Broom v. Pearson

85 S.W. 790, 98 Tex. 469, 1905 Tex. LEXIS 128
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1905
DocketNo. 1396.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 85 S.W. 790 (Broom v. Pearson) 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
Broom v. Pearson, 85 S.W. 790, 98 Tex. 469, 1905 Tex. LEXIS 128 (Tex. 1905).

Opinions

The plaintiffs in error brought this action to recover of the defendant 200 acres of land which is a part of the west half of the Francis Hamilton survey of 600 acres in Rusk County, or such portion thereof as the evidence might show them entitled to. Judgment upon a special verdict was rendered for the defendant in the District Court and was affirmed in the Court of Civil Appeals, the latter court holding that the undisputed evidence showed that such title as the plaintiffs had once had to the land was *Page 473 barred by limitation. The facts are as follows: The parties agreed that Francis Hamilton was their common source of title. A certificate for 1280 acres was issued to Francis Hamilton and was located partly upon the 600-acre tract in Rusk County and partly upon 680 acres in Cooke County. Hamilton died in 1838, leaving a widow, Caroline, and two children, James D. and Mary L. Caroline subsequently married W.C. Davis, to whom she bore four children and died July 15, 1852, leaving surviving her her husband and her six children, and leaving a will which was never probated, but was authenticated by one of the subscribing witnesses and recorded as in the case of a deed. This will has, it seems, been recognized and acted on as valid by all parties concerned as if fully established. By it she undertook to devise to James D. and Mary L. Hamilton, in equal portions, the 600 acres of land of which the 200 acres in controversy is a part. James D. Hamilton died, without issue, in 1853, leaving as his heirs his full. sister Mary L. Hamilton, his half sisters, Permelia and Elizabeth Davis, and his half brothers, James and Thomas Davis. Permelia was born about 1841, married her present husband, Broom, in July, 1860. James was born in 1843 and died without issue in 1863. Elizabeth was born in 1846, married Compton in October, 1865, and died in 1898, leaving children as her heirs. Thomas was born in 1848 and was living at the institution of this suit. Mrs. Broom, the children of Mrs. Compton, and Thomas Davis are the plaintiffs, claiming interests inherited from their half brother, James D. Hamilton, immediately, as well as through their deceased brother James Davis. The defendant claims under Mary L. Hamilton as follows: Deed from W.C. Davis, her guardian, to J.H. Cameron under sale regularly made and confirmed by the probate court of Rusk County in 1855, recorded September 28, 1860, describing the land conveyed by metes and bounds and also as the west half of the Francis Hamilton survey of 600 acres. Deed from Mary L. Hunter, nee Hamilton, and her husband to J.H. Cameron of date January 16, 1858, recorded same day, describing land conveyed as the east half of the Francis Hamilton survey and also by metes and bounds. Deed from J.H. Cameron and wife to J.M. Cameron, dated February 3, 1866, recorded February 12, 1866, conveying the whole of the Francis Hamilton survey by metes and bounds. Deed from J.M. Cameron and wife to A.F. Lacey for the 200 acres in controversy, dated March 26, 1887, and recorded March 28, 1887. From Lacey the defendant Pearson deraigns his title to the 200 acres by regular chain of conveyances, the last of which to himself is dated February, 1900. From this statement it is seen that plaintiffs have undivided interests in the whole of the Hamilton land which they inherited from their deceased brothers, unless they have lost them by limitation, or in some other way. As Mrs. Broom married in 1860 and is still a married woman, and as Mrs. Compton married in 1865 and lived until 1898, limitation can only be established against them *Page 474 by showing either that the statute commenced to run against them before their respective marriages, or that the bar has operated since the passage of the recent statute abolishing the disability of coverture. Upon the first contention the evidence shows that J.H. Cameron cleared a field on the east half of the Hamilton survey "a short time after he bought it and before the war." It is not shown that the possession thus taken was maintained continuously until J.H. Cameron conveyed to J.M. Cameron in February, 1866. Furthermore, as to Mrs. Broom, who married in July, 1860, this evidence is probably too indefinite to show a possession taken before her marriage. But, waiving these objections, the possession of the east half held as a distinct tract under one deed describing it alone can not be extended by construction to the boundaries of another and separate tract held under another deed. The deed under which the tract possessed was held must determine, by the boundaries therein given, the extent of the constructive possession, for it is under that deed the entry was made and to it other parties had the right to look in determining the extent of the claim asserted by the possession. The authorities upon the subject will be found cited in 1 Cyc. of Law and Proc., 1128. Besides this clearing, the evidence shows only that J.H. Cameron cut some timber occasionally from the other tract, but it is clear that this can not be held to have constituted a possession. When J.H. Cameron conveyed to J.M. Cameron in 1866 the whole of the Hamilton survey as one tract, the latter at once entered upon the east half and kept up an actual possession and use thereof until he sold out in 1884 and he moved away. This possession undoubtedly extended to the whole original survey, as its boundaries were called for in the deed under which it was held. Besides the evidence shows an actual possession upon the west half taken and held by J.M. Cameron which was probably sufficient to bar the claim of any one against whom limitation ran. But as Mrs. Broom and Mrs. Compton were covert when this possession was taken it was ineffectual against them. As we have stated, J.M. Cameron sold his home upon the east half in 1884 and moved away. The other possession on the west half came to an end about the same time. The 200 acres in controversy became severed from the remainder of the Hamilton survey by the conveyance to Lacey in 1887 when no limitation had taken effect against Mrs. Broom and Mrs. Compton, and there has not since that time been any such use of the land by the subsequent owners as amounted to a possession. The evidence shows merely a rather extensive cutting of timber and nothing else, until defendant himself took possession within five years before this suit was begun. The possession of J.M. Cameron was sufficient to bar the claim of Thomas Davis, but not those of the other plaintiffs.

There are some other contentions of defendant in error which will be briefly disposed of. The first is that the sale by the guardian of Mary L. Hamilton passed also the title of the heirs of J.D. Hamilton *Page 475 because there were debts chargeable upon the whole property. If Mary L. Hamilton had been the only heir of James D. Hamilton, the authorities relied on would give countenance to the contention that an administration on his estate would have been unnecessary and that the debts could have been satisfied in the guardianship proceeding. Berry v. Young, 15 Tex. 369; Veal v. Fortson,57 Tex. 485. But certainly it can not be held that the guardian of a minor can sell the interests of other persons in property merely because it is held in common with the minor and the interests of all are chargeable with common debts. It is by no means clear that there were any such debts, and it is clear that the probate court authorized and the guardian made only a sale of the ward's title.

It is next contended that the guardianship sale, in view of the great lapse of time since it took place, and the apparent acquiescence of plaintiffs therein should be regarded as having effected a partition of the 600 acres, setting apart the west half as the share of Mary L.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 S.W. 790, 98 Tex. 469, 1905 Tex. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broom-v-pearson-tex-1905.