Campbell v. McLoughlin

270 S.W. 257, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 169
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 6, 1925
DocketNo. 1185.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 270 S.W. 257 (Campbell v. McLoughlin) 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. McLoughlin, 270 S.W. 257, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 169 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

The Smith and Davidson .grants are adjoining surveys in Hardin county, Tex., the Smith immediately north of the Davidson. The David Choate grant was junior to the Smith and Davidson, and was in part laid on the western end of these two senior grants; thus creating a conflict involving a large part of the Choate.

In 1873, under lawful executions against David Choate, the sheriff of Hardin county sold 400 acres of the David Choate grant to S. 6. McClenny and an adjoining tract of 200 acres to L. H. Daniels, conveying by 'these deeds all the right, title, and interest owned in the land by David Choate at that time. Appellants, by heirship and mesne conveyances, hold under these sheriff’s deeds, which were valid in every respect and effective to pass whatever interest David Choate owned in the land at the time of the sale. These two tracts of land, while on and a part of the David Choate, were included in the conflict between that survey and the Smith and Davidson grants. Appellees claimed by heir-ship and a chain of regular transfers under David Choate and his wife, Mary Choate.

Appellants instituted this suit against ap-pellees in the usual form of trespass to try title to recover from them the 600 acres above- described, pleading also limitation in favor of David Choate on the theory that he had perfected a limitation title against the Smith and Davidson titles prior to the execution of the sheriff’s deeds to McClenny and Daniels in 1873. Appellees answered by the usual pleas, and also sought to show: (a) That this land was the separate property of the wife of David Choate at the time of the execution sales; (b) that a title by limitation was perfected by David Choate and his wife subsequent to the execution of the sheriff’s deeds; (e) that the grantees under the sheriff’s deeds had reconveyed the land to David Choate and his wife. Appel-lees also sought to show that the Smith and Davidson titles .were superior outstanding titles against the title asserted by appellants, and that they had connected themselves with those* titles.

On a trial to a jury, appellants offered in evidence the complete David Choate chain of title from dhe state to themselves through David Choate, and, for the purpose of showing common source, the title from David Choate to appellees. Appellees then offered the complete chains of title from the state to Smith and Davidson, and from and under them to the Houston Oil Company, showing an active assertion of title by the Houston Oil Company and those under whom it held. This showing brought these titles down to about 1916. Then appellees offered in evidence a judgment whereby they and those under whom they hold recovered from the Houston Oil Company certain lands, including all the land in controversy in this suit. This was the judgment in the case of Houston Oil Co. v. Polly Choate et al., reported from the Court of Civil Appeals in 215 S. W. 118, and from the Supreme Court in 232 S. W. 285, to which reference is here made for a more detailed history of that case. Enough of the pleadings- in that case was offered in evidence to show that the judgment was based on a plea of limitation.

On conclusion of the evidence in the case now before us, the trial court instructed a verdict for appellees for all the land on the Smith, but submitted to the jury the issue of limitation on the Davidson under the following issue, requested by- appellants:

“Did David and Mary Choate, or either of them, have possession of the land in controversy in this suit under the three or five year statutes of limitation as the same has been defined for either the three or five years prior to June 3, 1873?”

• The jury answered this question in the negative. On proper questions the jury found against appellees on their issues of separate property, limitation, and reacquisitions of the title under the grantees in the sheriff’s deeds executed in 1873. On the verdict of the jury a judgment was entered in favor of *259 appellees for all of the land, in controversy, on the theory that the Smith and Davidson titles were superior outstanding titles to the Choate, and that they had connected themselves with and were in privity with those superior titles. Erom the undisputed evidence and from the verdict of the jury it appears, and we so find, that appellants now own and hold whatever interest David Choate was shown to own in the David Choate at the time of the execution of the sheriff’s deeds in 1873; that is to say, they own and hold the superior title under David Choate as common source. It follows then that the correctness of the judgment in favor of appellees can be sustained only on the theory that appellees established as a matter of law (a) an outstanding title superior to the David Choate, and that such outstanding title had not passed to David Choate prior to the execution of the sheriff’s deeds In 1873 (b) or that they had connected themselves with such outstanding title by showing in an affirmative way that they owned it.

Opinion.

Appellants have stated the issues in this appeal in the following questions:

Question No. 1:
“Was the judgment rendered in the ease of Houston Oil Company v. Polly Choate et al., in the district court of Hardin county, Tex., in 1916, admissible in evidence as a link in appel-lees’ chain of title, or as a muniment of their title?”

Appellants objected to the introduction of the judgment in the Polly Choate Case on the following grounds:

“The defendants in said cause offered in evidence as a link in their chain of title under Houston Oil Company of Texas, and for a statutory effect as evidence, judgment in cause No. 1796, Houston Oil Company of Texas v. Polly Choate et al., rendered in the district court of Hardin county, Tex., in March, 1916, whereby it •was adjudged and decreed by the court that the interveners, Mrs. D. P. McLoughlin et al., recovered said land, for the reason it was not involved in defendants’ chain of title or as a muniment of title.
“That the portion of Said judgment offered in evidence, being only the decreeing part thereof, unaccompanied by the issues submitted to the jury and their answers therein explaining the basis of same, was inadmissible for statutory effect or otherwise.”

The decreeing part of the judgment in this cause No. 1796 reads as follows:

“And it appearing to the court that the Houston Oil Company of Texas has heretofore dismissed its suit as plaintiff herein, and the same is hereby dismissed, and it further appearing that Mrs. Polly Choate and John W. Davis, original defendants in this suit, are dead, and that the only parties remaining1 to this suit are the interveners, Mrs. D. P. McLoughlin et al., and the Houston Oil Company of Texas; and it appearing that the said interveners, Mrs. D. P. McLoughlin et al., are entitled to recover the' land described in their intervention and cross-action, and the said interveners having moved for judgment herein, it is ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that the interveners, Mrs. D. P. McLoughlin, Ester Owen, Samuel Owen, her husband, Ettie Keller and Arthur Keller, her husband, Dora Shields and R. J.

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Bluebook (online)
270 S.W. 257, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-mcloughlin-texapp-1925.