Atchley v. Perry

120 S.W. 1105, 55 Tex. Civ. App. 538, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 390
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 1, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 120 S.W. 1105 (Atchley v. Perry) 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
Atchley v. Perry, 120 S.W. 1105, 55 Tex. Civ. App. 538, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 390 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, Associate Justice.

This suit was in trespass to try title, instituted by Tom J. Atchley against E. A. Perry and H. E. Chesley as executors of the last will and testament of F. M. Phelps, deceased, to recover Texas & New Orleans Railroad Company survey No. 15 of block No. 13, situated in Ochiltree County. Plaintiff’s only claim of title is that F. M. Phelps made a parol gift of the land to him and placed him in possession thereof, and that he has made valuable and permanent improvements thereon, relying upon such gift. Upon conclusion of the evidence on the trial the court gave a peremptory instruction to the jury in favor of the defendants, and from a verdict and judgment in accordance with that instruction plaintiff has appealed.

The following letter was introduced by the plaintiff:

*540 “Ochiltree, Texas, 2-21-’07.
“Mr. Tom Atchley,
“Comanche.
“Dear Tom: I thought I would drop you a line and see if you wouldn’t like to come up here and live. I have got a farm joins this town, 640 acres, 200 in cultivation; I am going to put up a house; got a good well and windmill; farm all fenced; finest place in the county. I will give you two-thirds of everything we can raise, hogs and cattle, mules, etc. I want to make my home with you. If we get along all right I will give you a good farm when I quit. This is the finest country in the world. Mr. Cropper is here; Will Graves and many others from Hamilton will he here. I have 2,200 acres of fine land here. Am getting out 4 acres in trees around the house—all kinds of fruit. Please let me hear from you. Hoping you are all well, I remain, yours truly,
“F. M. Phelps.”

The land in controversy in this suit is the farm of 640 acres mentioned in the letter, and its location is as stated in the letter. At the time the letter was written plaintiff resided in Comanche, Texas, and F. M. Phelps, then about seventy-five years of age, resided in or near Ochiltree, the county seat of Ochiltree County. It does not appear that plaintiff was in any degree related to Phelps, but that he was an old acquaintance and friend of whom Phelps was fond. In June, following the receipt of this letter, plaintiff moved with his family upon the land in controversy, and he and Phelps lived together on the land until after the death of Phelps, which occurred about September 10, 1907. At the time plaintiff went upon the land about two hundred acres were already in cultivation, with fencing and other improvements thereon. Afterwards a house, barn and other improvements were erected at a cost of about fifteen hundred dollars. Plaintiff testified that these improvements were placed on the land by him and at his expense, that he put into them about one hundred dollars which he brought from Comanche and fifteen hundred dollars which he borrowed, but on cross-examination he further testified that the fifteen hundred dollars he borrowed never came into his hands, nor was it placed to his credit in bank, nor did he execute a note for it to any one, nor contract with any one for the erection of the house, nor promise to pay the fifteen-hundred-dollar loan at any definite date, nor agree to pay interest thereon. He further testified that he assisted with his personal labor in the erection of the improvements; he also cultivated a crop upon the land, a part of which had been planted when he went there, and the improvements were not entirely finished until after the death of F. M. Phelps. Testifying upon the trial, October 13, 1908, he further said on cross-examination: “I probably did tell G. S. Phelps that I was to get two-thirds of the crop. . . . I might have told G. S. Phelps that I was to get two-thirds of the crop last year and two-thirds this year, but I don’t remember it.”

A. W. Thurman, for plaintiff, proprietor of a hotel at which F. M. Phelps was boarding at the time, testified as follows: “I have heard F. M. Phelps speak of the plaintiff. The first time I heard him speak *541 of him was while he was staying at the Stephens house; that was before he came to the other town. He just said that he wanted some man to come up and live on his place; he was telling me about Atchley living with him in Hamilton, and said he was going to come up here and make a home with him. I heard him speak of Atchley several times after he came up to my hotel to live. He said he wanted Atchley to come up here and make a home with him so that he could have a place for a home; he said that he was getting ready for him to come, He said that Tom had been with him down in Hamilton County—said he would fix up a home up here and give him a piece of land. That is what he said as nearly as I can remember. He did not state where he was going to give him this home; he said he was going to fix up a home on his place; it was in that connection that he said he was going to give him a piece of land.”

Alvin Teas, for plaintiff, testified as follows: “I had a conversation with Mr. Phelps in which he mentioned Tom Atchley. It was on this section mentioned, where the trees are planted out, near the house that is built up there. ... I plowed for him and helped him set out the trees up there. We put out those trees in March, I think it was last spring a year ago. ... It was at the time I was helping him put out those trees that I had the conversation with him; it was before any of the improvements were put on the place except the fencing. He said that Mr. Atchley had been working for him a good deal, and that he had written for-him to come up here and work for- him. At different times he talked about him coming up here and working for him; said he worked a good deal for him down there where he used to live; said if he did come he was going to fix up the place and build a house on it; he had some furrows plowed and some trees and flowers set out, and stakes set where the house was to be. Said he expected Atchley to come and live on the place and that he expected to have a room there of his own to go to when he wanted to; he said something about Atchley coming and taking care of him. I said he could afford to give him a quarter section of land to get him to come and take care of him, and he said he could afford to give him a section. He said he did not want Atchley to come up here unless he had some prospects of having something by reason of his coming. He said that Atchley had worked a whole lot for him down there and that he wanted to do something for him.”

Boyd Jones, for plaintiff, testified: “I knew F. M. Phelps in his lifetime; knew him about two years. I had a conversation with Mr. Phelps about this place on which Mr. Atchley now lives. Mr. Phelps, Tom and myself were all that were present. He had been building a new house, and one Sunday I stopped in there. They were on the porch. I asked him who was going to live there; first I asked him who he had rented it to; he said it was not rented; said that Atchley was going to live there. He said that he, Atchley, was going to live on the place for his lifetime. He pointed to Tom Atchley and said: ‘That fellow there is going to live there/ ”

Bud Jordan, for plaintiff, testified as follows: “I had a conversation with F. M. Phelps along in the spring of 1906, with reference to the plaintiff, Tom Atchley. The first conversation I had, I had come to

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 S.W. 1105, 55 Tex. Civ. App. 538, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atchley-v-perry-texapp-1909.