Baldwin v. Smith

181 S.W. 785, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1239
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 2, 1915
DocketNo. 32. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 181 S.W. 785 (Baldwin v. Smith) 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
Baldwin v. Smith, 181 S.W. 785, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1239 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

BROOKE, J.

This is an action of trespass to try title, filed by C. N. Smith, Ab J. Jett and Jef Cochran coming in as intervening plaintiffs, against Jacob C. Baldwin, P. M. Tanner, Anna Charles, and husband, John Charles, John Crost, Eliza Dever, nSe Crost, and husband, Bill Dever, Grace Blocker, née Croft, and husband, and Jack Blocker, to recover 262%, acres of land, the east half of the 525-acre tract known as subdivision No. 4 of the B. Tarkington league, in Liberty county, Tex. The land involved is described in the judgment rendered in the case. The defendant Jacob C. Baldwin filed plea of not guilty and cross-bill against the plaintiff and the interveners and his codefendants, asking judgment in his favor for the land involved. All parties defendant were duly served, and answered; Baldwin’s codefend-ants, in effect, disclaiming any interest in the land. Baldwin was the only defendant who asserted title to the land, and the controversy-was between him, the plaintiff, and the interveners. The case was tried by the court without a jury, and judgment was rendered for the interveners for the land involved, and for the plaintiff and interveners for costs of suit, to which judgment and conclusions of law and fact the defendant Jacob C. Baldwin excepted and gave notice of appeal, an;d the case is properly before this court.

On February 13, 1847, the state of Texas issued to B. Tarkington, who was then a married man, a patent to one league of land, located in Liberty county, Tex. He died February 13, 1861, and his wife died in August, 1865. They left several children surviving them, who partitioned the estate of their father and mother in October, 1865. In that partition the other heirs of B. Tarkington conveyed or set aside to Mary Tanner, who was the daughter of B. Tarkington, and who was at that time the wife of James R. Tanner, her share of the interest in her mother’s and father’s estate, which was 525 acres of said B. Tarkington league, and being subdivision No. 4, the east half of which is involved in this suit, whereby the property became her separate estate.

James R. Tanner and Mary Tanner lived together as husband and wife from the date of their marriage, which was prior to 1860. About 1880 James R. Tanner died, and some time thereafter his wife, Mary Tanner, also died. About October 12, 1870, a man by the name of Francis Hammer came into the neighborhood from the state of Ohio, and bought from some of the heirs of B. Tarkington their subdivisions of said land. On that date, according to the testimony of John L. Tarkington, he saw Mary Tanner and her husband, James R. Tanner, sign a deed to Francis Hammer by which they conveyed to him said subdivision No. 4, for a consideration of 50 cents per acre, which the grantee paid in gold. This deed was executed in the house of a man named Mel McGinnis, who lived upon the Tarkington league; that is, a party gathered there, and a justice of the peace named Evans was present. James R. Tanner and wife appeared before this justice, and, as the witness says, signed and ae- *786 knowledged the deed, but he does not know whether it was properly acknowledged or acknowledged as required by law, with reference to the acknowledgment of a married woman. He does not know whether any or all of the requirements of law were complied with, or whether the certificate of acknowledgment was ever placed on the deed.

The plaintiffs and interveners showed a regular chain of title from Francis Hammer down to themselves. The first deed in the chain of title, from Francis Hammer to John Lyford is dated July 15, 1875. The other deeds in plaintiff’s and interveners’ chain of title are dated at intervals from that date down to the one to plaintiffs and interveners, which is dated the 17th day of July, 1913. This chain of title consists of six transfers, and in each- -of said deeds is found a recital substantially the same as that found in the first deed from Francis Hammer to John Ly-ford, dated July 15, 1875, and which the court found was of record in the Deed Records of Liberty County in Book P, page 120. The recitals in all of said instruments were as follows:

“All that tract or parcel of land lying and being situated in the county of Liberty, state of Texas, and being part of the Barton Tarkington league of land originally patented to Barton Tarkington and said tract conveyed to Mary Tanner one of the heirs, by deed of partition among said heirs of Barton Tarkington, deceased, on the 20th day of October, 1865, and conveyed by said Mary Tanner, joined by her husband, James Tanner, to Francis Hammer, by deed dated the 12th day of October, 1870, and described as lot 4 in Hammer plat.”

On the 25th of October, 1906, the sole and only heirs of Mary Tanner, who are the co-defendants with Baldwin, conveyed said subdivision No. 4 of the B. Tarkington league, which is the land that was set aside by Mary Tanner in the partition of the estate of B. Tarkington and his wife to B. I. Sparks, who conveyed the same to Annie Lomax, who conveyed the same to Jacob O. Baldwin, and the defendant Baldwin is the legal owner of whatever title, if any, that was in Mary Tanner at the time of her death.

James R. Tanner and Mary Tanner lived near the land in question, after it is alleged that they sold the same to Francis Hammer, until about 1880, when James R. Tanner died, and Mary Tanner continued to live near the said land until the time of her death, which took place many years afterward, and no claim was ever made by either of them during their lifetime to the land in question, and no claim was made by the heirs, so far as the record shows, of Mary Tanner, until about the 25th day of October, 1906.

The court found that due diligence, search, and inquiry had been made for the deed supposed to have been executed by Mary Tanner and her husband, James R. Tanner, to Francis Hammer on the 12th day of October, 1870, and it finds that the said deed was seen by Mrs. Lincoln H. Hyer, of Los An-geles, Cal., and that the same was destroyed among her husband’s papers in the year 1904, and that her husband is now dead. Therefore the court admitted the testimony of J. L. Tarkington, who testified as follows:

“I am a brother of Mary Tanner. She is dead. She married James R. Tanner, and he is dead, too. I remember when the Barton Tarkington league was partitioned. I remember seeing a deed executed by Mary Tanner and her husband, James R. Tanner, to Francis Hammer. It was at Mel McGinnis’ house on Tarkington prairie in Liberty county. I was present, and I seen her and her husband sign it. Maj. Evans, they called him, took her and her husband’s acknowledgment. He held the position of justice of peace. I also executed a deed there that day before Maj. Evans. I sold to Francis Hammer. I don’t think any one else sold to Francis Hammer that day. I and my sister and her husband signed their deeds. It was at Mel McGinnis’ house on Tarkington prairie. Maj. Evans, the justice of the peace, took the acknowledgments, and I paid him the money right there in the house for taking the acknowledgments. You ask me since that time have any of the heirs of Mary Tanner or Tarkington heirs asserted claim or claimed any part of that land, and I say I never knew of them to claim nary foot of it since that time. They haven’t put up no claim at all in any way. You ask me all I know about it is they were there and executed some kind of a deed, and Maj. Evans took their acknowledgments,' and I say we made the deeds to Hammer.

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Related

Temple Lumber Co. v. Pulliam
272 S.W. 587 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
181 S.W. 785, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-smith-texapp-1915.