Bennett v. Latham

45 S.W. 934, 18 Tex. Civ. App. 403, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 93
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 24, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 45 S.W. 934 (Bennett v. Latham) 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
Bennett v. Latham, 45 S.W. 934, 18 Tex. Civ. App. 403, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 93 (Tex. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

Appellee, Latham, brought this suit against the appellants, Bennett and Burnett, to recover upon their warranties of title part of the purchase money paid by him to Bennett for a tract of land bought-by him from Bennett, and by Bennett from *404 Burnett, as containing 640 acres, but which contained only 492 acres. The land was described in the petition as being section No. 5, patented to Burnett as assignee of Beaty, Seale & Farwood, and its metes and bounds as given in the deed from Bennett to Latham were set out. It was alleged that Burnett sold and conveyed the section to Bennett, as ■containing 640 acres, by the acre, at $7 per acre, with general warranty ■of title, and that Bennett had in same way conveyed it to Latham at ■$9 per acre. Breach of both warranties was alleged to have occurred through a conflict between the tract conveyed and the Mary Sloan, an -older survey, in consequence of which plaintiff had been evicted of 148 ■acres. The petition also charged that Bennett had pointed out the boundaries of the tract conveyed to plaintiff, and represented it to contain 640 acres, and that the sale and purchase were effected under mutual mistake of both parties as to quantity. There were allegations conicerning a former suit by one Burgess against Latham in which, it was ■■asserted, the eastern boundary of section No. 5 had been fixed so as to ■conclude Bennett, but in the view taken of the case this becomes immaterial.

The court below rendered judgment in plaintiff’s favor, for the value of the deficiency, against both defendants at $7 per acre, and, in addition, against Bennett at $2 per acre; and gave judgment over in Bennett’s favor against Burnett for the amount adjudged against them jointly, or such part of it as Bennett should pay to Latham; but refused to allow plaintiff interest upon the money paid Bennett for the shortage in the land.

The defendants have prosecuted a joint appeal, and plaintiff has assigned as error the refusal to allow interest.

Section 5 was patented to Burnett, as assignee of Beaty, Seale & Farwood, March 21, 1879, by the following field notes: “Beginning at 'S. W. corner of survey No. 5, Washington County Railroad Co.; thence north with its west line 2000 varas; thence west 1547 varas stake on east line of Mary Sloan’s survey; thence S., 10 degrees W., 1479 varas to M. Sloan’s S. E. corner; thence N., 80 degrees W., 290 varas; thence S., 10 -degrees W., 6Ó3 varas; thence east 2193 varas to beginning, containing 640 acres.”

April 3, 1890, Burnett conveyed it by the same field notes to Bennett, ■at $7 per .acre for 640 acres. December 13, 1892, Bennett conveyed it to Latham, as containing 640 acres, at $9 per acre, which consideration was paid April 3, 1893. This deed described the land as “640 acres patented to J. H. Burnett as assignee of Beaty, Seale & Farwood, known as Beaty, Seale & Farwood survey No. 5.” “Beginning at the S. E. corner of the Mary Sloan survey; thence N., 10 degrees E., 1479 varas to a stake for corner; thence east 1547 varas to a stake for corner; thence south 2000 varas to a stake for corner; thence N., 10 degrees E., 603 varas to a stake for corner; thence S., 80 degrees E., 290 varas to beginning, containing 640 acres.”

Both parties, at the time of the sale, supposed the section to contain *405 640 acres, and Bennett so represented it to Latham. The parties went upon the ground and some of the supposed corners and boundaries on the west and north were pointed out, but it is not made clearly to appear where these were with reference to the true lines and corners of the Sloan survey. It does satisfactorily appear, however, that Latham bought by the acre upon the representation that there were 640 acres in the survey. Prior to the original survey of the section in question, a block of surveys had been made on the ground for the Washington County Bailroad Company, of which Ho. 5 called for in the field notes of the Beaty, Seale & Farwood Ho. 5, was the most westerly. It was in the open prairie, and its lines and corners were unmarked. It tied on the north to the Mary Fabreau survey, which in turn tied to the Williams or McKissick league. Its location could only be ascertained by running the lines of those surveys. A surveyor who testified in the trial below and whose evidence was evidently adopted by the court, made a survey, and in the way indicated established the situation of the Washington County survey Ho. 5. It was found to harmonize with the field notes of the other surveys for the same company lying east of Ho. 5, which were marked on the ground, and with all other surrounding surveys. This evidence satisfactorily established the location of the Washington County survey Ho. 5. The Mary Sloan, on the west of the section in controversy, was a well-known survey, of which the lines were easily established, though its eastern boundary was in the prairie and unmarked. There is nothing upon the ground to indicate that the section in controversy was actually surveyed when located.

In March or April, 1893, Latham, by tenant, took possession of the section in question, built two houses and fenced about 160 acres. He testified that he took possession of the entire section, and that his tenant had the right to use all of it, but it affirmatively appears that no part of the improvement was upon the Sloan survey, and it does not appear whether or not any of it was within the lines of the Washington County survey Ho. 5. Hence it is not shown that he ever had pedal possession of any of the land within the lines of the section.

After the location of the section in question, the certificate, by virtue of which the Washington County Bailroad survey Ho. 5 had been made, was floated, and a location in favor of C. W. Pressler, extending to the western line of the former survey, was made, and east of it and on part of the land formerly occupied by the former survey, another certificate, in favor of the International & Great Horthern Bailroad, was located. If the western line of the survey Ho. 5, Washington County Bailroad Company, and the eastern line of the Mary Sloan survey are located according to the evidence of the surveyor referred to, the space between them occupied by the survey in question is less than 640 acres by 148 acres. To include 640 acres the lines of the section would have to be extended beyond the line of the Sloan on the west, or that of the other survey on the east.

The first assignment of error attacks the petition as stating no cause *406 of action. The point urged is, that the allegations failed to show a breach of warranty, in that they assert that part of the land conveyed to plaintiff is embraced within the Sloan survey, and at the same time show that the deed conveyed no part of that survey. If this were all the petition alleged, the proposition might be true. Indeed, we think it is true that the petition does not show a breach of the warranty. The covenant relates to the premises conveyed by the deed, and not to quantity. The petition shows that there could not be a conflict between the lines of the tract conveyed and those of the Sloan tract, since the deed makes the eastern line of the Sloan the western boundary of the land which it describes. The covenant could not be held to apply to any land occupied by the Sloan survey, inasmuch as the deed excludes that land from its description.

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Bluebook (online)
45 S.W. 934, 18 Tex. Civ. App. 403, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-latham-texapp-1898.