Appel v. Childress

116 S.W. 129, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 607, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 677
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 10, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 116 S.W. 129 (Appel v. Childress) 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
Appel v. Childress, 116 S.W. 129, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 607, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 677 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

JAMES, Chief Justice.

The judgment was that plaintiffs (appellants) do not recover the land sued for; that defendants S. P. Childress and H. G. Wilson go hence without day and recover costs, and that the warrantors of defendants (naming them) go hence without day and recover their costs, etc.

The appeal bond is payable to Childress and Wilson only. The warrantors were parties defendant (Sayles’ Rev. Stats., article 5252), were interested adversely to plaintiffs and have rights under the judgment that would be affected by the appeal. The bond should have been made payable to them also.

Instead of dismissing the appeal at this time, the case will be held on the docket fan the time allowed for filing a motion for rehearing, during which time appellants mat present to the clerk of this court a new bond payable to the proper parties, together with a motion to be allowed to file the new bond and for its approval by this court, and *609 for the service of the motion on the warrantors and giving their places of residence and providing also for the expenses of such service. See Bank of Decatur v. Preston Nat’l Bank, 85 Texas, 562.

[A new bond having been filed, the court rendered the following opinion on the merits of the case.—Reporter.]

. The action was brought by appellants to try title to the Alexander Bond survey 803, in Medina County, of 320 acres, which was patented to A. Baldinger, assignee.

The answer, besides the plea of not guilty, consisted of a plea of the ten years statute of limitation generally as to the whole survey, and specially as to a part of it consisting of about 41 acres. The defendants cited their warrantors.

Plaintiffs pleaded in a supplemental petition, in substance, that the survey was the community property of Andrew Baldinger and his wife, Ann Baldinger, the father and mother of plaintiff Clara Appel; that Ann Baldinger died November 7, 1877, and by her will devised to - her husband a life estate in her half of the community property, with remainder to her children. That said will also provided that the share the daughter, Clara Appel, would take under said will at the death of the father should be a life estate therein with remainder to the heirs of her body, to wit, the other plaintiffs herein. That on March 26, 1883, there was a partition in the Probate Court between the estate of Andrew Baldinger (who died in' 1880) and the children of Ann Baldinger, by which the land in controversy was set aside to the heirs of Ann Baldinger. That in December, 1899, the heirs of Ann C. Baldinger partitioned her estate and the tract in controversy was set aside to Clara V. Appel and her eight children, plaintiffs herein. That Clara V. Appel was married to her -present husband, John H. Appel, in 1875.

The cause was tried by the court with judgment for the defendants. As plaintiffs established title, the judgment must have been based upon limitations. The judge has filed no conclusions and we are compelled to adopt and take as true any theory or state of facts which finds support in the evidence favorable to the judgment. There is testimony which, if accepted as true, supports the judgment in favor of the plea as to all of the survey originally fenced in by Sam Hutchison in 1874 or 1875. The plea, with its reference to this part of the survey, we shall consider first.

It appears in the evidence that Hutchison owned an undivided half of about 2,000 acres on the east side of Seco Creek in the Pablo Mancha league, and had control of the other undivided half; and in 1874 or 1875 he built a fence enclosing with said 2,000 acres some surrounding lands, thereby enclosing all of the survey in controversjr except about 41 acres at its northeast corner. This enclosure formed what was known as the Hutchison pasture. There is no proof in the record that Hutchison ever used the pasture, Consequently up to the time he disposed of it to Kilgore in 1878 the statute was not shown to have run. Enclosure without use is not sufficient. Dunn v. Taylor, 102 Texas, 80.

In 1878 Hutchison sold to old man Kilgore his 1,000-acre interest *610 in the Mancha survey. And the evidence, without setting it forth, may be said to show that he sold to Kilgore his fences and interest in fences surrounding the enclosure and delivered him the pasture as it stood in 1878, and Kilgore gave it to his son, Yancey Kilgore, and his son-in-law, John Strait, about that time.

Yancey Kilgore testified at the trial to the following facts: As soon-as we bought we built the fence along the south line of the Mancha survey from the west bank of the Seco due east to the east end of the lower Bond survey and joined the wood fence, thus closing out Hutchison, and throwing or leaving all of the survey 803, except the northeast corner, in our pasture. As soon as this south fence was • built John Strait built a house on the inside of the pasture and lived there until he died, and his widow lived there until she died, and his children lived there until they married or sold. It appears that this house was not upon the tract in question, but upon the Mancha survey.

It appears also that Yancey Kilgore and John Strait had a division in 1884 in which the former got 500 acres, and for this the latter got the rest of the Yancey interest or claim in the balance of the pasture and the fences around it.

Kilgore further testified: “While John Strait and I were together we had absolute control of the pasture and the fences around it, and no one could go in or take out wood or put in stock without our permission. We had the same control of the Bond land as we had' of our other lands. . . .. Up to the time Strait and I divided we owned the land and fences jointly and held joint possession of the fences and the land. . . . During our possession of this land we grazed stock on it and my brother-in-law had a farm on the Mancha land. We used the pasture for grazing purposes.” The division between them took place in 1884 according to the witness Butledge, and in 1885 according to Yancey Kilgore.

The witness J. B. Strait, son of John Strait, testified that in 1889, in the fall or winter, a wire fence was built near the east boundary of survey 803 by his father and Mr. Kewton (who adjoined on the east) near where the original wooden fence was, and this wire fence when finished took in all of survey, including the 41 acres in its northeast corner, which up to that time was outside of the pasture. The same witness, as to the use of the enclosure by' his father (his knowledge dating from 1885), testified: “Our house was on the inside of this enclosure; we were using it for our home and pasture; farm and everything were inside this pasture; we used the Bond surveys for pasture only, as they were only grazing land and not fit for farming. . . . While my father lived there no one could put cattle in there and no one could haul wood off the land; no one ever went into that pasture and put cattle in there, or hauled off wood without my father’s consent. While father lived there he had absolute control of the land and the fences around it. As far as I can remember no one ever put any cattle in the pasture or hauled any wood from the pasture since my father’s death, and since my mother’s death- no one has put any cattle in the pasture or hauled any wood off without our consent.” John Strait, the father, died in April, 1895.

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Bluebook (online)
116 S.W. 129, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 607, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/appel-v-childress-texapp-1909.