Brewer v. Cochran

99 S.W. 1033, 45 Tex. Civ. App. 179, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 276
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 31, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 99 S.W. 1033 (Brewer v. Cochran) 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
Brewer v. Cochran, 99 S.W. 1033, 45 Tex. Civ. App. 179, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 276 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

REESE, Associate Justice.

this suit E. W. Brewer and other

plaintiffs, heirs at law of William and Caroline Brewer, deceased, seek in an action of trespass to try title to recover of Owen L. Cochran the David Scott quarter league survey in Hardin County. They also seek to have a rescission of certain quitclaim deeds executed by them to ’ • W. H. Cochran, under whom the defendant claims, on the ground that the execution of said deeds was procured by fraudulent misrepresentations on the part of J. B. Cochran acting at the time for W. H. Coehran, who claimed to be the owner of the land, to the effect that the said William and Caroline Brewer had sold and conveyed the land in their lifetime.

The defendant answered by general denial and a plea of not guilty, and especially pleaded that the. land in controversy had been sold and conveyed by deed executed November 30, 1865, by William and Caroline Brewer, plaintiffs’ ancestors under whom they claim title, to Ingham S. Roberts, whose title defendant has. It was alleged that the land in controversy had been sold by the administrator of David Scott, the original grantee, under order of the Probate Court on June 1, 1863, the sale being on twelve months credit with vendor’s lien retained in the deed. That in order to procure the money to discharge this indebtedness the said William and Caroline Brewer, on November 30, 1865, sold and conveyed the land to Ingham S. Roberts, and on the same day H. E. Simpson, administrator de bonis non of said David Scott, executed to said Brewers a release of said vendor’s lien on the land. It is further averred that this deed and release are both lost or destroyed, as also the records thereof, if ever recorded, and it was sought to establish their execution by circumstantial evidence.

Defendant also set up the execution by plaintiffs and Mrs. Cooper, one of the heirs who did not join in the suit, of quitclaim deeds to W. H. Cochran, and denies any fraud or misrepresentation in the procurement of the same.

The case was tried without a jury and judgment rendered for defendant, from which plaintiffs appeal.

Without discussing the many assignments of error in the order in which they are stated in the brief, we will first dispose of certain questions which, in our judgment, are of controlling importance.

William and Caroline Brewer are common source of title, plaintiffs, who are their heirs at law, claiming title under such heirship, and defendant claiming title under deeds from said William and Caroline Brewer. Defendant established by evidence of duly recorded deeds title in himself from Ingham S. Roberts. The deeds from Roberts under which be claims having been made in October, 1869, and recorded immediately thereafter. To establish the link in his chain of title from Brewer to Roberts defendant endeavored by circumstantial evidence to show that William and Caroline Brewer had conveyed the land to *181 Boberts by deed executed November 30, 1869, which deed had been lost or destroyed together with the record thereof, if in fact it had ever been recorded. At any rate, defendant did not claim to have any other proof of the execution of this deed than that afforded by certain circumstances relied upon for that purpose.

It is not an open question in this State that the execution of a deed for land may be established by this character of evidence, and the principle is not controverted by appellants. The circumstances relied upon were: open and notorious assertion and claim of ownership by Boberts and those claiming under him from the date of Boberts deeds in 1869 down to the present time, together with payment of taxes. No actual possession was shown in any of the parties, plaintiffs or defendant or his vendors, but it was shown that the land was wild and unimproved land.

Defendant further relied upon the evidence afforded by certain papers and documents found among the papers of Ingham S. Boberts, who died in 1885, and also the recitals in the deeds of Boberts executed in 1869, Which are links in defendant’s chain of title. Appellants objected to the introduction in evidence of these papers and documents and also the recitals in the deeds from Boberts, and reserved proper bills of exceptions to the rulings of the court admitting the evidence, and the points involved are presented by proper assignments of error. In appellants’ brief the most serious attack is upon the admission in evidence of the recitals in the deeds from Boberts.

On October 5, 1869, by deed of that date Boberts sold and conveyed a half interest in the land in controversy to Dennis Perkins and on October 7, 1869, he sold and conveyed the other half interest to appellee Owen L. Cochran. In the deed to Cochran appears the following recital, in connection with the description of the land conveyed: “One undivided half of that one-fourth of a league of land granted by the State of Texas to David Scott . . . and conveyed by David Burrell and H. E. Simpson, administrators representing the estate of David Scott, deceased, as per .deed dated June 1, A. D. 1863, and November 30, 1865, to William and Caroline Brewer, and by them to me as per deed dated November 30, 1865, which patent and deeds are here referred to as part of this conveyance.” The deed to Perkins contains substantially the same recitals.

The appellants’ objections are to the recitals as to the conveyance from William and Caroline Brewer to Boberts, on the ground, substantially, that they are recitals in deeds between third parties, having no connection with themselves or their said ancestors, and are selfserving declarations of Boberts.

The other papers and documents admitted over appellants’ objections are:

1. A letter of Isaiah Junker to Ingham S. Boberts, which is here inserted entire:

“Beaumont, Texas, November 27, 1865.

Dr. I. S. Roberts,

Dear Sir: I have almost succeeded in making the trade with Brewer & wife for the David Scott Headright 1107 acres of land. From all *182 I have since learned, it is better than I represented it to you; but owing to the fact of there being no offices in this county, the separate acknowledgment of Mrs. Brewer can not be taken, and I shall have to get them if possible to go to Liberty and execute the papers there. Brewer and wife are joint owners in the purchase of the land at the probate sale, and their joint note was given for the payment at 12 months from date.

The note is yet unpaid and I could not make the trade so as to get titles all right without paying the note, so title could be made to Brewer from the administrator of Scott’s estate, which I agreed to do, in order to secure this land, which is the best bargain I know of anywhere at this time. But it will take all the money you and Gentry have in my hands, $700, and something over, as I am to pay Brewer and wife $150 and pay the note and interest, amounting to over six hundred dollars. With what I am to pay Brewer and wife will make the land cost near $800— • that is, if we could close the trade here, but if I can get them- to go to Liberty to close the matter, I expect I will have to pay their expenses, which will be twenty-five or thirty dollars or more. This will leave me without any money and one hundred dollars or over out of my own pocket, and will make it necessary that I wait until I get more funds from you.

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Bluebook (online)
99 S.W. 1033, 45 Tex. Civ. App. 179, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brewer-v-cochran-texapp-1907.