Baldwin v. Root

40 S.W. 3, 90 Tex. 546, 1897 Tex. LEXIS 343
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 40 S.W. 3 (Baldwin v. Root) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baldwin v. Root, 40 S.W. 3, 90 Tex. 546, 1897 Tex. LEXIS 343 (Tex. 1897).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

A. K. Boot sued J. H. Baldwin, J. C. Baldwin, J. L. Baldwin, and Ed. J. Hamner, in the District Court of Haskell County, to recover a tract of land situated in that county, patented to the heirs of Jonas Harrison, Sr., deceased, by virtue of unlocated balance certificate No. 2476-2577. The plaintiff, however, really claimed only three fourths of the land. E. J. Hamner disclaimed any interest-in the land. The facts as found by the Court of Civil Appeals, and shown by the undisputed evidence in the record, are, in substance, as follows:

Jonas Harrison, Sr., immigrated to Texas in 1835, with his wife, Eleanor, and eight children. He died August 6, 1836, leaving surviving him his widow and their children—Margaret, Jonas, Jr., Jacob, D. C., John, Thomas J., William and Almira Harrison. On the 4th day of April, 1839, the Board of Land Commissioners of Shelby County issued to the “legal representatives of Jonas Harrison” a certificate for a league and labor of land, and on July 1, 1852, the Commissioner of the General Land Office of the State issued to “the heirs of Jonas Harrison deceased” a certificate numbered 2476-2577 for the unlocated balance of the original certificate. The unlocated balance certificate was located and surveyed in 1856 and patent issued in the name of the heirs of Jonas Harrison, deceased, April 6th, 1870.

A. K. Boot claimed the land hy virtue of the transfer of an interest in the unlocated balance certificate, made to Charles Turner, November 10, 1855, prior to the location of the said certificate, by Eleanor Harrison, surviving widow of Jonas Harrison, and five of his children, to-wit: John, Thomas, William and D. C. Harrison and Almira Daniels, formerly Almira Harrison, who was a married woman at the time the transfer was made, but the certificate of her acknowledgment thereto was so defective that the instrument was void and no claim made under it.

By the transfer each of the parties conveyed all of his or her interest *550 in the certificate, but it was specified that the interest of Mrs. Eleanor Harrison was one-half and the interest of each of the other parties was 102f acres. The instrument contains the following clause: “We hereby relinquish all of our right and title in and to the within described duplicate certificate, for the consideration before mentioned, unto the said Charles Turner and his heirs, and do by these presents forever warrant and defend the right and title to the 1333-§- acres of the said certificate and the land surveyed by virtue of the same to the said Charles Turner, his-heirs, etc., against the claims of all other person or persons.”

The transfer was filed in the general land office November 13, 1863, and was recorded in Haskell County August 12, 1892. A. K. Hoot had a regular chain of transfers from Turner to himself which were duly recorded in Haskell County. Mrs. Eleanor Harrison died in 1866.

J. H. Baldwin, who is the plaintiff in error, claimed title to all of the land under the heirs of Jouas Harrison Sr.by the conveyances hereinafter stated. When the dates of the deeds are not given they are unimportant, being made after the patent was issued, and before the deed was made-from J. C. Baldwin to J. H. Baldwin.

Margaret Harrison married William Thomas and they both died, leaving four children, two of whom—Benjamin Thomas and Almira Gaston— by power of attorney coupled with an interest to E. J. Hamner and deed from Hamner, conveyed to J. C. Baldwin their interest in the land. Eleanor Thomas, who married P. H. Plarrison, and Mary A. Thomas, who married one Mays, conveyed their interests in the land to J. C. Baldwin, the-deed specifying that it was a conveyance of the interest of the parties-named, “let the same be -little or much.” P. H. Harrison, who was the heir of Jonas Harrison and who died in 1864, joined in the same deed, lie-being the husband of Eleanor Harrison.

Almira, who was also an heir of Jonas Harrison, and who married George K. Deaton, together with her husband and John Harrison, one of the children of Jonas Harrison Sr., conveyed each his interest to J. H. Baldwin by deed dated November 5, 1891, reciting that it was made in lieu of a prior deed made June 16, 1891, which had been lost, and the loss-of it was proved by the testimony of J. C. Baldwin.

Jacob Harrison died in 1867, leaving one daughter—Eleanor—who married M. S. Eord, and she and her husband conveyed her interest in the land to J. C. Baldwin January 2, 1891, reciting “be it much or little.”

Almira Harrison married Samuel Daniels, both of whom died leaving four children—W. G., John C., Biehard and Kate Daniels. The latter married J. A. Wheeler, and all of them by deed and power of attorney to E. J. Hamner conveyed to J. C. Baldwin their interest in the land on the 10th day of October, 1890.

Thomas Harrison died in 1868, leaving one son—Samuel—who conveyed his interest in the land to J. C. Baldwin January 2, 1891.

D. C. Harrison and William Harrison jointly conveyed to J. C. Baldwin the interest of each in the land in controversy by deed dated Decern *551 her 5, 1890, which contained the statement that the interest of the parties was conveyed, “let it he much or little.”

A general warranty deed from J. C. Baldwin to J. H. Baldwin, dated December 10, 1890, conveyed all of the land for a consideration of $5000 cash paid, the payment of which was proved to have been made. The trial judge in his findings of fact states that this deed conveyed the interest of J. C. Baldwin in the land, which we took to' have been an inadvertent omission on Ms part, as he made up the statement of facts himself, the parties having disagreed, and his conclusions of law were not based upon the terms of tMs instrument. We therefore conclude that we should consider this deed as it is set out in the statement of facts.

W. A. Huffman, who claimed under the transfer to Turner and under whom Root claims the land, paid all taxes upon it from 1885 to 1890 inclusive. J. H. Baldwin paid all taxes on the land from 1891 to 1895 inclusive. Baldwin has had the open actual exclusive and continuous adverse possession of the land since November 1, 1890. This suit was filed April 26, 1895.

At the time the deed w*as made by J. C. Baldwin to J. H. Baldwin the former lived in Haskell County and the latter in FanMn County. J. C. Baldwin was then the agent and attorney in fact for J. H. Baldwin, acting under a power of attorney which authorized Mm to sell and convey upon such terms as he might choose “any and all lands of whatsoever description that I own in Haskell County, Texas, or that I may hereafter buy in said county, either in partnership with said J. C. Baldwin or in my own separate name.”

At the time and before E. J. Hamner conveyed the land to J. C. Baldwin the latter owned an abstract of title to lands in Haskell County, which showed the existence and registration of the several deeds from Turner to Huffman. J. C. Baldwin was an attorney at law and passed on the title to all land, including that in question, purchased by J. H. Baldwin in Haskell County, and in doing so acted with the consent and knowledge of J. II. Baldwin.

The Court of Civil Appeals finds that “the evidence fails to show that J. H.

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40 S.W. 3, 90 Tex. 546, 1897 Tex. LEXIS 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-root-tex-1897.