Bledsoe v. Haney

122 S.W. 455, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 285, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 62
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 27, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 122 S.W. 455 (Bledsoe v. Haney) 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
Bledsoe v. Haney, 122 S.W. 455, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 285, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 62 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

RICE, Associate Justice.

This is an action of trespass to try title, brought in the usual form, by appellee against appellant for the title and possession of eighty acres of land in Lubbock County, Texas.

The defendant' answered by plea of not guilty and the five years statute of limitations. The case was tried by the court without a jury, resulting in a judgment in favor of appellee, from which this appeal is prosecuted.

The appellee showed title from the sovereignty of the soil to himself by deeds properly recorded,. and the judgment rendered in his favor is proper, provided ‘the action of the court was correct in excluding a deed offered in evidence by appellant, showing an outstanding legal title in one Thomas W. Campbell to the land in controversy, or the conclusion of the court to the effect that the statute of limitations did not apply.

Appellant contends by his first assignment that the trial court erred in refusing to admit in evidence the deed from Charles W. Bindley and Marian T. Bindley, his wife, purporting to convey said land to Thomas W. Campbell, dated the 14th day of February, 1881, and recorded in the proper county on the 24th of February next thereafter, contending by his proposition thereunder that if the same had been so admitted it would have shown a conveyance of an outstanding legal title to the land in controversy to said Campbell long prior to the time when plaintiff acquired the deed under which he claims from said Bindley. On the trial the defendant offered in evidence a deed from Bindley and wife, of Park County, in the State of Indiana, conveying the land involved to Thomas W. Campbell. This deed was acknowledged by Bindley and wife before John J. Woody, a justice of the peace in and for said county on the 14th day of February, 1881, and duly recorded on the 24th day of February, 1881, in the proper county, but the certificate of acknowledgment was defective and not in accordance with our statute. At the time this acknowledgment was taken no officer was authorized outside of this State to take acknowledgments to deeds of lands in this State, except a notary public, the clerk of "a court of record, or a commissioner of deeds for this State. Appellee therefore contends that the action of the court in excluding said deed so offered in evidence was correct, said acknowledgment having been taken by an Indiana, justice of the peace who was not authorized so to do. But appellant insists that, notwithstanding this fact, the same should have been admitted in evidence, because the Act of the Thirtieth Legislature," approved April 23, 1907, p. 308, soI *******9 changed the law as to permit its introduction, by providing for the admission in evidence of any deed which may have been actually recorded for a period of ten years in the proper county, irrespective of whether the same was proved or acknowledged in the manner provided by the laws of this State or not. The Act in question reads' as follows, to wit:

*288 “Section 1. That article 2312 of the Devised Civil Statutes of the State of Texas be and the same is hereby amended so as hereafter to read as follows, to wit:
“Article 2312. Every instrument of writing which is permitted or required by law to be recorded in the office of the clerk of the County Court, and which has been or hereafter may be so recorded, after being proved or acknowledged in the manner provided by the laws of this State in force at the time of its registration, or at the time it was proved or acknowledged, or every instrument which has been or hereafter may be actually recorded for a period of ten years in the book used by said clerk for the recording of such instrumenés, whether proved or acknowledged in such manner or not, shall be admitted as evidence in any suit in this State without the necessity of proving its execution; provided no claim, adverse or inconsistent to the one evidenced by such instrument, shall have been asserted during that ten years; provided, that the party to give such instrument in evidence shall file the same among the papers of the suit in which he proposes to use it, at least three days before the commencement of the trial of such suit, and give notice of such filing to the opposite party or his attorney of record; and unless such opposite party, or some other person for him, shall, within three days before the trial of the cause, file an affidavit stating that he believes such instrument of writing to be forged. And whenever any party to a suit shall file among the papers of the cause an affidavit stating that any instrument of writing, recorded as aforesaid, has been lost, or that he can not procure the original, a certified copy of the record of any such instrument shall be admitted in evidence in like manner as the original could be. And after such instrument shall have been actually recorded, as herein provided for a period of ten years, it shall be no objection to the admission of same, or a certified copy thereof, as evidence, that the certificate of the officer who took such proof or acknowledgment is not in form or substance such as required by the laws of this State, and said instrument shall be given the same effect as if it were not so defective.
“See. 2. The fact that there are no adequate laws to relieve persons whose titles to their lands have been clouded by insufficient acknowledgments and proofs taken and made by ignorant and incompetent officers, creates an imperative public necessity for the suspension of the constitutional rule ' requiring bills to be read on three several days, and an emergency exists that this Act take effect and be in force from and after its passage, and it is so enacted.”

It will be observed that the first clause of said Act is not essentially different from the old law. The second clause, however, provides for a different contingency entirely from the first, and seems to permit the introduction in evidence of every instrument which has been or may hereafter be actually recorded for a period of ten years in the record of deeds by the clerk, irrespective of whether the same may have been proven or acknowledged in the manner required by law or not, provided no claim, adverse or inconsistent with the one evidenced by such instrument, shall have been asserted during that ten years. The question, therefore, for consideration *289 is, what is meant by this new clause, and wliat construction must be given to its words? It is evident that the Legislature intended to make a radical departure from the system prevailing in the introduction of recorded instruments in evidence at the time of its adoption. The old law, art.

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Bluebook (online)
122 S.W. 455, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 285, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bledsoe-v-haney-texapp-1909.