Carleton v. Hausler

49 S.W. 118, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 275, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 143
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 18, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 49 S.W. 118 (Carleton v. Hausler) 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
Carleton v. Hausler, 49 S.W. 118, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 275, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 143 (Tex. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

FISHER, Chief Justice.

This is an action by the appellants in trespass to try title, to recover an undivided one-half interest in a certain tract of land described in plaintiff’s petition. The defendants pleaded not guilty. Upon trial of the case before the court below judgment was rendered in favor of the appellees. The facts are as follows :

“1. That on the 17th day of May, 1856, W. B. P. Gaines and Robert J. Townes purchased the land in controversy under deed of conveyance from one John B. Jones, shown in paragraph 12 of these facts; that said deed is a common source of title to said land, and that said property was acquired during the married life of Robert J. Townes and his wife, Pat-tie- E. Townes.

“2. That Pattie E. Rector, Pollie T. Carleton, Mila T. Morris, 1SF. Cobb Townes, and Allen R. Townes are the children and only children and heirs at law of Robert J. Townes and Pattie E. Townes., his wife.

“3. That all rights now held and claimed by plaintiffs and defendants are claimed by the plaintiffs by descent from Robert J. Townes and by conveyance from his heirs; and by the defendants by conveyance from W. B. P. Gaines and Robert J. Townes, and Chas. S. West, executor, and one or more of them, and subsequent deeds.

“4. That Pattie E. Townes and Robert J. Townes were married January 8, 1846, and that Pattie E. Townes died in August, 1863, and that Robert J. Townes died in October, 1865.

“5. That Robert J. Townes died testate, and that Chas. S. West of Austin, Texas, was the executor, with powers vested in him as shown by will set out in paragraph 17 of these facts.

"6. That plaintiffs have never paid any taxes on the land in controversy.

“7. That when the estate of Robert J. Townes, deceased, was closed, it was found insolvent.

“8. That if the agreement between R. J. Townes and W. B. P. Gaines, shown in paragraph 15 of these facts, and the deed of the latter to his son W. P. Gaines, shown in paragraph 21 of these facts, or if the deed shown in paragraph 20 of these facts from Chas. S. West as executor of R. J. Townes, together, with the will of said Townes, to W. B. P. Gaines, in connection with said deed from W. B. P. Gaines to his son W. P. Gaines, under all the circumstances and legitimate facts appertaining thereto, passed title to the said W. P. Gaines, the son, then plaintiffs can not recover in this suit. Otherwise they can recover the two-fifths interest represented by Mrs. Pollie T. Carleton and Mrs. Pattie E. Rector in the land sued for, as described in plaintiffs’ original petition. It is further agreed that each of the defendants deraign title to the land in controversy from the said W. P. Gaines.

*277 “9. That no recovery can be had for the interests in the property in controversy inherited by Mrs. Mila T. Morris, H. Cobb Townes, and Allen E. Townes, by reason of the bar of the statute of limitation.

“10. That there is no limitation against Mrs. Pollie T. Oarleton and Mrs. Pattie E. Eector, heirs of Eobert J. Townes, deceased, in the land sued for as described in plaintiffs’ original petition.

“11. W. B. P. Gaines died in 1891.

“13. Deed dated Brazoria, 17th May, 1856, from John B. Jones to Wm. B. P. Gaines and Eobert J. Townes, conveying to them a number of tracts of land, including the land in controversy. This deed was duly acknowledged on the 19th of May, 1856, and recorded on the 38th October, 1857, in the records of deeds of McLennan Count)', Texas, in Book ‘G,’ on pages 590 and 591.

“13. It is agreed by and between the parties hereto that Pattie E. Eector (nee Townes), joined by her husband and E. L. Eector, has duly conveyed by deed in writing her one-fifth interest in the land in controversy to the plaintiff Pollie T. Oarleton before the filing of this action.

“14. W. P. Gaines, being sworn, testified: W. B. P. Gaines was my father. He died in 1891. I am 46 years old. In the years 1855 and 1856, W. B. P. Gaines and Eobert J. Townes were partners in buying and selling land in Texas. I know the handwriting of W. B. P. Gaines and Eobert J. Townes. The agreement shown in paragraph 15 of these facts was signed by W. B. P. Gaines and Eobert J. Townes. Eobert J. Townes wrote said agreement. The notes shown in paragraph 16 of these facts were signed by W. B. P. Gaines and Eobert J. Townes. What I know about the payment is what my father told me and from papers in my possession. Eobert J. Townes died in the fall of 1865. In the year 1867 or 1868, 1 helped gather cattle belonging to my father for the purpose of selling them and paying off. said notes; though I did not actually see the money paid over, I was informed of such purpose by my father. Said notes and certain other notes, and the claim of John Barnes against the estate of Eobert J. Townes, shown in paragraph 18 of these facts, were found together in an envelope among the private papers of my father W. B. P. Gaines. There were no other notes ever found among the papers of Gaines and Townes or among the papers of W. B. P. Gaines that resembled or are in any way similar to the notes shown in paragraph 16 of these facts. The receipt signed by J ones, shown in paragraph 19 of these facts, was found among the private papers of W. B. P. Gaines. There was no money paid on the claim of Barnes against the estate of Eobert J. Townes, which was transferred to W. B. P. Gaines, as shown in paragraph 18 of these facts. The only thing that W. B. P. Gaines received from said estate was the lands conveyed to him by Chas. S. West, as executor. Said lands were worth, in 1873, on an average of 50 to 75 cents an. acre. The particular land in controversy was worth $3.50 or $3 per acre at that time. Immediately after the death of Eobert J. Townes, my father W. B. P. Gaines began to pay taxes thereon. Eobert J. Townes was insolvent when he died. W. B. P. Gaines was never insolvent. The *278 Chas. S. West referred to as executor of Robert J. Townes was a prominent lawyer at Austin, Texas; and at one time a judge of the Supreme Court of this State.

“The testimony of the witness Gaines, so far as he stated what his father told him and what he knew from the papers in his possession as to the payment of the Lanphere notes, and their being paid after Townes’ death, and what his father told him as to the purpose of selling the cattle, was objected to by the plaintiffs as being hearsay. The court admitted the testimony, construing it as hearsay, and to this extent objectionable.

“15. Agreement between Wm. B. P. Gaines and Robert J. Townes as follows: State of Texas, County of Travis.—Whereas, Wm. B. P. Gaines and Robert J. Townes are the joint and equal owners of several tracts of land. [Here follows the description of a number of tracts, including the land in controversy in this suit, being the same land purchased from John B.

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Bluebook (online)
49 S.W. 118, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 275, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carleton-v-hausler-texapp-1899.