Ballard v. Carmichael

18 S.W. 734, 83 Tex. 355, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 748
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1892
DocketNo. 6923.
StatusPublished
Cited by82 cases

This text of 18 S.W. 734 (Ballard v. Carmichael) 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
Ballard v. Carmichael, 18 S.W. 734, 83 Tex. 355, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 748 (Tex. 1892).

Opinion

OPINION ON REHEARING.

GAINES, Associate Justice.

This was an action of trespass to •try title, brought by the appellees against the appellants, W. C. Ballard and John Labriere, for the recovery of a tract of 1476 acres of land, patented to the heirs of John F. Morgan. The trial was had before the court without a jury, and resulted in a judgment for plaintiffs for an undivided interest of seven-twelfths in the land, and for the defendant Labriere for an undivided interest of five-twelfths. All parties complain of the judgment.

We will first dispose of appellants’ assignment of errors.

The original certificate by virtue of which the land was patented was issued to the heirs of John F. Morgan. The plaintiffs’ original chain of title under the patent consisted, first, of an alleged transfer of the original certificate by Eleanor Fipher, sole heir of Morgan, to one James Johnston; second,- deed from the executors of the will of James Johnston to S. J. T. Johnston, made by virtue of a power contained in the will; third, deed from S. J. T. Johnston to John Carmichael. The plaintiffs were heirs of John Carmichael, and had a conveyance from A. G. Carmichael and J. A. D. Carmichael, who, we presume, *359 were the only other heirs. The proof seems defective as to the heir-ship of the two persons last named, but no point is made upon it in the brief of appellants.

The plaintiffs also introduced in evidence deeds from all the heirs of James Johnston to themselves to the land in controversy. . These deeds recite, in effect, that they were made for the purpose of confirming the sale and conveyance by the executors of the will of James Johnston to S. J. T. Johnston. But they were made after the suit was instituted, but before the filing of the amended petition. They also introduced in evidence a deed from 8. J. T. Johnston to themselves to the land in controversy, which recites, in effect, that it was for the purpose of making good his deed to John Carmichael. This deed was also executed after the commencement of this suit.

For the purpose, as we presume, of availing themselves of this after-acquired title, the plaintiffs, subsequent to the date of the deeds last named, filed an amended petition, in which they alleged, first, a trespass by the defendants on a day anterior to the filing of the original petition, and then another as of a date subsequent to that of the confirmatory conveyances.

The defendants excepted to the amended petition, on the ground that it alleged a trespass subsequent to the institution of the suit. The court overruled the exception, and we think that the ruling was correct. Our system of pleading permits the utmost liberality of amendment, and it has been too often ruled that the plaintiff may at any time before the trial abandon the old and set up by amendment a new cause of action to require the citation of authority to support the proposition. In such a case, the plaintiff makes himself liable to pay all costs which have accrued up to the time of the amendment, and if the parties defendant are in court by answer no service of process is required of them; but in all other respects the - action proceeds precisely the same as a new suit. And we see no reason why a plaintiff may not set up new grounds of recovery which have occurred since the beginning of his suit without abandoning his original cause of action. Should he fail, however, upon his original cause of action, but recover upon the new, he should as a rule be adjudged to pay all costs that had accrued up to the time the amendment was filed.

In connection with the assignment of error upon the action of the court in overruling the demurrer to the amended petition, the appellants submit another, which is upon its ruling in admitting in evidence the deeds executed after the suit was brought. It was doubtless for the purpose of admitting the after-acquired title that the amendment was filed. The rule is elementary that a plaintiff can not recover in trespass to try title upon a title acquired subsequent to the institution of the suit. But we can not see why he should not be permitted to renew his action by amendment, and thus place himself in position to *360 avail himself of his after-acquired title. Collins v. Ballow, 72 Texas, 330. The same reasons exist for permitting a new cause of action to be set up after suit in this class of cases which obtain in other cases. The rule as applied in our courts guards every right of the defendant, and tends to save expense and time and to bring the real matters in issue between the parties to a speedy determination. As we regard the amended petition in this case, it alleged the original cause of action, and in addition thereto one which accrued after'the suit was brought and before the amendment was filed. This, as we have seen, the plaintiffs had the right to do; and it follows that they had' also the right to establish their case by proving any title which they had acquired before the date of the amendment.

It was proved that Eleanor Fipher was the sister and sole heir of John F. Morgan. During the trial the plaintiffs were permitted to read in evidence, over the objections of the defendants, an instrument in writing of which the following is a copy:

“Received of James Johnston $323.27 in full for our interest in the land warrants John F. Morgan, deceased, was entitled to in Texas, we being the only surviving heirs, which we transferred to said Johnston the 3d day of this month. April 5, 1850.

[Signed] “John Fipher,

“Eleanor Fipher.”

To the introduction of the writing sundry objections were interposed. The objection among others was urged, that it did not describe the certificate by virtue of which the land in controversy was patented. The certificate was for one-third of a league, and was such as was issued to an immigrant who was not the head of a family. Morgan having been not only an immigrant, but also a soldier in the war of the Texas revolution, and having fallen at Goliad, his heirs in addition to that certificate became entitled to what are known as bounty and donation warrants, which were also issued. But we are of opinion that the evidence of the right to land now in question, though commonly known as a certificate and so designated in the statutes, was to all intents and purposes a land warrant; and that the admission in the receipt under consideration is to be construed as embracing all claims for land to which the subscribers were entitled as the heirs of Morgan. Land warrants and land certificates are in a general sense and in legal effect the same.

The receipt was also objected to upon the ground that it was not privily acknowledged by Eleanor Fipher in the manner provided by law for the conveyance of the property of married women. If the instrument purported to be a conveyance of the certificate, we are of the opinion that the objection would have been well taken. But it is not a conveyance, but a receipt containing a distinct admission that the *361 parties who signed it had transferred the warrants to Johnston on a day anterior to that on which the writing was executed. We see no reason, therefore, why it may not be received in evidence to prove the fact admitted—provided, always, that such fact be capable of proof by admission and relevant to the issue to be determined.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 S.W. 734, 83 Tex. 355, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 748, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ballard-v-carmichael-tex-1892.