Abernathy v. Stone

16 S.W. 1102, 81 Tex. 430, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1381
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1891
DocketNo. 7101.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 16 S.W. 1102 (Abernathy v. Stone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abernathy v. Stone, 16 S.W. 1102, 81 Tex. 430, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1381 (Tex. 1891).

Opinion

MARR, Judge, Section A.

This suit was instituted in the District Court of Falls County June 9, 1888, by the appellant against the appellee, to recover the title and possession of an undivided 866 acres in a large tract of land lying in Falls County, and patented to Henry Fanthorp by virtue of his headright certificate. The plaintiff claimed *432 as a vendee of Fanthorp, and the defendant as his sole heir. The plaintiff set up the facts constituting his right at length, and prayed to recover the land, and that title be divested out of the defendant and be vested in the plaintiff.

The defendant filed various exceptions and demurrers to the plaintiff’s pleadings, among which she excepted because it appeared from plaintiff’s pleadings that his claim was stale and barred by lapse of time. The court overruled all of the defendant’s demurrers except the one alleging laches, which was sustained and plaintiff’s suit dismissed, from which the plaintiff appeals.

The plaintiff in his original petition states that on the 23d day of March, 1854, Henry Fanthorp, the ancestor of the defendant, was the owner and in possession of a tract of 1314 acres of land lying in Mc-Lennan County, Texas, which the plaintiff described by metes and bounds, which said tract of land was located and surveyed by virtue of said Fanthorp’s headright certificate for one' league and labor of land, and on said day said Fanthorp by his deed of conveyance of that date, a copy of which is made part of plaintiff’s petition, conveyed to the plaintiff 866 acres of said land by metes and bounds, which is described in said deed and petition. This deed is in the usual form, recites a consideration of $1000 cash paid, and shows that the land was located by virtue of said Fanthorp’s headright certificate. The words of conveyance in the deed are: “Have this day, do by these presents sell, alienate, convey, and quitclaim unto the said Abernathy, his heirs and assigns forever, all and singular the following described tract of land, to-wit:” Then follows the description of the land, which concludes as follows: “And containing 8661 acres of land, and all right, title, and interest which I have and devise to the above described tract of land by virtue of the survey aforesaid I sell, convey, and quitclaim unto the said ALernathy, from me, my heirs, and assigns forever.”

That by virtue of said deed plaintiff says he became the owner of an undivided part of said land certificate, amounting to the quantity of land in said deed conveyed. That on the-day of March, 1859, said Fanthorp floated and removed from said land and other lands located by virtue of said certificate, said land certificate, and by virtue of said certificate so floated and removed located and surveyed the tract of 2322 acres of land lying in Falls County, which plaintiff describes by metes and bounds, and an undivided part thereof amounting to 8661-acres he seeks to recover in this suit. That on August 10,1868, a patent was issued to the heirs of Fanthorp for said land. That said Fanthorp is dead, and the defendant is his sole heir. Plaintiff alleges the defendant’s forcible entry and ouster of plaintiff January 1, 1888. That he does not know where the balance of said certificate is located, and he prays that the defendant be required to disclose. He prays that *433 plaintiff’s title to 8661 acres be established and he be adjudged to be the owner of .the same, and all title thereto be divested out of defendant and vested in plaintiff, and prays for partition and recovery of possession.

The plaintiff by trial amendment alleged that he never knew that Fanthorp had floated the certificate from the land in McLennan County till 1887. That from 1868 to 1880 he lived near the defendant, and she never, and neither Fanthorp nor the defendant ever, informed him or gave him any reason to suspect such repudiation, or offered to refund him his money, which he had paid. That not till 1887 did he know of the location of said certificate on the land sued for. That defendant did not take possession of said land till 1887, which was the first act hostile to plaintiff.

The court sustained the defendant’s demurrer setting up laches.

Appellee accepts the appellant’s statement of the nature and result of the suit above, with the following explanations: “The Fanthorp certificate was for one league and labor, or 4605 acres. The 866 acres conveyed by Fanthorp to Abernathy were out of a tract of 1314 acres at that time located and surveyed, by virtue of the Fanthorp certificate, in McLennan County. The appellant alleges that in March, 1859, Fanthorp without appellant’s consent floated and removed from said land and from other lands located and surveyed by virtue of the same, said certificate, and by virtue of the said certificate so floated and removed located and surveyed a tract in'Falls County containing 2322 acres, out of which he claims 866 acres by virtue of said conveyance.”

The assignments of error raise this question: Did the court below err in sustaining the special exception to the petition of the plaintiff on the ground that his claim or title had become a stale demand? The conveyance of the 866 acres of land by Fanthorp described this land by metes and bounds, and the instrument was not, as we think, a quitclaim, but an absolute conveyance of the land itself as contradistinguished from a transfer of the mere chance to or “right, title, and interest” in the land. Richardson v. Levi, 67 Texas, 359. It conveyed by its very terms the land to appellant, “his heirs and assigns forever,” and from Fanthorp, his “heirs and assigns forever.!’ If the certificate had not been floated and relocated on other land by Fanthorp, but on the contrary had the original location been continued and patented as made originally in McLennan County, then we think that the instrument of conveyance or deed from Fanthorp to appellant might have been sufficient, upon the issuance of the patent, to have vested both the legal and equitable title by estoppel in appellant to the extent of his purchase. Adams & Wicks v. House, 61 Texas, 641; Satterwhite v. Rosser, 61 Texas, 172, and authorities cited.

Under the circumstances, however, it mnst.be held, as the certificate was in fact floated and relocated on other lands, that therefore the only *434 effect of the conveyance above mentioned was to transfer the title to a portion of the certificate to appellant. . That it had this effect there can be no doubt. Robertson v. Du Bose, 76 Texas, 8; Renick v. Dawson, 55 Texas, 106; Hines v. Thorn, 57 Texas, 102. The contract of sale was fully executed and the purchase money paid by Abernathy to Fanthorp.

But appellant in effect contends that the mere conveyance of the certificate even under such circumstances will, when the land is subsequently located and patented in the name of the original grantee or his heirs, invest the assignee with the legal as well as the equitable title. If this were correct, of course stale demand would be inapplicable. We have found; however, no case that goes to that extent, unless it be Satterwhite v. Rosser, supra, and the facts there so far as stated would indicate that the land had been surveyed before the transfer was made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 S.W. 1102, 81 Tex. 430, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abernathy-v-stone-tex-1891.