Blair v. Hennessy

138 S.W. 1076, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1049
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 9, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 138 S.W. 1076 (Blair v. Hennessy) 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
Blair v. Hennessy, 138 S.W. 1076, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1049 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This is an action of trespass to try title brought by appellee Hennessy against appellant to recover a survey of one-third of a league of land in Leon county patented to Tapley W. Bennett, as-signee of Lucius Hibbard. Appellees, P. A. Newport, Nettie A. Mabry, and William Ma-bry, intervened in suit, and claimed title as heirs of Lucius Hibbard to an undivided one-third of the survey. Appellant disclaimed title except as to a tract of 1,175 acres out of said survey described in his answer, and as to which he pleaded not guilty and limitation of three, five, and ten years. The cause was tried without a jury, and judgment was rendered in favor of appellee Hennessy for an undivided two-thirds of the survey and for the interveners for two-fifths of the remaining one-third.

[1] The facts are as follows: Some time prior to the year 1839 the board of land commissioners of Brazoria county issued a certificate for one-third of a league of land to Lucius Hibbard; said certificate being No. 359. The findings of fact by the trial judge state that the certificate was issued February 16, 1833. This is manifestly a mistake because there was no land board of Brazoria county at that time; the law creating such board not having been enacted until 1837. The exact date of the issuance of the certificate is not material to any issue presented by the appeal, and therefore this erroneous statement in the findings of fact copied in the record is of no consequence. Lucius Hibbard died intestate in Ft., Bend county in 1839, leaving as his only heirs two brothers, Loren Hibbard and Levi Hibbard,- and a sister, Lucinda Hibbard. A transfer of this certificate to Tapley W. Bennett purporting to have been executed on May 16, 1844, and acknowledged before Daniel D. Culp, a notary public of Harris county, is on file in the land office. A patent to this land was issued to said Bennett as assignee of Lucius W. Hibbard on October 8, 1845. This assignment of the certificate was a forgery; Lucius W. Hibbard, as before stated, having died several years before the date of the assignment. On the day this assignment was executed Tapley W. Bennett conveyed an undivided one-third interest in the one-third league to Alexander Patrick in consideration of his services in locating the certificate. In April, 1875, the land was partitioned by a decree of the district court of Harris county *1078 and the north two-thirds thereof set apart to Bennett and the south one-third to Patrick. Bennett and Patrick and their vendees continuously claimed the land, paid taxes thereon, and exercised acts of ownership there-over, and no claim was ever asserted by the heirs of Lucius Hibbard until April 11, 1904, when Loren and Levi Hibbard executed a deed to appellee Hennessy, conveying all their interest in the survey. The date of the record of this deed is not shown, but some time prior to its record at a date not shown in the findings of fact or the statement of facts accompanying this record appellant purchased 924 acres from the holder of the Bennett title to the north two-thirds of the survey, and 251 acres from the holder of the Patrick title to the south one-third of the survey. These two tracts constitute 1,175 acres described and claimed in appellant’s answer. He purchased this land without any notice of the claim of appellees, believing in good faith that he was acquiring the title thereto, and paid therefor the sum of 83,400. The interveners herein are the heirs of Lucinda Hibbard. There has been no sufficient occupancy and use of the land to vest title by limitation. Plaintiffs made affidavit that the purported transfer of the certificate to Bennett was a forgery.

Under appropriate assignments of error appellant contends that upon the facts found by the trial court, which are above set out, judgment should have been rendered in his favor on the ground that he was an innocent purchaser for value of the legal title to the land claimed by him without any notice of appellees’ equity, and the further ground that, appellees having failed for over 60 years to assert their equitable title, their demand is stale and should not now be enforced. Neither the findings of fact by the trial court nor the statement of facts accompanying the record show the date of the location of the certificate. It was located by Patrick, and, as we understand the findings of the trial court, was located for Bennett. There is nothing in the findings or in the statement of facts from which it can be inferred that Hibbard had it located. The certificate did not give Hibbard title of kind to any land until a location was made thereunder.

[2] Hibbard, not having segregated and appropriated any part of the public domain by the location of the certificate, did not acquire, title to any land. All that the certificate gave him was the right to acquire title to one-third of a league of land by locating the certificate in the manner prescribed by the stature.

[3] This right descended to his heirs, and, they having been defrauded of it by the forgery of the transfer of the certificate, the title acquired by the location of the certificate and the patent issued to Bennett by virtue of the equitable doctrine of a constructive trust inured to their benefit, and they would be entitled to recover the land against the holder of the title who acquired same by the perpetration of the fraud or with knowledge of its perpetration, but the legal title passed to Bennett and through him to those holding under him. Appellant having purchased the legal title to the land for value and without any notice of appellees’ right in equity to have a constructive trust established by which title would have been decreed to them as against Bennett and purchasers from him with notice of their rights, we think he should be protected as an innocent purchaser.

[4] There is no principle of equity jurisprudence more consonant with justice and right or more salutary in its application than the rule which protects one who has in good faith and for value purchased a legal title against a prior equitable claim of title or interest in the purchased property of which he had no notice at the time of his purchase. The rule is based upon the conception that a court of equity acts solely upon tbe conscience of litigant parties, and will only compel a defendant to do what in good conscience he is bound to do. If the relations between the litigants are such that in equity and good conscience the plaintiff ought to obtain the aid which he asks and the defendant ought to do or suffer what is demanded of him, then the court should grant the relief asked, but, if the relations are not of this character, the court will withhold its hand, and leave the parties to the operation of strict legal rules. “If a plaintiff holding some equitable interest or right sues to enforce it against a defendant who has in good faith obtained the legal estate, the court simply refuses to interfere and do an unconscientious act by depriving him of the advantage accompanying such an innocent acquisition of the legal title.” 2 Pom-eroy, Eq. Jurisprudence, par. 739.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 S.W. 1076, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1049, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blair-v-hennessy-texapp-1911.