Allen v. Clearman

128 S.W. 1140, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 589, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 588
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 4, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 128 S.W. 1140 (Allen v. Clearman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Clearman, 128 S.W. 1140, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 589, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 588 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

REESE, Associate Justice.

This is a suit in trespass to try title by James H. Allen against John S. Clearman and others to recover land described as blocks 6, 7, 18 and 19 in the Manning addition to the city of Rockport. Defendants disclaimed as to block 18, and as to the balance of the land pleaded not guilty and title under the statute of limitation of five and’ ten years, and upon trial with a jury plaintiff had judgment for that block and defendants had judgment for the other three blocks. From the judgment plaintiff appeals.

The land is a part of a 320-acre survey patented to John ICeetles in 1867, by virtue of headright certificate for 640 acres issued to him in 1845. The certificate was located in two surveys of 320 acres each. Plaintiff deraigned title under a deed from all the heirs of John Keetles executed in 1895. Plaintiff was entitled to recover unless such right was defeated by the evidence offered of a conveyance of the certificate by Keetles to W. 0. Blair in 1845, under which appellees claim title, or by the limitation title set up by them. Appellees undertook to establish by circumstances the execution by Keetles and wife of a transfer 'to W. C. Blair in 1845 of the certificate. The evidence offered was sufficient to sustain the verdict of the jury for defendants on this issue. This evidence will be further particularly set out in our conclusions of law upon the whole case.

Appellees introduced in evidence a certified copy from the General Land Office of certain memoranda made upon the file wrapper covering the papers relating to the certificate and survey in question, purporting to have been made by different clerks in the General Land Office. Appellant objected on the ground that these were not such records of the Land Office as could be proved by certified copy under the statute. (Arts. 2306-2308, Rev. Stats.) These memoranda indicated the different steps that had been taken by the Land Commissioner with regard to the certificate, survey and patent, purporting to have been made during the progress of the matter through the Land Office, and were properly admitted so far as material or relevant. All of the material facts shown by these memoranda, relating to the ■survey and the issuance of the patent, were otherwise shown and were in fact a part of appellees’ title. Appellant’s objection is, in fact, leveled at the following memoranda: “Transfer from W. C. Blair to J. M. Manning withdrawn by C. R. Johns & Co., Aug. 10, 1867.” “Pat. del’v’d to Flan. Everett Sept. 12/67.” If there was any merit in appellant’s contention that certified copies of these memoranda were not admissible, the error of the court in admitting them was harmless for the reason that these facts were fully covered by a written agreement with regard to the evidence entered into by the parties and introduced in evidence. This agreement in fact furnished much the largest portion of the evidence of both parties. The assignment is overruled.

Objection was also made by appellant, and overruled and a bill of exceptions taken, to the introduction in evidence of a certified copy from the General Land Office of a letter from J. M. Manning to the Land Commissioner dated October 8, 1854, as follows:

*592 . . I also send enclosed the surveys of 640 acres of land made in said Eefugio County as per cert. Ho. 12, class 4th, issued in Victoria to John Keetles, also the deed of W. C. Blair to me for said certificate. Wishing you would notify me by mail of the receipt of said papers. . . . Please also inform me if the W. C. Blair has deposited in the Land Office the deed of John Keetles to the within referred to certificate. Said deed was made to Mr. Blair and entered in a deed where two and three certificates was purchased at the same time by said Blair, I believe in H. York.
Yours respectfully,
James M. Manning.”

It was objected that this letter was not an archive of the Land Office of which certified copies might be used as evidence. This is complained of by the second assignment of error. We think the objection is good. (Rev. Stats., art. 2306; Rogers v. Pettus, 80 Texas, 425; Lott v. King, 79 Texas, 292.) The letter-was introduced as one of the circumstances tending to show a transfer of the certificate by Keetles' to Blair. So far as it refers to the filing in the General Land Office of the surveys and the transfer by Blair to Manning, these facts are expressly embraced in the agreement as to evidence. In so far as it refers to° the execution of a transfer by Keetles to Blair, it could have been considered by the jury only as a claim by Manning that such transfer existed, and the fact that Manning made this claim from the beginning and always persisted therein, is also abundantly shown by the agreed evidence and other undisputed evidence. The evidence is so clear upon this point that we are disposed to regard the admission of this evidence, if error, as harmless. (Holt v. Maverick, 24 S. W., 532.)

There was. no error in permitting appellees to introduce in evidence the certified copy of the record of the purported copy of the transfer from Keetles to Blair of the certificate in question. This was offered as a circumstance only, and was fully authorized by the agreement referred to. The instrument in question purported to be a copy certified by the county judge of Calhoun County, June 11, 1855, to be a true copy of a deed signed by Elizabeth Gray, John G. Keetles and Mary J. Keetles, his wife, and duly acknowledged before Sam E. Betts, Judge of the United States for the Southern District of Hew York, dated September 11, 1845, conveying to W. C. Blair three land certificates, including the one in question, and which had been recorded in Calhoun County January 6, 1845; in Eefugio County, in which the land lay at that date, July 24, 1867; and afterwards transcribed into the transcribed records of Aransas County. These facts were all covered by the agreement. We think that without such agreement they would have been admissible in evidence as circumstances in connection with other circumstances established by the undisputed evidence, all of which tended to establish the same fact, to wit, the transfer of the certificate by Keetles to Blair, who in turn, as shown by his deed in evidence, conveyed it to Manning. The court properly limited the effect of the evidence as a circumstance merely. The jury were left free to determine its weight as such.

*593 The fifth assignment of error presents the proposition that the court erred in submitting the issue of the statute of limitation of either five or ten years. We have examined very carefully the extremely meagre testimony of the three witnesses introduced by appellees to establish their defense of limitation and we find it wholly insufficient to raise the issue of a continuous actual possession of any part of the property sued for, for even five years.

W. B. Abney testified that the widow of J. W. Clearman, under whom appellees claim and to whom Stoekley sold the land in 1887, and who died in 1898, had sold shell from the shell bank on the lots since Clearman’s death, and that witness had also done so as her representative. This is the full extent of his testimony. John S. Clearman, son of J. W. Clearman, testified that his father sold shell from the land and that" since his father’s death his mother had also done so. This is.the full extent of his testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
128 S.W. 1140, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 589, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-clearman-texapp-1910.