Baylor v. Tillebach

49 S.W. 720, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 490, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 194
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 1, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 49 S.W. 720 (Baylor v. Tillebach) 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
Baylor v. Tillebach, 49 S.W. 720, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 490, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 194 (Tex. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

This is a suit in trespass to try title brought on September 3, 1895, by Sallie S. Baylor, who is joined by her husband, G. W. Baylor, against C. Tillebach, N. C. Tillebach, John Hoeffel, S. T. Fontaine, Nicholas Zupanna, and Bartolo Fillol, to recover 200 acres of land, which is a part of Oflatt’s Bayou, formerly called Oyster Bayou, situated on Galveston Island.

The petition of appellants was in the ordinary form of -trespass to try title.

The first four named appellees (defendants below) by their answer plead not guilty, statute of limitations of ten years, a pre-emption claim to the land in controversy, use and occupation thereof for more than twenty years, improvements thereon in good faith, and that the patent to the land under which appellants claim, if ever issued, is void.

*491 The other two defendants answered separately by general demurrers and pleas of not guilty. The attorney Avho answered for N. Zupanna withdreAV from the case, stating as his reason therefor that since filing the ansAver for his client, plaintiffs had settled Avith him.

Other parties intervened, but before the cause was tried, with the permission of the court, withdrav their petition in intervention.

By supplemental petition in replication to appellee’s pleas of limitation, appellant Sallie S. Baylor pleaded coverture.

The cause was tried with a jury, Avho under a peremptory instruction of the court returned a verdict against appellants, upon which a judgment against them Avas entered in favor of all the appellees.

For convenience Ave will state here the supposd chain of title relied upon by appellants to recover the property, and then consider the several links in it claimed by appellees to be broken or defective. It is as folIoavs:

1. A patent issued by the Republic of Texas on November 18, 1840, to EdAArard Hall and Levi J ones, granting them 18,215 acres of land on Galveston Island, which land includes the premises in controversy. This patent Avas by a special Act of the Legislature of the State of Texas, on the 18th day of February, 1854, confirmed, and by said act the State disclaims any title to the land described in the patent.

2. A decree of the District Court of Galveston Couiiiy, Texas, entered on May 18, 1844, dividing 18,215 acres of land described in the above patent in fourteen sections of 1280 each, allotting the odd sections to EdAvard Hall, and the even sections, including section 2, of which the land in controversy is a part, to Levi Jones.

3. A deed of trust, which purports to have been executed on June 14, 1847, by Levi Jones and J. S. Sydnor to Oscar Farish and Pryor Bryan, trustees, for the benefit of Joseph Emerson, to secure a note of that date made to him for $2478 by the grantors in said trust deed, payable December 14th folloAving, conveying, Avith other lands, the 1280 acres constituting section 2 allotted to Levi Jones in the partition betAveen him and Hall, it being recited in the instrument that said section 2, except twenty acres previously sold, is the property of Levi Jones. This instrument empowers the trustees or either of them to sell the premises in default of payment of the note, and directs that sale be first made of the property of Levi Jones described therein. This deed of trust AAns acknoAvledged by the grantors before Oscar Farish (one of the trustees therein), clerk of the County Court of Galveston County, and from the records of deeds appears to have been recorded in the office of the county clerk of Galveston County on June 15, 1857.

4. A deed which purports to have been made on May 22, 1849, by Oscar Farish as trustee by virtue of the deed of trust above mentioned, conveying to J. S. Sydnor 1185 acres, a part of the 1280-acre tract designated as section 2 in said deed of trust. This deed refers to a release of seventy-five acres of the land originally embraced in the trust deed, and excludes from its conveyance the quantity of land so released. It also *492 purports to be signed by the beneficiary, Joseph Emerson, who, according to its recitals, acknowledges that he received the purchase money paid by Sydnor at said sale. This instrument also purports to have been acknowledged by the grantor, Oscar Earish, before himself as clerk of the County Court of Galveston County, on July 10, 1849, and filed and recorded in the office of said county clerk on the same day, and it appears of record in said office in Book “J,” page 83.

o. John S. Sydnor died in the latter part of 1869. He left a will which was duly probated by the County Court of Galveston County on the 25th day of October, 1869, which provides for an equal distribution of his estate among his children, one of whom is the appellant Sallie S. Baylor. In the decree of partition of the estate of J. S. Sydnor among his children, which was made on April 12, 1880, by the County Court of Galveston County, the 200-acre tract in Offatt’s Bayou on Galveston Island, in Galveston County, originally granted to- Hall and Jones in section 2 of their division, which embraces the land in controversy, was allotted to Sallie Sydnor Baylor, wife of George W. Baylor.

Had the original instruments constituting appellant’s supposed chain of title been brought from proper custody and introduced in evidence, a complete chain of title to the land in controversy emanating from the sovereignty of the soil and terminating in the appellant, Sallie S. Baylor, would have been shown, and to have defeated her right of recovery, appellee would have had to show either a superior title emanating from the same source from which Mrs. Baylor’s sprung, or that they had acquired title to the land and she was precluded from recovering it by virtue of the statute of limitation. There is, however, no testimony tending to show a common source of title; and the uncontradicted evidence discloses that appellants were married on the 22d day of April, 1863, and that Mrs. Baylor has remained a covert ever since. Her coverture therefore prevented the running of the statute of limitations against her until April 1, 1895, when article 3201, Revised Statutes, was so amended as to make the statute of limitations run against a married woman. Therefore, unless appellees had acquired title to the property in controversy by limitations prior to the date of appellants’ marriage, the statute of limitations could not avail them as a defense. If there is any evidence at all tending to show that the statute of limitations began to run in favor of any of the appellee’s prior to April 22, 1863, the date of appellant’s marriage, it certainly does not possess such cogency as would warrant the court to withdraw the question of limitations from the jury and instruct a verdict upon such issue against the appellants. Therefore the trial court must have based its peremptory instruction to the jury upon the theory that one or more links in the chain of title asserted by appellants, as above stated, was not sufficiently established by the evidence.

The patent from the Republic of Texas to Hall and Jones, affidavit of the loss of the original having been made, was proven by a certified copy from the records of the County Court of Galveston County. But by cross-assignment of error it is contended by appellees that a certified *493

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Bluebook (online)
49 S.W. 720, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 490, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baylor-v-tillebach-texapp-1899.