Brown v. Lazarus

24 S.W. 71, 5 Tex. Civ. App. 81, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 547
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 25, 1893
DocketNo. 239.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 24 S.W. 71 (Brown v. Lazarus) 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
Brown v. Lazarus, 24 S.W. 71, 5 Tex. Civ. App. 81, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 547 (Tex. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

STEPHENS, Associate Justice.

Appellant, Mary Brown, by this suit sought to recover, as sole heir of Patience Castleman, from appellees, who claimed under Michael D. and Andrew L. Castleman as the true heirs, the league of land in controversy, consisting of two tracts, situated, one in Wichita County and the other in Wichita and Archer counties.

The contention of appellant is, (1) that the proof of heirship offered by appellees, in so far as they sought to establish that those under whom they claimed were the true heirs of Patience Castleman, the common ancestor, by the declarations of Michael D. and Andrew L. Castleman, was inadmissible; and (2) that the findings of the court against the heirship claim of appellant and in favor of that of appellees were not supported by the evidence.

Appellant, to maintain the issue on her part, undertook to prove, that after the death of her mother, her father, William McDaniel, married Sarah Castleman, the surviving widow of John K. Castleman, son of Patience Castleman; that a single child, John McDaniel, was the issue of this marriage, who died without issue, after the death of his mother and before the death of his father; that at the death of this child, all the descendants of Patience Castleman were dead, including the children of John K. Castleman, the last of whom, she claimed, died pending this second marriage of her father.

*83 The theory of appellees was, that no such child ever lived; but if there ever was such a child, that Michael D. Castleman, son of Patience, and Andrew L. Castleman, son of John, one or both, survived him, and were the sole heirs of Patience when they assigned their rights as such heirs, about the year 1855, to those under whom appellees claimed. In pursuance of .this transfer of the Patience Castleman certificate, the lands were afterwards located, and, in the year 1867, patented. It was contemporaneous with this transfer, and principally in connection therewith, that the declarations, both written and oral, objected to, were made, which, was more than thirty years before this controversy arose.

The certificate was granted to John K. Castleman as the administrator of the estate of Patience Castleman, about the year 1848, and after the-death of said John K., which occurred in the year 1840, was withdrawn, from the.probate records of Montgomery County, where it had been on file among the papers pertaining to the Patience Castleman estate, and turned over to a Mr. McCown for a Mrs. Sarah Castleman, who after-wards died at his house in the year 1855. Soon after her death, which was contemporaneous with his, it was obtained by those under whom appellees claim from the representatives of the McCown estate. It was undisputed that Patience Castleman left a son named Michael, who survived John K., and that of the three sons of John K. — James, John, and Andrew — the last named was the survivor.

Appellees proved by witnesses residing in Falls County, that from about 1851 to 1856 or 1857 there lived in that county two men, since deceased, known and called Michael D. and Andrew L. Castleman; and by one of these witnesses, that they recognized each other as relatives, the latter as the nephew of the former. On the other hand, it was in proof by a witness for appellant, who had no personal knowledge of any other member of the Castleman family, but whose evidence was corroborated, that “Mike Castleman” died in Fayette County in the year 1845, and that by family report in the McDaniel family, of which Sarah Castleman had become a part, Andrew died in the State of Arkansas, in the year 1846; and that by such report, and the testimony of appellant and daughter as well, Sarah McDaniel died in Houston County, in August, 1849, from fright resulting from her little 3 or 4 years old son John being bitten by a large rattlesnake, of which he died in a few hours after his mother.

Appellees introduced evidence tending to show, that William McDaniel deserted his wife Sarah, and that that marriage was without issue. The-Sarah Castleman who died at McCown’s claimed to have a son Andrew, who, she complained, had entirely neglected her, and a young man of that name, as claimed by him. appeared at McCown’s soon after her death, inquiring about his mother. She made no mention while at Mc-Cown’ s of the McDaniel name.

In this state of the proof appellees were permitted to read in evidence. *84 the declarations, both verbal and written, made by Michael and Andrew Castleman about the year 1855, to the effect that they were descendants, the former the son and the latter the grandson, of the Patience Castleman to whom the certificate was granted. The first objection interposed by appellant was, that the declarations were inadmissible, because there was no proof outside of the declarations themselves of the relationship of the declarants to the family of Patience Castleman.

The rule on this subject is, we think, correctly stated by Mr. Wharton, as follows: “Before such declarations, however, can be admitted, the relationship of the declarant to the family must be proved by other evidence than his declarations; for it would be a petitio principii to say that his declarations are receivable because he is a member of the family, and he is a member of the family because his declarations are receivable. Such preliminary proof, however, need establish only a prima facie case; and it is said ‘ that but slight proof of the relationship will be required, since the relationship of the declarant with the family might be as difficultto prove as the very fact in controversy.’ ” 1 Whart. on Ev., sec. 218.

This principle seems analogous to that applied in laying a predicate for the introduction of the declarations of an agent. While the authority of the agent can not be proven by his declarations, it is not required that the proof of agency be full and’ satisfactory before his declarations are admissible. If competent evidence has been introduced tending to prove the agency, that will be sufficient. Stiff v. Fisher, 2 Texas Civ. App., 346.

In view of the great lapse of time since the assertion of title to the certificate was made, and of the fact that the declarations were made in connection therewith, and so soon after the alleged death of appellant’s stepmother, and of the identity of names and other circumstances above indicated, we are of opinion that there was no error in admitting the testimony. The evidence aliunde certainly tended to connect Michael and Andrew Castleman with the Patience Castleman for whose benefit the certificate was granted, and their declarations as to matters of pedigree were therefore competent. The fact also that persons bearing those names lived at that early day, declaring themselves to be descendants of said Patience, tended, we think, to rebut the testimony of appellant that the direct lineage of that family was then extinct. Hickman v. Gillum, 66 Texas, 314; Robertson v. Du Bose, 76 Texas, 1; McNeil v. O’Connor, 79 Texas, 227.

The second objection, that the declarations were made after a controversy had arisen over the ownership of the certificate, and were therefore self-serving, if tenable in any case since interest has ceased to disqualify a witness (1 Wharton on Evidence, sections 213, 214), must be overruled in this case because not sustained by the record. If any controversy had arisen, there was no evidence that it involved the question of heirship litigated herein, but rather to the contrary.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.W. 71, 5 Tex. Civ. App. 81, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-lazarus-texapp-1893.