Caver v. Liverman.

185 S.W.2d 417, 143 Tex. 359, 1945 Tex. LEXIS 125
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1945
DocketNo. A-237.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 185 S.W.2d 417 (Caver v. Liverman.) 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
Caver v. Liverman., 185 S.W.2d 417, 143 Tex. 359, 1945 Tex. LEXIS 125 (Tex. 1945).

Opinion

per curiam :

This is a suit in trespass to try title, brought by petitioner Caver against respondents, the land in controversy being a tract in Cass County 100 feet wide north and south and 4343 feet long, containing 9.99 acres, which many years ago was owned by the Jefferson Lumber Company and used by it as a right of way for its tram road. Its use for that purpose was abandoned about the year 1895, Petitioner proved a record title to the tract of land for which he sued. Respondents rely upon adverse possession, respondent Boyer claiming to have acquired title to the west 7.49 acres of the tract of land in controversy by possession and use and respondent Crawford claiming thus to have acquired the east 2.5 acres.

The jury, by answers to special issues, found in Boyer’s favor the essential elements of the five, ten and twenty-five year statutes of limitation and in Crawford’s favor.the essential elements of the ten and twenty-five year statutes. The trial court’s judgment that petitioner take nothing was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals. 180 S. W. (2d) 448.

The suit is in effect two separate suits, one between petitioner Caver and respondent Boyer for the 7.49 acre tract, and the other between petitioner Caver and respondent Crawford for the 2.5 acre tract, and the controversies as to the two tracts will be separately discussed.

The land in controversy is a part of the John Lick Head-right Survey, which was divided into three parts, designated as the north, middle and south thirds. The south boundary of the tract of land 100 feet in width, formerly owned by the Jefferson Lumber Company, which is also the south boundary of the two *361 tracts in controversy herein, is along the south line of the middle third and the north line of the south third of the Lick survey. Respondent Boyer took possession of the 7.49 acre tract under a deed dated December 19, 1918, executed by his mother, Mrs. Cynthia E. Boyer, joined by his father, conveying to "him, respondent E. Boyer, 208 acres of land more or less out of the middle third of the Lick survey and so described by metes and bound as to include within the boundaries of the tract conveyed by the deed the 7.49 acre tract, the south line of the. 208 acre tract conveyed being described in the deed as coinciding with the south boundary line of the middle third and the north boundary line of the south third of the survey. The same 208 acre tract, with the same description, had been conveyed to Mrs. Cynthia E. Boyer on October 30, 1917, by J. W. Witt and wife, and Witt held a deed to the same tract from L. D. Young and wife which, like the two deeds last described and with the same description, included the 7.49 acre tract. Prior deeds in the chain of title, however, used the same description but excepted the right of way (and consequently the 7.49 acre tract) that had been deeded to the Jefferson Lumber Company.

The petition for writ of error attacks as contrary to the undispted evidence the jury’s finding that Boyer held peaceable and adverse possession of the 7.49 acre tract, using or enjoying the same for a period of ten consecutive years prior to the filing of the suit. After careful examination of the statement of facts, we have reached the conclusion that there is evidence supporting this finding of the jury. The substance of some of the evidence will be stated'briefly.

The deeds by which Witt, although he had no title to the 7.49 acre tract, conveyed the 208 acres to respondent Boyer’s mother, and by which she conveyed the 208 acres to Boyer, included the 7.49 acre tract as a part of the land conveyed. Boyer and his father and mother immediately went into possession of the land and occupied it as their home. The land had been fenced before they acquired it and most of the 7.49 acres, the right of way, was within the enclosure. The fence on the south line of the enclosure followed in general the south line of the right of way, but apparently because of irregularities in the surface of the right of way the fence was not straight. There is evidence that in some places the fence was 12 to 20 feet north of the south line of the right of way and that at a few places it was as far as 60 feet from the line, so that small parts of the 7.49 acre tract, although included in the deed, were outside of the fence. Boyer has maintained the fences forming the enclosure at all times since the land was conveyed to him.

*362 Boyer lived on the 208 acre tract and used it for farming ing and stock raising, making a crop on some portion of the land from 1918 until the fall of 1922. Thereafter his tenant occupied the land, cultivated portions of it, and used it for grazing livestock until 1943. There is evidence that, from 1919 until the crop year 1943 a crop was made each year of some portion of the land described in the deed. During all of that time Boyer claimed ownership of the 208 acres described in the deed and regularly paid taxes on it.

Most of the 7.49 acres was unfit for farming on account of the dumps and cuts made for the tram road and because timber had overgrown a part of it. During two years a tenant farmed 200 or 300 yards, of the 7.49 acres as far as the fence on the south but except for that none of the right of way was actually cultivated. There is evidence proving, or at least tending to prove, that each year, during a period or periods of ten consecutive years. Boyer and his tenants, after the crops were made, turned their livestock into the enclosure and thus regularly and consecutively during the fall and winter used the land within the enclosure for grazing, and there is positive testimony that the livestock went onto the old right of way and grazed there.

The evidence may be summarized as showing that the land here in controversy and claimed by Boyer was included within the description contained in the deed to Boyer;- that he took possession under that deed, claiming as his own all of the land described in it; that the land conveyed to him was enclosed by fences so that the enclosure included, except for a few small portions of the right of way, all of the land described in thb deed; and that Boyer and his tenant possessed and used the, land for farming and grazing each year for a period or periods; of more than ten consecutive years. This evidence supports the1 jury’s finding of adverse possession and use of the 7.49 acres.

Petitioner invokes the rule of Turner v. Moore, 81 Texas 206, 16 S. W. 929, which was discussed in Simonds v. Stanolind Oil & Gas Co., 134 Texas 332, 336-338, 114 S. W. (2d) 226, making the contention that since part of the land described in Boyer’s deed, that is the land immediately north of the 7.49 acres, was owned 'by one person and part, the 7.49 acres, by another person, Boyer’s possession of the land to the north cannot be extended to the 7.49 acre tract. The rule of Turner v. Moore is not applicable, because, as has been said, there is evidence proving, or at least tending to prove, that Boyer and his tenants had actual possession of the greater part of the 7.49 acres.

*363 Petitioner makes the further contention that Boyer acquired no title to the part or parts of the 7.49 acre tract lying outside of his enclosure, because there is no proof that he ever possessed or used that land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 S.W.2d 417, 143 Tex. 359, 1945 Tex. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caver-v-liverman-tex-1945.