Cheek, Guardian v. Herndon

17 S.W. 763, 82 Tex. 146, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1095
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1891
DocketNo. 2879.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 17 S.W. 763 (Cheek, Guardian v. Herndon) 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
Cheek, Guardian v. Herndon, 17 S.W. 763, 82 Tex. 146, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1095 (Tex. 1891).

Opinion

COLLARD, Judge,

Section A.—This suit was brought on the 6th of January, 1888, by Sammie B. Beed and J. B. Cheek, guardian of the *148 estate of the minors Ida, Annie, and Minnie May Williamson, against W. S. Herndon, O. L. Allen, and the St. Louis, Arkansas & Texas Railway Company, to recover and for partition of one-half undivided interest in the Joseph Robbins 320 acres survey of land situated in Smith County. Herndon made his warrantors parties to the suit, to-wit, Julius L. Williamson, W. G. Williamson, Dolly Yancy and her husband IT. M. Yancy, W. G. Johnson, Mary B. Adams and her husband L. O. Adams, and J. M. Williamson. The following are the important facts of the case:

Jasper M. Williamson and Mary A. Williamson were husband and wife; she died September 22,1865, leaving surviving her, her husband and seven children of the marriage—Mrs. Lady Turner, Frank, Julius, Dolly, John, Mollie B., and Gallatin, or W. G. Mrs. Turner died in 1869, her husband S. W. Turner surviving her. Frank died in 1873, leaving no wife or child. At the time of the death of Mrs. Mary A. Williamson, the community property of herself and her husband consisted of the Joseph Robbins 320 acres survey of land and 305 acres of the Gilbert survey, besides several thousand dollars in personal property. In 1867 J. M. Williamson married his second wife Frances E. Plaintiffs are the children of the second marriage, all minors except Sammie B. Reed, who married in April or May, 1883. Frances E. Williamson, the second wife of J. M. Williamson, died about the year 1875.

On January 22, 1867, J. W. Williamson conveyed the Gilbert survey of 305 acres to his son John T. Williamson by deed, expressing the consideration as $500, giving to his first wife’s children no part of the proceeds of the sale. The evidence tends to show that he also appropriated the personal community estate of his first marriage and accounted to the children for none of it. The 305 acres tract was more valuable than the 320 acres. Hence it appears that he appropriated considerably more than his half of the community and more than his half of the land. This being the condition of things, on January 20, 1872, he made a deed of gift to his second wife and the children of that marriage to an undivided half of the 320 acres of land, the Robbins survey. This deed has never been found, but he had it duly recorded in the Smith County record of deeds, March 9, 1872. Upon this title the plaintiffs sue the vendees of the children of the first marriage, who paid value for the land purchased, and the vendees of J. M. Williamson, for fractional parts of the same survey, who also paid value for the same. Defendants contend that as J. M. Williamson had disposed of and appropriated more than his one-half in value of the community land by sale of the Gilbert survey, the equitable title to his half of the Robbins 320 acres was vested in the children of the first marriage, and that his deed of gift to his second wife and children, the consideration being “for natural love and affection,” conveyed no title, and that such children can not recover and have partition of the same *149 with defendants holding the rights of the first set of children and rights of J. M. Williamson derived from the first set of children.

This is the main issue, but there are other minor issues which will be explained as they arise in this review of the case. The cause was by agreement withdrawn from the jury after the trial had commenced, and it was tried by the judge, who rendered judgment for plaintiffs for an undivided half-interest in 22 acres, three-fourths acre, and 1£ acres of the Bobbins survey, describing each tract by metes and bounds, quieting the title of defendants Allen and the railway company to the land described in their deeds; also quieting the title of Herndon to so much of the survey as was not adjudged to plaintiffs, they to pay the costs incurred by Allen and the railway company and one-half of other costs of suit. Cheek as guardian has appealed.

On the trial the defendants read in evidence over objection of plaintiffs the deed of J. M. Williamson to John T. Williamson for 305 acres of land of the Gilbert survey. It is signed J. M. Williamson and acknowledged for record by James M. Williamson. The objection to the deed was that “it was not signed and acknowledged legally by Jasper M. Williamson, and was not material.” The court allowed the bill of exceptions, with the explanation that the facts showed that Jasper M. Williamson and J. M. Williamson was the same person, and that “James” in the certificate of acknowledgment was a clerical error. The evidence and the record before us and the pleadings identify the grantor under “ J. M.” as well as “Jasper M.” Williamson. The deed to his second wife and her children is signed J. M. Williamson. Several of his recognized deeds were signed “ J. M.,” and were read in evidence. His identity under both names is clearly established. We agree with the court below that the error in the certificate of acknowledgment was clerical only. Such an error could not affect the deed itself. The objection was not that it was not a recorded instrument nor that it-had not been proved up as at common law. The court’s ruling was correct.

Appellants assign as error the overruling of their exceptions to all that part of defendant’s first amended answer filed February 28, 1889, contained in subdivisions 6 to 20, for the reason that such portions of the amended answer set up matter that was irrelevant. The exceptions to the pleading were as follows: “And plaintiffs specially except to all that part of said pretended answer included in subdivi-' sions thereof 6 to 20 inclusive, because said part sets up a series of matters and things and alleges transactions foreign to this suit, and not relevant to any issue herein, and which constitute no defense to this action.” The pleading referred to is as follows:

“Subdivisions 6 to 20 of said amended answer set up matter in substance as follows: That when Mary A. Williamson, the first wife of Jasper M., died, in 1865, there were no debts or incumbrances against *150 the community estate of herself and said Jasper; that in January, 1867, said Jasper M. Williamson conveyed the 305 acres tract of land belonging to said estate to John T. Williamson for a cash consideration; that said Jasper M. appropriated to his exclusive use all the personal property belonging to said estate, amounting in value to about $7000; that about the year 1868 said Jasper M. married his second wife Frances E., and on January 20, 1872, executed to her and her children by him begotten a deed of gift to an undivided half-interest in the Bobbins survey of 320 acres, which was also part of said community estate; that said deed of gift was void because the donor then had no interest in the Bobbins survey, having theretofore conveyed and appropriated fully one-half of said community estate, and because it was made to cheat and defraud the heirs of Mary A. Williamson, deceased; that the said heirs acquiesced in the partition of said estate as thus made by said Jasper M.; that neither said heirs nor their vendees knew of said deed to Frances E. Williamson and her children till 1887; that when said deed was executed in 1872 there was pending a suit by the United States Government against said Jasper M.

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.W. 763, 82 Tex. 146, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1095, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cheek-guardian-v-herndon-tex-1891.