Brin v. Anderson

60 S.W. 778, 25 Tex. Civ. App. 323, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 431
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 6, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 60 S.W. 778 (Brin v. Anderson) 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
Brin v. Anderson, 60 S.W. 778, 25 Tex. Civ. App. 323, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 431 (Tex. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

KEY, Associate Justice.

This is an action of trespass to try title to 64 acres of land, W. C. Anderson and' his wife being the plaintiffs and Leon Brin the defendant. The plaintiffs prevailed in the court below and the defendant has appealed.

Among other matters, the plaintiffs alleged in their petition that on March 26, 1896, the land in controversy was their homestead, it being part of 217 acres of land on the William Guyman survey owned by them. That on the day referred to, W. C. Anderson executed a trust deed in favor of the defendant on the 217 acres of land to secure a debt of about $1500; that on December 3, 1896, in a suit brought against W. C. Anderson, Leon Brin recovered judgment for said debt and a foreclosure of the deed of trust, under which judgment the 217 acres of land were sold and bought in by Brin. They also alleged that, the 64 *324 acres of land in controversy being part of their homestead, the deed of trust and foreclosure sale were void and Brin acquired no title thereunder.

The defendant Brin, among other pleas, set up cross-action, alleging that there was a balance still owing and due on his judgment against W. C. Anderson; that he caused an abstract of said judgment to be made and recorded as the law directs, in Brown County, where the land in controversy and other lands described in the plea are situated; and he prayed, in the event of the plaintiffs’ recovery of the land sued for, that his judgment lien created by recording the abstract be foreclosed on the other lands described in the plea. This plea alleged that the abstract of judgment was “alphabetically and otherwise duly indexed and cross-indexed, as required by law in such cases.”

The ruling of the court in sustaining exceptions to and striking out the defendant’s cross-action is assigned as error, and we think the assignment is well taken. The plaintiffs by their petition in this case "attacked the judgment in the former suit in so far as it undertook to foreclose the lien on the land in controversy, and we think the matters pleaded in the cross-action were so connected with and incidental to the judgment referred to and the averments in the plaintiffs’ petition, as to bring them within the rule permitting the filing of counterclaims and pleas in reconvention. Clegg v. Varnell, 18 Texas, 294; Carothers v. Thorp, 21 Texas, 361; Jones v. Ford, 60 Texas, 129; Scalf v. Tompkins, 61 Texas, 479. We are also of the opinion that the averments in reference to indexing the abstract were sufficient.

In reference to the homestead question it was shown by the undisputed evidence that at the time he designated his homestead, and before he executed the deed of trust to appellant, W. C. Anderson and his wife owned several connected tracts of land, amounting in the aggregate to 500 acres or more. The sketch on p'age 325 indicates the location and condition of the several tracts at the time referred to.

March 26, 1896, on the same day of, but prior to, the execution of the trust deed under which appellant claims, W. C. Anderson, in the manner prescribed by statute, executed and had recorded a written designation of his homestead, composed of the W. C. Anderson preempton, the 28 1-2-acre tract and the 18 8-10-acre tract. The designation describes the W. C. Anderson pre-emption as containing 159 9-10 acres; and, so considering it, the designation includes over 200 acres. W. C. Anderson was then a married man and resided with his family on his pre-emption survey, his residence, outhouses, well, and an old orchard being on that survey. There was also a field in cultivation on that survey near his residence, consisting of at least 12 acres. There was a tenant house in the north triangle of that survey, near which there was about 15 acres of land, part of that survey, in cultivation. The upper part of the north triangle of that survey was fenced off as a pasture, but was in appellees’ possession and use at the time.

Most of the 70-acre tract on the M. R. Williams survey was in culti *325 vation; and on the 56 1-3-acre tract there was at least 13 acres in cultivation. The 18 8-10-acre tract had a tenant house upon it, and at least 7 acres in cultivation. It was inclosed by a fence, but not included in the inclosure with the other lands. There was at least 13 acres on the 38 1-3-acre tract in cultivation. Appellees had one large inclosure

including all of the W. C. Anderson pre-emption, except the small triangle in the south end and on the southeast side of the public road, which seems to have been fenced off as a pasture, though this is not absolutely certain from the testimony.

The large inclosure referred to is indicated by the dotted line, beginning at the extreme north corner of the W. C. Anderson pre-emption and extending around to where the public road enters the south line of the 38 1-3-acre tract; from there the fence runs with the public road *326 between appellees’ residence and the land in controversy, and practically with the east line of the W. C. Anderson pre-emption to the place' of beginning.

The Guyman 217-acre tract joins the W. C. Anderson pre-emption* on the east. The land in controversy in this suit is part of the Guy-man tract, and was at the time in question inclosed as a farm, as indicated by the dotted lines, and all of it, except a few acres, was then in cultivation. On the west end of the 64 acres, and within about 300 feet of his residence, W. C. Anderson had planted another orchard, which the evidence indicates had not reached maturity at the time the homestead designation and trust deed in question were made.

The testimony shows that all the cultivated lands on the several tracts had been in cultivation by W. C. Anderson fifteen or twenty years, a portion of that in controversy having been put in cultivation first. All of the cultivated lands on the several tracts referred to were used and enjoyed by W. C. Anderson in the same general way,—that is, for farm purposes,—ever since they were put in cultivation.

The land in controversy is more conveniently situated with reference to the residence than most of the other lands designated as homestead; and W. C. Anderson testified that he had always claimed the 64 acres as part of his homestead. It was also shown to be a better class of land than that in cultivation on the other tracts.

It was further shown that the W. C. Anderson pre-emption conflicted with the William Patton, which was an older survey, and that before the homestead designation was made, .the owner of the Patton had brought suit and recovered from W. G. Anderson 24 acres of the preemption survey. This apparently cut the homestead designation down to less than 200 acres; but there is some testimony tending to show that the W. C. Anderson pre-emption contained an excess nearly equal to the shortage referred to.

As before stated, on the same day that the homestead designation was made, and substantially as part of the same transaction, W. C. Anderson executed a deed of trust to appellant, conveying the Guyman 217-acre tract, which includes the land in controversy; and thereafter the deed of trust was foreclosed, and appellant purchased the entire Guyman tract thereunder. This trust deed contained a disclaimer of homestead right in the Guyman survey on the part of W. C. Anderson.

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Bluebook (online)
60 S.W. 778, 25 Tex. Civ. App. 323, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brin-v-anderson-texapp-1901.