Ayers v. Snowball

181 S.W. 827, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1253
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 23, 1915
DocketNo. 7025.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 181 S.W. 827 (Ayers v. Snowball) 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
Ayers v. Snowball, 181 S.W. 827, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1253 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

*828 LANE, J.

The 3,000 acres of land, situated in Harris county, Tex., of which the 600 acres sued for by plaintiffs, James Snowball and others, is a part, was patented to J. L. Stanley, and became and was the community property 'of said Stanley and his wife, Mary A. L. Stanley. In 1838 Stanley gaye a title bond for 1,000 acres of said land, described by metes and bounds, to J. W. Oates. The Oates tract was so surveyed that its north line extended from the west to the east line of said 3,000-acre tract, a distance of 18,933 varas, leaving the 600 acres, sued for in this cause, north of its north line. On the 1st day of October, 1840, at 10 o’clock a. m., two deeds were recorded in the deed records of Harris county, Tex. — one from J. L. Stanley to A. Wynn, dated October 1, 1840, reciting a consideration of $150, conveying 17 labors of land, which included the 3,000 acres above mentioned, and, for an additional consideration of $100, 100 head of cattle and their increase were conveyed. The other deed was from A. Wynn to Mary A. L. Stanley, wife of J. E. Stanley, conveying the same land and cattle for a recited consideration of . $100 for the land and $100 for the cattle. Both deeds were acknowledged before the same person, and witnessed by the same witnesses on the same date. Thereafter Stanley conveyed the 1,000 acres mentioned in the first part' hereof to Oates.

After the death of J. L. Stanley in 1843, his widow, Mary A. L. Stanley, married O. B. Monroe. After such marriage she, joined by her husband, sold to E. B. Wise 320 acres out' of the 3,000-acre tract lying just north ¡of the Oates 1,000 acres; but the deed by which they sought to pass the title to same, of date January 12, 1855, was never properly acknowledged, and by reason of this defect did not pass title to said Wise. In February, 1855, Mrs. Monroe, joined by her husband, s'old two tracts of 100 and 180 acres, respectively, out of the north portion of said 3,000-acre tract. The 320, 100, and 180 acre tracts mentioned composed the 600 acres of land sued for and joins the Oates tract on the north, and embraces all of said 3,000-acre tract which lies north 'of said Oates tract. On November 2, 1858, Mrs. Monroe and husband, for a recited consideration of $274, conveyed land to William Anders described as follows:

“The remaining balance of a tract of land known as the J. H. S. Stanley tract, of Green Bayou, containing 3,00o1 acres of land. The tract herein conveyed comprises all of the said Stanley tract which has not heretofore been soli by the said parties of the first part, being the remaining balance of land not heretofore sold of the tract of land conveyed by Archibald Wynn to Mary A. E. Stanley, now Monroe, as will appear from Harris County Records of Deeds, Book F, p. 483, be it 400 acres more or less.’’

On the 2d day of April, 1861, Sterling N. Dobie, by deed, conveyed to J. J. Cain certain land, a part of said 3,000-acre Stanley tract. Said, deed in describing the land conveyed contains the following:

“All that certain tract or parcel of land consisting of 1,000 acres, more or less, being one-third of 17 labors granted to J. E. Stanley and patented 22d day of October, 1845, situated and described as follows: In Harris county, on the west side of Green Bayou. * * * ”

Then follows further description showing the land conveyed to be one-third of the 3,-000-aere Stanley tract.

On the 19th day of July, 1862, Mrs. Mc-Nease, formerly Mrs. Mary A. L. Stanley, and husband, W. R. McNease, for a recited consideration conveyed to John J. Cain and George W. Hagy certain land described as follows:

“1,000 acres, more or less, of land out of the John E. Stanley 17 labors on Green Bayou in said Harris county, being the entire balance of said 17 labors not heretofore sold to Mary A. L., the said 17 labors having been conveyed to her by A. Wynn, by deed dated 2d Oct., 1840, and recorded on Harris County Records of Deeds, Book F, p. 483, and the intention of this deed and desire of the parties is to convey to said Gain & Hagy all the right, title and interest that ioe_ or either of its have jm, and to said la/nd, the said 1,000 acres being the same conveyed to said Gain by S. W. Dobie by deed dated April 2, 1862, and recorded on Harris Co. Records of Deeds, Book T, p. 142, the same being owned by said Dobie for his one-third interest in said labors for locating the same.”

J. L. Stanley died in 1843, and left surviving him his widow, Mary A. L. Stanley (who married O. B. Monroe, and after the death of Monroe married W. R. McNease) and his two children, William and Martha. There was no administration upon the estate of said J. L. Stanley. Mrs. Stanley, later Monroe and McNease, respectively, died in 1885, and by will devised such interest as she had in any of the said 3,000 acres to Mary A. L. Snowball. Mary A. E. Snowball died intestate, and left surviving her three children, to wit, Lillian E., Daisy D., and James B. Snowball. All the plaintiffs, except the Fer-gusons, who are hereinafter called the Snowballs, are admittedly entitled to the estate of Mary A. E. Stanley-Monroe-McNease, and Martha Stanley, her daughter, to all interest they had in the land involved in this suit at the time of their deaths. The plaintiffs Ferguson claim one-half of any estate J. L. Stanley had in said land, under a deed executed and delivered to him on the 23d day of April, 1879, by William Stanley, the son of J. L. Stanley, deceased.

The Snowballs and Ferguson brought this suit against appellants in the ordinary form of trespass to try title to the 600 acres out of the said 3,000-acre tract (Stanley tract), which lies north of the said Oates 1,000-acre tract, on the theory that the said 3,000-acre tract was the community property of J. L. Stanley and wife, Mary A. L., at the time of the death of said J. L. Stanley, and one-fourth thereof was .inherited by William Stanley, and passed by his deed to Ferguson, and that one-fourth thereof passed by inheritance to the daughter, Martha, and from her to the Snowballs, and that one-half thereof passed to the Snowballs by the will of Mrs. Mary A. *829 L. Stanley-Monroe-McNease; tlie Snowballs owning three-fourths and. the Fergusons one-fourth thereof.

Appellant J. O. League answered, alleging that the title to the said 3,000 acres of land originally patented to J. L. Stanley passed by the two deeds of J. L. Stanley to Wynn, and Wynn to Mrs. Mary A. L. Stanley, respectively, from the community estate of J. L. Stanley and wife to Mary A. L. Stanley as her separate property, and that by the said deed of Mrs. Stanley-Monroe, of date January 12, 1855, she conveyed 320 acres of the 600 acres sued for to E. R. Wise; that by the deed of the same party of date February 6, 1855, she conveyed ISO acres thereof to B. R. Wise; and that by the deed of same party of date February 4, 1856, she conveyed to John Kennedy 100 acres thereof, making a total of 600 acres so conveyed, being the 600 acres sued for by plaintiffs. He also alleged in said answer that he believes that said Mary A L. Stanley-Monroe executed and delivered to E. R.

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Related

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269 S.W. 1117 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1925)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
181 S.W. 827, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ayers-v-snowball-texapp-1915.