Ardoin v. Cobb

136 S.W. 271, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 195
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 22, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 136 S.W. 271 (Ardoin v. Cobb) 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
Ardoin v. Cobb, 136 S.W. 271, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 195 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

FLY, J.

This is an action of trespass to try title instituted by Z. L. Cobb against Theo W. Ardoin and Eli Ardoin, to recover a tract of land known as survey 51 in section No. 1 in El Paso county. A trial by the court resulted in a judgment in favor of Cobb.

Plaintiff, Cobb, showed that the land was patented to W. O. Stanley on December 22, 1856, and that Stanley sold the land to Thomas B. Huling, and then, over the objection of defendants, he introduced in evidence a deed from Elizabeth Huling, described in the deed as “surviving widow of Thos. B. Huling, dec’d, late of Lampasas,” *272 and in which, deed it is recited that she “did file her inventory and appraisement of the community property of said husband and herself in the records of said county as required by law to enable her to control and manage said community property.” In connection with recitals in the deed, plaintiff placed in evidence an application on the part of Elizabeth Huling to the district court of Lam-pasas county, on May 18, 1873, to substitute the inventory and appraisement of the community estate of herself and husband, which it was alleged were destroyed by fire, and the order was granted making the substitution and that the papers be recorded. Certified copies of the substitute papers were placed in evidence. Plaintiff also introduced a release or deed by parties describing themselves as heirs of Thomas B. Huling, to lands belonging to' the estate of Thomas B. Huling. Unless the recitals in the instruments be taken as evidence of marital relationship between Thomas B. Huling and Elizabeth Huling, there was no proof of that very essential fact.

It does not appear that the rights of sur-vivorship of Mrs. Huling were ever questioned, if her marriage to Thomas B. Huling was shown; but, on the other hand, in a receipt, lease, or deed given by persons claiming to be the heirs of Thomas B. Huling, dated February 25, 1876, and duly acknowledged, the death of Thomas B. Huling is recited, and the control and management of his estate by Elizabeth Huling is fully recognized. In addition, survivorship proceedings were had in the probate court of Lam-pasas county. The conclusion is irresistible the Elizabeth Huling was the surviving wife ■of Thomas B. Huling. The release mentioned was admitted without objection from the defendants, and the matters therein recited, though hearsay, would prove the facts recited.

Plaintiffs in error made objections to the ■deed by Elizabeth Huling on the grounds that there was no proof that she was the surviving wife of Thomas B. Huling, and that there was no proof that she executed the deed.

[1] To those objections plaintiffs in error will be confined, and they cannot now urge the objections that copies of ancient instruments are only admissible when they have been filed as provided by statute and upon .affidavit of loss of the originals; nor that it was not shown that the instruments came from the proper custody. The record does not indicate that a copy of the deed of Elizabeth Huling was used; but, on the other hand, it states that “the plaintiff offered deed from Elizabeth Huling, surviving widow of Thomas B. Huling, to W. O. Phillips, dated 30th day of March, 1877, and filed for record February 19, 1878, in volume 1, page 78,” and the inference would be that the original was placed in evidence. In the absence of objections on that score at the trial, plaintiffs in error will he held to have acceded to the proposition that there were no objections to the admissibility of the deed except those urged by them.

[2] The deed of Elizabeth Huling was executed in 1877, and consequently when offered in evidence was 33 years old and presumably came from the proper custody, and that would give it the character of an ancient instrument, even if it had not been recorded for 30 years, or even though it had not been 30 years old when the suit was instituted and had not been recorded for 30 years, or at all. Bass v. Sevier, 58 Tex. 567; Mackey v. Armstrong, 84 Tex. 159, 19 S. W. 463.

It is held in the case of Roche v. Lovell, 74 Tex. 191, 11 S. W. 1079, that neither the recitals in- court proceedings when a qualification as survivor is had, nor in the deed of the survivor to her vendee, are evidence of the fact that property belongs to the community; but no point was raised in the trial court in this case as to the community character of the property, the sole objection to the deed being that it had not been shown, aliunde the recitals in the deed, that Elizabeth Huling was the wife of Thomas B. Huling. In the absence of anything to the contrary, the presumption would obtain that the property belonged to the community.

There is no intimation in the case of Roche v. Lovell that the deed made by the survivor was an ancient instrument, and, on the other hand, it must not have been because if, as in that case, there was no question about the marital relation having existed at the time of death of the husband, the law would presume the power to execute the deed if it was an ancient instrument. Watrous v. McGrew, 16 Tex. 513; Yeramendi v. Hutchins, 48 Tex. 531; Harrison v. McMurray, 71 Tex. 122, 8 S. W. 612; Garner v. Lasker, 71 Tex. 431, 9 S. W. 332.

The deed of Elizabeth Huling has never been questioned and for over 30 years has formed the link in a chain of title, and in an instrument over 35 years old executed by persons representing themselves as heirs of Thomas B. Huling, deceased, they acknowledge having received $5,768 worth of land from Elizabeth Huling in full of all their claims upon the estate of Thomas B. Huling, who is described as being dead, and convey ufito her' all lands not discovered belonging to the estate. That instrument was properly signed and acknowledged, and duly recorded in Lampasas county. The dealings of those parties with Elizabeth Huling can be accounted for- upon one ground alone, that of her survivorship. The instrument in question was admitted without objection on the part of plaintiffs in error, and, when taken in conjunction with the court proceedings in 1866 and the recitals in the deed of 1877, would raise the presumption that Thomas B. Huling was dead in 1866, and that Elizabeth Huling was his widow. No question *273 was raised in the trial court as to the property not belonging to the community estate.

It is the general rule that recitals in deeds and other instruments in writing are not binding upon any but the makers of the instruments and their privies. In Devlin on Deeds, § 996, it is stated: “A recital in a deed that the grantors are the widow and heirs of a person who has a record title is not competent evidence of the truth of the matters recited against a stranger.” And the ease of Costello v. Burke, 63 Iowa, 361, 19 N. W. 247, is cited in support of the text. In that case it is held: “The conveyances introduced show that John Bennington was vested with the title, and there is no competent evidence that it has ever passed from him. The recitals in the deed to William Costello that the grantors therein are the heirs at law of John Bennington, deceased, are not competent evidence either of his death or their heirship. These recitals are no part of the conveyance, and they are no more competent as evidence of the facts stated than they would be if embodied in any other writing signed by the parties. Neither are the recitals in the judgment in the case against Edinbum competent evidence of these facts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 S.W. 271, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ardoin-v-cobb-texapp-1911.