Bohny v. Petty

17 S.W. 80, 81 Tex. 524, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1398
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1891
DocketNo. 6768.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 17 S.W. 80 (Bohny v. Petty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bohny v. Petty, 17 S.W. 80, 81 Tex. 524, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1398 (Tex. 1891).

Opinion

COLLARD, Judge, Section A.

This suit was brought in the District Court of Cooke County on the 20th day of March, 1888, in form of trespass to try title, by the appellee W. P. Petty against the appellant H. G. Bohny to recover 7 by 100 feet of land in Gainesville, Texas. Bohny answered not guilty, by pleas of limitation of five years, and improvements made in good faith. There was a verdict and judgment for Petty May 5,1888, for the land and for Bohny for improvements, and the latter appealed. The controversy grew out of the following transaction:

On March 5,1873, one 27. T. Bomar owned a certain two acres of land in Gainesville, bounded on the north by Gomar Street and on the east by Commerce Street, formerly Dye Street. On that date he conveyed to J. T. Rowland a strip 100 feet wide off the north side of the tract— that is, beginning at the northeast corner of the tract, thence south 100 feet, thence west 178 feet, thence north 100 feet, and thence east 178 feet to the beginning.

March 11, 1873, Rowland conveyed to W. E. Fletcher the south half of the strip—that is, a strip 50 feet wide. Fletcher conveyed the same to Lewis Broadwell October 5, 1877, and Broadwell conveyed it to W. P. Petty February 5, 1879. Petty conveyed to B. Sommers April 20, 1887, and a short time before the institution of this suit Sommers’ vendee reconveyed the strip to Petty. On March 19, 1873, Rowland conveyed the north half of the strip bought by him from Bomar to F. T. Hall, Hall to R. S. Rollins October 20,1873, Rollins to M. Kahn April 16, 1879, Kahn to J. T. Walker May 29, 1879, and Walker to Bohny December 23, 1882. The northeast corner of the strip bought by Rowland from Bomar is identified by an old hedge where the west line of Commerce Street intersects the south line of Gorham Street, but there are no other marks, corners, or lines to identify the original strip sold to Rowland or the subdivisions of the same. The deeds call for course and distance, only designating the known northeast corner.

*526 At the time Bomar sold off the strip to Rowland he had the whole of his two acres fenced, and after the sale he moved his north fence down south to what he supposed was 100 feet running east and west. Soon after Petty became the owner of the south half of the Rowland strip, in 1879, one Blackwood, acting for Petty, built a fence around what he supposed was the Petty lot. When he commenced to build the fence he went to Bomar and asked him where Petty’s south line was, and Bomar said it was at his (Bomar’s) north line of fence, and that if it was not right “we could make it right.” Blackwood then measured off fifty feet north of Bomar’s fence and built Petty’s north string of fence at that point. The truth was that Bomar’s fence was seven feet too far south, and this led to the placing of Petty’s north fence the same distance too far south.

When Walker bought the north half of the Rowland strip Petty’s lot was inclosed as above stated with a plank fence; the rest of the land on the north was not inclosed. He commenced to improve in 1880, moved a residence on the same and inclosed it, joining fences with Petty by his permission. He says: “When I fenced my lot I found I had too much ground on the south. ’ ’ Before he sold to defendant Bohny in 1882 they went and looked at the lot, Petty’s north fence being the division line. He (Walker) told Bohny there was too much land in his inclosure, four or five feet in excess of fifty feet, and that he thought the north fence might be four or five feet too far north and take in a part of Gorham Street. He (Walker) did not know, and “never once thought” that Petty had any land north of his fence; thought he had all his land inclosed with his fence. “I supposed Petty’s north fence was on his north line, but never heard him say anything about where his north' line was. I fenced it all in, thinking I would get that much more if nothing was ever said about it.”

Petty always supposed that the fence he built was on his north line until about July, 1887. He did not tell Bohny he had too, much land in his inclosure, because he did not know it. The north fence of Petty was regarded by him and Walker and Bohny as the division line between them up to July, 1887. After buying the land of Walker, Bohny placed some improvements on the disputed seven feet—a chicken house and a water closet, and planted three cedar trees (five years old at the time of the trial), a catalpa tree, some rose bushes, and shrubbery. He also several times repaired parts of the division fence, and thought it was the line. He built a bakery and a store on the lot north of the disputed seven feet in the northeast corner of his lot, and has lived on it since his purchase from Walker.

Bomar has never claimed any land north of his north fence. He testified that when Blackwood came to build Petty’s fence something was said about his north fence being the line, “And I told Blackwood it made no difference whether it was the right line or not; that we would *527 let my north fence be the south line of Petty’s lot and the north line of my lot.”

The court instructed the jury that plaintiff had shown a good title to the lot described in his petition unless he had lost the same by his own acts and omissions, as would be afterward explained, and that defendant had shown a good title to the lot conveyed in the deed of Walker to him, described as beginning at the northeast corner of a two acres tract heretofore owned by Dr. 3SL T. Bomar, thence west 100 feet, thencsouth 50 feet, thence east 100 feet, and thence north 50 feet, and consequently there were but two questions for .the jury (besides that of improvements in good faith): first, as to the locality of the true line; and second, if it is where plaintiff claims it to be, whether he had lost the land by his acts and omissions.

Appellant objects to this charge because the court charges that plaintiff had established title to the land in controversy. The objection is to only a part of a sentence in the charge. The court did not unqualifiedly tell the jury that plaintiff had shown title to the land in controversy, but that he had done so unless he had lost it by his acts and omissions to be afterward explained.

We think the charge was correct. Plaintiff’s deed covers and conveys the south fifty feet strip of the Rowland strip, and so do the mesne conveyances from Rowland down to him. There is no doubt or question about the fact that this Petty strip includes the land, the seven feet in dispute, and that he showed title to it unless, as stated by the court, he had lost it by some act or omission. The court fully instructed the jury as to the principle that if Petty by placing his north fence where it was had misled either Walker or Bohny into the purchase of the land and improving the same; or if defendant did not know whfere the line was, but by reason of plaintiff’s improvements or acts or conduct coupled with the fencing, or by the representations of Walker, he was misled as to where the line was and erected valuable improvements upon the land in dispute, they should find for defendant; but that if defendant knew Petty’s fence was not on the line, or from all the circumstances had such notice as would have induced a reasonably prudent man to make inquiry as to the true line and he failed to make such inquiry, he could not recover.

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.W. 80, 81 Tex. 524, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bohny-v-petty-tex-1891.