Adams v. Duncan

215 S.W.2d 599, 147 Tex. 332, 1948 Tex. LEXIS 440
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1948
DocketNo. A-1722.
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 215 S.W.2d 599 (Adams v. Duncan) 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
Adams v. Duncan, 215 S.W.2d 599, 147 Tex. 332, 1948 Tex. LEXIS 440 (Tex. 1948).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brewster

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action in trespass to try title filed by F. P. Adams et al, petitioners, against William Duncan et al, respondents. A trial court judgment for petitioners was reversed and remanded by the court of civil appeals. 210 S. W. (2d) 180.

In 1842 the 640 acres of land in controversy was patented by the Republic of Texas to William Duncan, of Philadelphia, Pa., as the William Duncan Survey, Abst. 136, Jasper County, Texas.

Duncan still owned the land when he died in Philadelphia, in 1864, testate. His will was duly probated in Philadelphia and letters testamentary were granted to his widow, two sons, a nephew, and a grandson named John G. Ford. Under the will these executors or a majority of them were “fully authorized, empowered and directed to grant, bargain, sell and convey all my right, title, interest, claim and demand of, in and to all my real and personal estate.”

All executors, except Ford, died between 1867 and 1878. No ancillary administration on Duncan’s estate was ever had in Texas, but a certified copy of the Pennsylvania probate proceedings, including Duncan’s will, was filed for record in Jasper County, Texas, in 1901.

On July 31, 1906, in consideration of $4,480.00 cash paid, John G. Ford, as sole surviving executor of the estate of William Duncan, deceased, executed a deed conveying the 640-acre William Duncan Survey to W. J. B. Adams, R. F. Adams and Abel Adams, from whom petitioners claim title as heirs and legal representatives of heirs. In this deed Ford reserved one half the mineral estate in the 640 acres for the benefit of himself and the other heirs of William Duncan.

*335 At the time this deed was executed title by limitation to the William Duncan Survey was being asserted by one Burrell and one Bilbo. So, on March 24, 1908, the Adamses, grantees in the Ford deed, sued Bilbo, Burrell and others in trespass to try title to recover the land. In that litigation 160 acres of the land was awarded to Bilbo and the remainder to the Adamses. See Adams v. Burrell (Civ. App.), 127 S. W., 581, and Burrell v. Adams, 104 Texas, 183, 135 S. W., 1156. In that suit the Supreme Court says that the Adamses “exhibited a perfect title to all land in controversy, and, unless defeated by limitation, were entitled to recover against all the defendants all the land in suit.” (135 S. W., p. 1157.) The record showed that they had acquired their title to the Duncan Survey in 1906 by the deed from Ford, executor, above described, which they introduced in evidence over the objection of the defendants. (127 S. W., 583.) And in their brief filed in the court of civil appeals in support of that appeal they said: “The plaintiffs bought from the executor of William Duncan’s estate, and the validity of their title is not disputed. (See Patent p. 114, Will of Duncan, p. 106, Deed to Adams, 104 Sten. Rep.) ” Moreover, in the trial of the case at bar, much of the testimony given in the Adams-Burrell trial was offered in evidence. Petitioners offered excerpts from the testimony of R. F. Adams, one of the grantees in the Ford deed, in which he swore: “I think we bought the Duncan survey in 1906. We had never owned it before unless we owned a part of it when we bought this place here that Burrell lived on. We didn’t claim it at that time.” Respondents offered the testimony of John G. Ford, executor, given by deposition in that suit in 1908 and introduced by the Adamses, in which he identified himself as one of the executors of the will of William Duncan, deceased, and said that all the other executors named had died from 1867 to 1878; that “since the death of the other Executors I have acted in the capacity of Executor and the other heirs have acquiesced in such acts and ratified them by accepting their shares of the consideration money received for real estate sold by me as Executor”; that “the estate of the said Wm. Duncan has not yet been finally settled, there have been three accounts filed; I have not yet been discharged as such Executor”; and that in 1879 he sold certain property in Philadelphia and in 1901 had sold 640 acres in King County, Texas, belonging to the William Duncan estate. Also, in the trial of this case petitioners offered numerous instruments subsequently executed by the Adamses, grantees in the Ford deed, and in some of them the land is referred to as “more particularly described in a deed from Wm. Duncan by Executors, to W. J. B. Adams et al.”

*336 Then, in 1945, came this suit, filed by petitioners against respondents as the heirs and legal representatives of the devisees under the will of William Duncan and as the successors to the William Duncan title. Following the usual allegation in trespass to try title, petitioners specially pleaded title by limitation of 3, 5, 10 and 25 years. Respondents answered by plea of not guilty and then by cross action prayed judgment against petitioneres for title and possession on allegations in trespass to try title. In answer to this cross action petitioners pleaded not guilty and by special pleas again set up claim to title under limitation of 3, 5, 10 and 25 years.

Before trial the respondents, as cross-plaintiffs, filed a disclaimer of any title in the William Duncan Survey except to one half the mineral estate which, they alleged, was reserved to them by the terms of the Ford deed, above described.

Attacking the Ford deed as void, petitioners filed a motion asking the trial court to note judicially that under the laws of the State of Pennsylvania the power of sale given an executor by will becomes exhausted when the purpose of the power has been accomplished. Respondents pleaded that by taking the deed . from Ford, placing it of record and using it in the Burrell-Bilbo litigation to protect their title from trespassers, petitioners were estopped to question its validity. The court of civil appeals sustained that contention and petitioners insist that it erred in so holding. We have concluded that the point must be overruled.

In the first place, we cannot say that Ford’s deed as executor was void because the purpose of his power had been accomplished and therefore had been exhausted. According to his testimony in 1908 given in a deposition taken and offered by the Adamses in the Adams-Burrell litigation and in no way disputed in this case, Ford continued to act as executor after the death of his last co-executor in 1878, with the acquiesence of the Duncan heirs, and had in 1908 “not yet been discharged as such Executor” because “the estate of the said Wm. Duncan has not yet been finally settled”; and, as such executor, he had sold lands 'in King County, Texas, as late as 1901, turning the consideration over to the Duncan heirs. In 1908 this seemed adequate proof that his powers as executor had not become exhausted by 1906, therefore we are unable to say now, in a suit between the heirs and privies of the grantor and grantees in the Ford deed, that it had become so exhausted.

Petitioners further attack the power of Ford to execute the deed in question because he had not taken out ancillary letters *337 in Texas. Art. 8305 R. S., 1925, provides that when a foreign will recorded in Texas gives an executor power to sell real estate situated in this state no order of court shall be necessary to authorize the executor to make sale and execute a proper conveyance.

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Bluebook (online)
215 S.W.2d 599, 147 Tex. 332, 1948 Tex. LEXIS 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-duncan-tex-1948.