Borden v. Patterson

111 S.W. 182, 51 Tex. Civ. App. 173
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 27, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 111 S.W. 182 (Borden v. Patterson) 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
Borden v. Patterson, 111 S.W. 182, 51 Tex. Civ. App. 173 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

Defendant in error was the plaintiff in the court below and plaintiff in error was the defendant, and,each will be so called hereinafter.

The suit was brought in the ordinary form of trespass to try title to the west half of block 30, block 39 and block 63 of Alexander’s Addition to the city of El Paso. The defendant answered by a plea of not guilty, and the case was tried without a jury and resulted in a judgment in favor of plaintiff for all the west half of block 30, the west half and southeast quarter of block 39 and the east half of block 63. The writ of error is prosecuted from the judgment.

While we adopt the findings of fact of the trial'court, we deem it unnecessary to set them out in extenso in this opinion. An analysis of such findings will show the titles relied upon by the respective parties to be in substance as follows: On March 16, 1883, J. Wilkin Tays, by deed of that date, acquired from J. A. Zabriskie an undivided one-eighth interest in the tract of land known as survey No. 369, containing 640 acres situated in El Paso County, Texas. This deed, however, was not recorded until the 5th day of June, 1883. On the 33d day of May, 1883, by a decree of the District Court of El Paso County in cause No. 338, entitled Chas. Nauwald v. J. C. Kerby et al. (J. Wilkin Tays and J. R. Currie were of the defendants), said survey No. 369 was partitioned among the parties to the suit, and at the same time the Alexander Addition to the city of El Paso was laid out and estáblished on the survey. In the decree certain blocks were set apart in *176 severalty to J. W. Tays and J. R. Currie to be owned and held by them as tenants in common, to wit: blocks 20, 39, 46, 62, 63, 64 and 66 in said addition. A certified copy of the decree was filed for record in the office of the county clerk of El Paso County, Texas, March 6, 1884, and was duly recorded in said office. The decree recited that J. Wilkin Tays and J. R. Currie owned an undivided one-eighth interest in survey Ho. 269 and allotted and set apart to them in lieu thereof the block above described among others, allotting the remainder of the survey to the plaintiff Hauwald and the other defendants. It then contained the following recitations: “which said lands are to be held by them (Currie and Tays) jointly and in equal proportions; that they and their codefendants and said plaintiff consented and agreed to said decree; and it is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that the second described lands hereinbefore allotted to J. R. Currie and J. W. Tays as aforesaid (being the block above described among others) be set apart to be held jointly as aforesaid, and that the title to said land be vested in them in fee simple, and all the titles heretofore existing in said plaintiff and their codefendants be divested from and out of them and vested in the said J. R. Currie and J. W. Tays.”

When this decree was entered in said District Court of El Paso County, Texas, there was no deed of record showing that J. E. Currie had any title or interest whatever in said survey Ho. 269 so partitioned and established as Alexander’s Addition to the city, the one-eighth interest set aside to them being that acquired by J. Wilkin Tays from J. A. Zabriskie, as before stated. On Hovember 5, 1883, J. W. Tays executed and delivered to J. E. Currie a general warranty deed which was filed for record December 20, 1883, reciting the cash consideration of $4,000, and conveying to said Currie the real estate described as follows:

“All of a one-half of an undivided one-eighth (one-sixteenth) interest in that tract of land (describing and fully identifying survey number 269),” and further recites: “The undivided sixteenth of which is herein conveyed was conveyed by C. R. Johns & Co. to J. A. Zabriskie and by said J. A. Zabriskie to me by deed dated March 16, 1883, and filed for record June 5, 1883.” This deed says nothing in regard to the decree of partition.

Conceding for the present that the intention of Tays was by this deed to vest in J. E. Currie the legal title to the interest which was recognized as belonging to Currie in the partition decree in the Hauwald case, the chain of title of the respective parties to the west half of block 20 may be stated as follows:

The Hauwald decree, above referred to, allotted the block to J. W. Tays and J. R. Currie. On April 12, 1884, J. W. Tays and J, R. Currie conveyed the southeast quarter of block 20 to R. P. Sargent, leaving Currie and Tays the owners of three-quarters of the block. On Jan-nary 14, 1884, Tays and Currie conveyed to A. R. Lendner the northeast one-quarter of the block which was afterwards conveyed by Lendner to L. H. Davis, trustee, who sold the property under the deed of trust to J. W. Tays and S. Schulz. This left Tays owner of an undivided half of the west half and the northeast corner of the block, that is to say half of three-quarters of the block. This half of three-quarters was *177 conveyed to Slocum, trustee, and on foreclosure of the deed of trust in probate court this one-half of three-fourths was conveyed to the Santo Domingo Cattle Company, which company conveyed the same to Millard Patterson, making Patterson the owner of an undivided one-half of the west half of block 20. On the 15th of December, 1885, J. Be Currie conveyed to Smith and Fernandis, by deed of that date, “all of his interest in block 20, consisting of 5 lots.”

It will be noted from the above that Pays and Currie had already sold the southeast quarter of the block to B. P. Sargent and the northeast quarter of the block to A. B. Lendner, leaving Pays and Currie the owners of the west half of the block.

Smith and Fernandis sold the undivided one-fourth of the block, consisting of 5 lots, to W. F. Lewis by deed of March 3, 1887, and by another deed, made to correct the one just stated, designated the interest conveyed as an undivided half of the west half of block 20.

Prior to this, by deed of trust, dated December 15, 1886, Smith and Fernandis had conveyed to J. A. Buckler, trustee, the undivided 5 lots in block 20 to secure S. C. Lesser in the payment of $2,000 evidenced by a note. Phis note was transferred by Lesser to Mary Brannigan, who sued on it and foreclosed the deed of trust lien, and the property was sold by the sheriff, by an order of sale issued on the decree of foreclosure, to Jacob Scwingle, and Scwingle conveyed the same to B. V. Bowden, and Bowden and Scwingle by their deed of February 21, 1905, conveyed to F. W. Lewis the undivided half of the west half of said block claimed by them. Phis left Lewis the owner of an undivided one-half of the west half of block 20 and Patterson the owner of the • other half of same.

And the chain of title to block 62 may be thus stated: Phe Uauwald decree vested in J. W. Pays and J. R. Currie block 62. In January, 1884, J. W. Pays and J. B. Currie conveyed the west half of the block to A. B. Lendner. Lendner afterwards conveyed it to L. H. Davis as trustee, who, as such trustee, conveyed it to J. W. Pays and S. B. Schulz. Phis left Pays owning an undivided half of the entire block. He conveyed this one-half to J. D. Slocum, trustee, to secure the Santo Domingo Cattle Company in the payment of a debt. Phis deed of trust was foreclosed in the probate court and the undivided half of block 62 sold, by order of that court, to the Santo Domingo Cattle Co., who conveyed the same to Millard Patterson.

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111 S.W. 182, 51 Tex. Civ. App. 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borden-v-patterson-texapp-1908.