Campbell v. McFadden

31 S.W. 436, 9 Tex. Civ. App. 379, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 369
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 6, 1895
DocketNo. 46.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 31 S.W. 436 (Campbell v. McFadden) 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
Campbell v. McFadden, 31 S.W. 436, 9 Tex. Civ. App. 379, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 369 (Tex. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinions

BRYAN, Special Justice.

— This is an action brought on the 8th day of June, 1885, in the District Court of Williamson County, for specific performance of a written contract, which is as follows:

*382 “By this instrument of writing I bind myself to make to Hath an Halbert and David Garner a quitclaim deed to one-half of the league of land to which I am entitled as a citizen of Texas, as soon as myself shall obtain a title for the same, to be divided equally in quality and quantity; and should I refuse to comply with this obligation, I authorize any court of justice to compel me to make the title as aforesaid; and by this instrument I authorize the said Halbert and Garner to enter upon said land and hold the same as his own property acquired by a just and.legal title; the said Halbert and Garner, to pay all the expenses of selecting, surveying, and clearing from the office my said title; as also the government fee for said land by the said Halbert and Garner, binding themselves to locate the said land, or as good land as they can find vacant, and paying to me the sum of fifty dollars.
“January 22, 1838. “William McFadden.
“Witness: “F. Hardin. “Hathan Halbert.
0
“Absalom Jett.”

Partition of the William McFadden league was also sought in the suit. Appellants, who were plaintiffs below, sued as the heirs of Hathan Halbert and of David Garner, except two of the appellants, W. T. Campbell and E. H. Lott, who claimed as assignees under Halbert and Garner. The appellees, who. were defendants below, are William McFadden, David H. McFadden, and a number of other persons in possession of portions of the William McFadden league; also the Missouri Pacific Railway Company; but there was an adjustment of the litigation as between appellants and said company.

Appellants allege, that Hathan Halbert and David Garner complied fully with their part of said contract; that they located the certificate of William McFadden on vacant land, which is now in Williamson County, in 1840, and had the field notes returned to the General Land Office of Texas, and paid the government dues and all fees incident to the location, and paid to William McFadden the fifty dollars stipulated to be paid him in said contract; that a part of the location was on what was known as the Aguirre grant, and by reason of the apparent conflict, the government refused to issue patent thereon till in July, 1884, when the Supreme Court decided said grant to be invalid and void, and patent then issued on said location; that appellants could not procure the issuance of a patent sooner. Appellants further alleged, that said contract was proved up for record and duly recorded in Williamson County in 1854, and that William McFadden accepted as fully satisfactory to him the performance of the said contract by Halbert and Garner as above set forth; and that the said William McFadden and the said Halbert and Garner entered into actual possession of said survey, occupying the same as tenants in common, and continued so to do from the date of said .location up to the time when the patent issued.

*383 Appellants farther alleged by way of excusing the delay in bringing their suit, that by the terms of the contract they could not maintain their action till patent was obtained, and that the issuance of the patent was refused by the Commissioner of the Land Office till 1884, for the reasons already stated; and further, that William McFadden was informed by Halbert and Garner, before the location was made, that it would be in conflict with what was known as the Aguirre grant, and that under the rules in the General Land Office it might be many years before a title could be obtained for him, and that with this knowledge he gave his full consent to the location as made; and that the delay in obtaining the patent has been with the consent and approval of William McFadden and those claiming under him; that Halbert died in 1867, and Garner in 1864.

Appellants further alleged, that by reason of some sort of conveyance of the league made by William McFadden to D. H. McFadden, the patent issued to said D. H. McFadden instead of William McFadden; and they further alleged, that William McFadden refused to perform said contract, and they made a tender in court of any money that might still be due from Halbert and Garner in fulfillment of their part of the said contract, if any should be found due, and they prayed for specific performance and for partitions.

Appellees answered by general and special exceptions, by general denial, and by special pleas. They pleaded non est factum as to the contract sued on, and attacked it as a forgery, William McFadden making his affidavit to that effect.

All the appellees joined in a special plea, in which they averred, that if the contract on which this suit is brought was in fact made or alleged by appellants, which is not admitted, but denied, that the said Halbert and Garner failed to perform their part of said contract, and instead of locating the certificate of William McFadden on vacant land, they located mainly upon the Raphael de Aguirre grant, and by field notes so imperfect that no patent could have issued thereon, had the conflict not existed, and they failed to procure a patent for the location; that William McFadden in 1844 sold an undivided half of the certificate and the land upon which it was located to D. H. McFadden; that William McFadden in 1845 first learned that the location was in conflict with the Aguirre grant, and at once informed Halbert and Garner that no title could issue on the location they had made by reason of said conflict and said defective field notes, and requested Halbert and Garner to raise the certificate and locate it on vacant land, and notified them that if they did not in a reasonable time float the certificate and relocate it on vacant lands, he would consider the contract canceled and at an end; that Halbert and Garner failed and refused to raise said .certificate and locate it elsewhere, and that thereupon William McFadden repudiated said contract, and refused to recognize any right in said Halbert or Garner to any part of said survey; and that he immediately took exclusive possession of the entire *384 survey in open hostility to their claim, and. thereafter sold it in parcels to various persons, who placed their deeds of record, and who went into actual possession and made valuable improvements thereon; that from and after 1846 Halbert and Garner abandoned all claim to the location and remained silent while the entire survey was appropriated by William McFadden, as aforesaid, and never for a period of about forty years, and until the patent issued, renewed their claim; that neither Halbert nor Garner, nor any one claiming under them, ever had said field notes corrected or took any steps to have the conflict removed, nor did they ever do any thing whatever thereafter to secure the issuance of patent on the location; and that appellees, by' their own efforts and at their own expense, had said field notes corrected and said conflict removed, and at their own expense procured the issuance of the patent, in July, 1884.

Appellees further pleaded that the demand of appellants was a stale demand, and that they were guilty of loches.

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Bluebook (online)
31 S.W. 436, 9 Tex. Civ. App. 379, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-mcfadden-texapp-1895.