Bringhurst v. Texas Co.

87 S.W. 893, 39 Tex. Civ. App. 500, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 353
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 23, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 87 S.W. 893 (Bringhurst v. Texas Co.) 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
Bringhurst v. Texas Co., 87 S.W. 893, 39 Tex. Civ. App. 500, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 353 (Tex. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

GILL, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by George R. Bringhurst and his coplaintiffs in the form of an action of trespass to try title to recover of the Texas Company, a corporation, 842 acres of land out of the Stephen Jackson league in Hardin County, Texas. The property in controversy is known as the Sour Lake tract on which is situated the Sour Lake health resort and it is now part of the Sour Lake oil field.

The defendants pleaded not guilty and limitation of three, five and ten years. Of the issues submitted to the jury they decided but one, *503 and found for defendant on the theory that its predecessor in title had acquired the land by parol sale. From a judgment upon that verdict plaintiffs have appealed.

The history of the title as disclosed by the record may be stated in a general way as follows: The league which comprises the land in controversy was granted by the Mexican Government to Stephen Jackson in 1835. Jackson, the original grantee, conveyed 1,000 acres .thereof by metes and bounds to Holland, Freeman and Sears for a consideration of $6,000. The 1,000 acres thus conveyed embraced the land in controversy in this suit. By the year 1856 W. C. Lacy had become the owner of the entire tract, his title being connected by mesne conveyances with that of Holland, Freeman and Sears. One of the intervening owners of an undivided interest was Gilbert Lacour who with his wife at one time resided on the property. Lacy conveyed a 22 acre tract to one John Bitchie. This left 978 acres out of the 1,000 acre tract, and this Lacy sold and conveyed to W. B. Smith in 1859. In March, 1859, W. B. Smith sold and reconveyed to Lacy an undivided half interest in the tract for a recited consideration of $11,000 paid, leased the remaining half to Lacy for $2,000 per year and retained a lien on Lacy’s interest to secure the payment of the rent. Lacy and his wife resided on the property and he died in 1860, leaving his wife, Eliza, surviving him. He also left a daughter, Mrs. E. Stone. In April, 1862, the administrator of the estate of W. C. Lacy, deceased, duly sold and conveyed Lacy’s undivided interest in the Sour Lake property to John Clements. The consideration was $15,500. In the same month W. B. Smith released his mortgage securing the rent. In August, 1862, Clements in consideration of $21,500 paid, sold and conveyed his half interest. to A. M. Gentry by warranty deed, and on the same day W. B. Smith sold to Gentry and conveyed by warranty deed his half interest, the considera-, tion being $20,000, due October 1, 1873. There was no express reservation of the lien in the deed, but the terms of the sale were recited. Gentry thus became the sole owner, subject to the implied lien to secure the payment of the purchase money of Smith’s interest. On October 14, 1862, Gentry for a paid consideration of $9,000 conveyed to J. FT. Beed an undivided two-fifths of the tract. About the same date he sold to Sophia Trube, A. J. Chavanne and George H. Bringhurst one-fifth each, the consideration from each being $4,500 paid, and each of these four deeds contained a recital that the vendee took his interest subject to Smith’s lien for unpaid purchase money. Thus Gentry ceased to be an owner.

Mrs. Trube, in May, 1870, sold and conveyéd her one-fifth to J. FT. Beed, and Chavanne having died, his administrator in 1868 conveyed his one-fifth to H. G. Pannell and George H. Bringhurst. The land thus became the property of Beed to the extent of an undivided three-fifths and Pannell and Bringhurst as to the remaining two-fifths.

In March, 1870, Mrs. Eliza C. Lacy, the widow of W. C. Lacy, brought suit to enforce a 200 acre homestead claim in the land on the ground that she and her husband had occupied it as a home during his ownership of an undivided half interest, and that such homestead interest did not pass by the administrator’s deed. She joined as defendants John Clements, H. G. Pannell, George S. Bringhurst, Sophia *504 Trube and J. H. Reed. In 1871 W. R. Smith made himself a party defendant as warrantor of the title. He also set up his lien for his purchase money. Smith and the other defendants' made a common fight against Mrs Lacy, being represented by the same attorneys.

In 1873 Smith died and his executor became a party. On a trial the defendants defeated Mrs. Lacy’s claim, but on appeal the cause was remanded. On the 5th day of February, 1873, an execution for costs amounting to $18.20 was issued out of the Supreme Court against all the defendants except Smith’s administrator, and was executed by levying on their interests in the land in controversy and selling the same on May 6, 1873, for a consideration of $30. A. B. Hooks became the purchaser, and the sheriff on the same day executed to him a deed effectively conveying to him their interests in the land, which at that time was on the face of the record the entire title.

In January, 1874, Hooks sold the land to P. S. Watts for a recited consideration of $1,000, and in May, 1877, Watts conveyed to J. G-. Minter for a recited consideration of $2,000. These deeds were duly recorded soon after their execution. On the 10th day of June, 1903, the heirs, of J. G. Minter and wife and the heirs of Bringhurst, Pannell and Reed entered into a written agreement in which all differences between them were adjusted as to the title to the land and the validity of the execution sale under which Minter held, and the parties to the agreement thereby, as between themselves, became the common owners of the land in controversy and thereafter became the plaintiffs in this suit. Hnder that agreement they all claim under the defendants in the Lacy suit and also through the execution sale to Minter.

We return now to the further history of the suit brought by Mrs. Eliza Lacy. Pursuant to the reversaLit was tried again and judgment rendered in her favor for 200 acres of the land, to embrace Sour Lake and the improvements. On the appeal of defendants the Supreme Court in 1879 reversed and rendered the judgment awarding to Mrs. Lacy on her homestead claim an undivided half interest of 100 acres in 200 acres, including the improvements at Sour Lake, the 200 acre tract to be designated by the District Court out of which 100 acres was to be partitioned to Mrs. Lacy. The trial court thereafter procured the 200 acre tract to be designated and marked out and appointed commissioners to partition 100 acres thereof to Mrs Lacy. This was never done. Ho further proceedings were had in the cause and it was thereafter dismissed for want of prosecution.

On October 22, 1880, Gilbert Lacour and wife in an action of trespass to try title against James G. Minter and one Minerva Muchant recovered a judgment against Minter for the title and possession as of the homestead right of Lacour’s wife, but the description contained in the judgment failed to identify any particular part of the tract and there was never any partition thereunder. Writ of possession was issued on this judgment in Hovember, 1880, and was executed by W. W. Lyon, sheriff.

. In the year 1880 P. J. Willis of Galveston, Texas, undertook to acquire a good title to the Sour Lake property. For the purpose of throwing the litigation into the Federal Courts in case any should arise he determined to have all his conveyances made to H. Clay Ewing of *505 Missouri, Willis to be the beneficial owner.

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Bluebook (online)
87 S.W. 893, 39 Tex. Civ. App. 500, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bringhurst-v-texas-co-texapp-1905.