim of Cooper and others to the half of the land now in controversy does not affect the title of Newell's estate, derived through the judgment of the Federal court. That judgment adjudicated all of the questions between the parties which are here presented and is not subject to revision by this court.
We are of opinion that the judgment rendered in the United States Circuit Court at Galveston in the case of Newell's Executors v. Eliza Cooper, B.P. Cooper, and Frances Westrope constitutes a legal title to the land outstanding in Newell's estate superior to the claim of the plaintiffs in error. There is no error in the judgment, and it is affirmed.
Affirmed.