Ballingall v. Brown

226 S.W.2d 165, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1884
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 2, 1949
DocketNo. 15087
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 226 S.W.2d 165 (Ballingall v. Brown) 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
Ballingall v. Brown, 226 S.W.2d 165, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1884 (Tex. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

SPEER, Justice.

Plaintiffs, Albert Brown; William Fish-bein; Janet Fishbein, a minor, acting through a next friend; Dorothy Fishbein Wall, joined by her husband; and Dan Brown, instituted this suit on July 9, 1948, in statutory form of trespass to try title against defendants, Della Ballingall and her husband, to recover title and possession of about 12 acres of land in the Trinity River “botton,” inside the corporate limits of the City of Fort Worth. Parts of the land have been platted into lots and blocks and are thus described, while about half has not been platted and is described in the petition by metes and bounds.

Defendants answered with a plea of not guilty and a claim of title under the ten year statute of limitation by themselves and those under whom they hold and claim.

For a quick understanding of some of the complicated issues before us, it is certain that Mrs. L. A. Peterson, formerly Mrs. Alice Reeves, was a widow during the times material here; that in 1944 she died at an advanced age, after being bedridden for a year or more with cancer. Her age at the time of her death was only estimated but it is revealed that she had a great grandson 17 years of age; she left a will bequeathing her property to an invalid widowed daughter, who died of tuberculosis without issue early in 1948; the daughter lived with Mrs. Peterson on the involved property and remained there until her death. Aside from the invalid daughter, Mrs. Peterson left surviving her five other sons and daughters. After the death of the single daughter, two sons and two daughters, all adults, conveyed their respective interests to the other daughter, Mrs. Della Ballingall and she and her husband are the defendants in this suit.

Trial to a jury on special issues resulted in a verdict favorable to defendants, but upon motion by plaintiffs the court entered judgment non obstante veredicto for them, from which defendants have appealed.

Appellants’ (defendants below) first point of error contains more than a page [168]*168of purported evidentiary matters and arguments, concluding with this language : “The trial court erred in overruling the defendants’ motion for judgment and in sustaining the plaintiffs’ motion for judgment notwithstanding the findings of the jury to the contrary.”

We think the quoted portion of the point of error presents the controlling factor in this appeal. Before the cause was submitted to the jury the court refused to submit appellees’ requested peremptory instruction. After the verdict was returned, the appropriate motion by appellees for judgment non obstante veredicto was filed and considered by the court and some days later the motion was sustained and the judgment for appellees was entered, in which the court found substantially that there was no issue of fact raised by the testimony and that the peremptory instruction requested by appellees should have been given. If the court was correct that the instructed verdict should have been given, it was proper to enter the judgment non obstante veredicto (Rule 301, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure), otherwise it was error.

The testimony in this case, like most cases of its kind, is lengthy. It seems that in 1907 Mrs. Peterson and her family were required to move from a dairy farm when it was sold out and in an effort to help her a neighbor told her of an old vacant house, sometimes referred to as a shack, in the river bottom and advised her to move into it until she could find something better; neither she nor her friend knew who owned the property. The old house was on a part of about 40 acres enclosed by a barbed wire fence, which enclosure also included the 11 or 12 acres here in controversy, but the house was not on the land involved. No on* seems to know who owned the remainder of the enclosure, nor is it important here. Mrs. Peterson continued to remain in the house and for many years had cultivated parts of the land and pastured the reminder up to the time of her death in 1944. There is testimony from five or six persons who said that Mrs. Peterson at various times told them she owned the property, the precise time she began asserting ownership is not shown; as we shall later point out, uses, occupancy and claim of ownership prior to 1928 become immaterial.

Counsel for both sides stipulated many matters which were conclusively shown by the testimony in order to shorten the statement of facts; this commendable gesture by all parties has materially lessened our labors.

The material stipulations are in effect that: Appellees (plaintiffs) established in themselves a regular chain of title from the sovereignty of the soil to all lands in controversy, except Lot No. 9 (less than one acre), Grainger’s Third Addition; as to said Lot No. 9 appellees established a complete chain of title down to J. F. Ellis in 1886 but no conveyance out of Ellis; there is a complete chain of title to said Lot No. 9 beginning with the deed of Wilson to Key in 1890 to appellees; appellants’ possession began subsequent to 1890. During the years 1913 and 1919 appellees’ predecessors in title recovered judgment against Mrs. L. A. Peterson for title to the land (separate parts in those two suits covered all), and in 1919 Mrs. Peterson conveyed all her rights in the property to ap-pellees’ predecessors in title. In 1923 Dan and I. Brown, the former a plaintiff in this suit and the latter a predecessor in title of the other plaintiffs, recovered judgment against Mrs. Peterson for title to all the land in question and had their order for writ of possession. Notwithstanding all of said judgments and conveyances so stipulated, Mrs. Peterson continued to remain on the premises and to cultivate and use the part here in controversy the same as she had done previously in connection with the approximately 30 acres enclosed, which remainder, for all this record shows, she may own by prescriptive rights.

It is quite clear to us that appellants cannot claim title by limitation by virtue of any uses, occupancy or claims of ownership by Mrs. Peterson between the date of her entry in 1907 and 1923, because between those dates the court had decreed the title to each of the appellees and to their predecessors in title as against Mrs. Peterson. Moreover, Mrs. Peterson had [169]*169during that time quitclaimed her rights to them.

As best we can gather from the testimony, only one witness, a Mr. Pannill, stated that Mrs. Peterson ever claimed to own the land after 1928, when she leased it from appellees, which fact we shall notice later. Mr. Pannill was sued along with Mrs. Peterson for title and possession in 1940. Other witnesses either fixed the time they heard Mrs. Peterson claim ownership prior to 1928 or left a fair inference that it was before that year. Several witnesses said the general reputation in the neighborhood was that Mrs. Peterson owned the land but, like her declarations of ownership, they were indefinite as to the time.

If Mrs. Peterson and appellants ever ripened their prescriptive rights into title, it must have been subsequent to March 24, 1928. On that date appellee Dan Brown and I. Brown, a predecessor in title to the other appellees, entered into a written lease contract with Mrs. Peterson for the identical land here involved. By the terms of that instrument the lessee obliged herself to pay to lessors rentals of one-eighth of the corn and other crops produced on the land, to keep in repair the fences, to prevent waste, etc., and to “erect fences on the true boundary lines of lessors’ lands and to keep same in good state of repair during the continuance of this lease.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

KENNEDY CON., INC. v. Forman
316 S.W.3d 129 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2010)
Katz v. Rodriguez
563 S.W.2d 627 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1978)
Corder v. Foster
505 S.W.2d 645 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1973)
Jeffus v. Coon
484 S.W.2d 949 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1972)
Oswald v. Staton
421 S.W.2d 174 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1967)
Champion Paper & Fibre Company v. Wooding
321 S.W.2d 127 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1959)
Jones v. Bilderback
290 S.W.2d 580 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1956)
McDowell v. Greenland
259 S.W.2d 305 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1953)
Allen v. Sharp
233 S.W.2d 485 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1950)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
226 S.W.2d 165, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ballingall-v-brown-texapp-1949.