Bigham v. Stamps

212 S.W. 775, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 747
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 26, 1919
DocketNo. 8095.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 212 S.W. 775 (Bigham v. Stamps) 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
Bigham v. Stamps, 212 S.W. 775, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 747 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

[1 ] This is the second appeal of this case. The opinion on the former appeal is reported in 187 S. W. 733. It is a suit instituted by the appellee against appellant to recover a tract of land, a part of the D. Bratt survey, situated in Freestone county. The defendant pleaded not guilty. The statutes of limitation of five and ten years, and set up claim to only a part of the land in controversy. No evidence appears to have been offered in support of the pleas of limitation. The case was tried by the court without a jury and the trial resulted in a judgment for the appellee. At a former day of the present term we affirmed the judgment of the district court because no fundamental error was apparent on the face of the record and because we were then of the opinion that the statement of facts filed with the transcript in the case fails to comply with the statute which requires that such statement shall be agreed to by .the parties and approved by the judge, or in the event of-a failure of the parties to agree that a statement of facts shall be prepared and certified to by the judge filed In duplicate with the clerk of the trial court, and the original sent to the appellate court as a part of the record. Upon a consideration of appellant’s motion for rehearing we reached the conclusion that we erred in declining to consider the statement of *776 facts, and set aside our judgment affirming the case.

The statement of facts sent to this court is signed by counsel for appellee only with the words, “Approved as the statement of facts,’’ and signed by' “A. M. Blackmon, Judge Seventy-Seventh Judicial District of Texas.” The caption shows the style and number of the case, and recites:

“The following pages contain a full, true, and correct statement of all the material facts adduced in evidence at the trial of said cause.”

There is a certificate that—

“It is agreed by and between the counsel for the plaintiff and the counsel for the defendant that the foregoing 35 pages contain a full, true, and correct statement of all the material facts adduced in evidence at said trial of said cause, styled and numbered in the caption hereof, and that the same is agreed to as the statement of facts in said cause.”

This certificate, as above indicated, is signed by counsel for appellee only; the name of counsel for appellant being omitted. In our search for authority upon the question, after the opinion declining to consider the statement of facts for the reason stated was handed down, which will be withdrawn, we find that the Supreme Court of this state, in the case of Schneider & Davis v. Stephens, 60 Tex. 410, has expressly decided that a statement of facts, certified to by the judge before whom the case was tried as an agreed statement, and which is only signed by counsel for one of the parties to the suit, may be considered on appeal, the presumption being that it was properly certified, citing McManus v. Wallis, 52 Tex. 534. We also find that in Dwyer v. Testard, 1 White & W. Civ. Cas. Ct. App. § 1229, it was held that where, in the beginning of the paper, it purported to be the statement of facts in the case, and concluded, “We agree that the above is a correct statement of the facts given in evidence on the trial of this case,” and is signed by counsel for one of the parties, and is indorsed “Approved,” and signed by the judge who tried the case the paper was “sufficiently authenticated to require it to be considered as a statement of facts.” That case was distinguished from Renn v. Samos, 42 Tex. 104, in the fact that in the latter case there was nothing in the beginning or conclusion of the paper purporting to be a statement of facts to indicate that it was intended as such statement. In the case at bar the paper purporting to.be a statement of facts is signed by counsel for appellee and indórsed approved as the statement of facts in the case. In its beginning and conclusion it is stated that it is a statement of the facts proved on the trial, and following the authorities cited it should and will be treated as a statement of facts in the case.

The controversy grows out of a dispute as to the true location of the boundary line between lands owned by the respective parties. The trial court filed the following conclusions of fact and law:

“Conclusions of Fact.
“(1) In September of the year 1898 the defendant, E. Y. Bigham, and one J. C. Wells owned in common or jointly a tract of land in Freestone county, Tex., aggregating 287 acres, of which the land in controversy in this suit is a part.
“(2) In November, 1898, the defendant, Big-ham, and the said J. C. Wells effected a partition of said tract of land, the defendant Big-ham executing at the time a deed to J. C. Wells which embraced the land in controversy in this suit. Wells executed a deed to Bigham to all that portion of the 298 acres lying east of a line running south 30° east from the ell corner of the Bratt survey. The defendant, Bigham, erected a fence along the west line of the portion deeded him by Wells, and assorted no title or claim to any portion of the tract west of this line until about the year 1910.
“(3) In October, 1898, J. C. Wells conveyed the portion of the 287 acres received by him in the partition to J. C. Hagler, and in March, 1891, Hagler conveyed same to W. D. Anderson. The field notes, in the deed from Wells to Hagler and from Hagler to Anderson covering and embracing the land in controversy herein, as well as the field notes in the original partition deed, were as follows: ‘Second tract: Being a part of the Bratt survey and described as follows: Beginning at the N. W. corner of said survey; thence N. 60° E. 524 vrs. to a corner in the north line of said survey, being one of the ell corners of this tract; thence 30° E. 770 vrs. to a stake in the south line of this tract; thence south 60° W. 692 vrs. to a stake in the west line of the Bratt survey; thence N. 30° W. to the place of beginning.’
“(4) During the year 1910, W. D. Anderson having verbally contracted to sell the tract of land owned by him, as above described, to one Ben Pillans, he, Pillans, and the defendant, Bigham, employed a surveyor to establish and mark on the ground the boundary line between the land owned by Bigham and contracted for by Pillans. Pillans at this time had no deed to the land or no description of same, and did not know where the ell corner as called for in the partition deed was located. The surveyor employed to do the work had in his possession the old partition deed between Bigham and Wells. From the field notes therein contained he began at the N. W. corner of the Bratt survey and ran a line north 60 east for the distance therein called for, viz. 524 varas and stopped; this being the point at which Bigham'was then contending the boundary line should be located. To embrace the land originally conveyed to Wells and then owned by Anderson, the line should have been projected to the ‘ell corner’ of the Bratt survey, or a distance of some 168 varas farther. Pillans, not knowing where the ell corner was, and not understanding the calls in the original partition deed, agreed that, if the land east of the point where the surveyor had stopped' was not embraced and covered by Mr. Anderson’s deed, and there was in fact an excess, or some land which had not theretofore

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Bluebook (online)
212 S.W. 775, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bigham-v-stamps-texapp-1919.