Collier v. Couts

47 S.W. 525, 92 Tex. 234, 1898 Tex. LEXIS 182
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 3, 1898
DocketNo. 699.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 47 S.W. 525 (Collier v. Couts) 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
Collier v. Couts, 47 S.W. 525, 92 Tex. 234, 1898 Tex. LEXIS 182 (Tex. 1898).

Opinion

GAINES, Chief Justice.

We take the following statement of this case, together with the conclusions of fact of the Court of Civil Appeals, from the opinion of that court:

“On June 27, 1894, the appellant brought this suit in trespass to try title to recover from J. E. Couts, appellee, an undivided interest of 11-24 of the Azariah Braelcene 290 acres survey, adjoining the city of Weather-ford, Parker County. The plaintiff is a daughter of Azariah Brackene, to whose heirs the land was patented. She was bom on July 12, 1834, her father dying in March, 1842. The trial judge held her entitled to recover unless defeated by the defendant’s plea of the ten year statute of limitation, upon which alone the appellee prevailed. Among other matters, the plaintiff seeks to avoid the defense of limitation on the ground of coverture. It appears that she married B. B. Collier on April *236 14, 1859, and that this marriage terminated with his death on March 5, 1893. In connection with his plea, the defendant offered the following instruments: (1) A certified copy of the unconditional headright certificate to A. Brackene, dated November 21, 1848, to 640 acres of land. (2) A transfer by W. T. J. Brackene to John McMillan, dated November 16, 1849, transferring 290 acres of this certificate. The transfer itself purports to be the act of William T. J. Brackene, but the certificate of acknowledgment describes William Brackene as the grantor and as acting in the capacity of administrator of the estate of A. Brackene, deceased. (3) A certified copy of a transfer dated December 16, 1854, from John McMillan to Jesse R. Wright, of 290 acres of the land called for by the unconditional certificate. (4) A transfer of the certificate from J esse R. Wright to John Matlock, dated December 8, 1855, and a certified copy of the transfer of the same certificate from John Matlock to Joshua Barker, dated December 11, 1857. (5) A certified copy of the field notes, of the survey of 290 acres of land, made for the heirs of A. Brackene by Llewellyn Murphy, surveyor of Parker County, describing the survey in controversy, dated December 21, 1852, and filed in the General Land Office July 26, 1858. (6) The original patent, dated December 22, 1860, from the State to the heirs of A. Brackene, to the land in controversy. With this claim of Joshua Barker the defendant connects himself by a deed from the sheriff of Parker County, dated April 8th, and duly recorded April 9, 1868, resting upon an execution levied upon the land in controversy on March 18, 1868, which issued upon a valid judgment in favor of one A. C. Crane against Joshua Barker; it appearing that the appellee became the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale had by virtue of this 'levy and execution.

“With reference to the character and the extent of the possession relied upon by the appellee in support of his defense of ten years’ limitation, the evidence justifies the following conclusions of fact, imported by the verdict of the jury under the charge of the court: Joshua Barker built a house upon the survejq in which he lived continuously from 1857 or 1858 until 1862. This occupancy by him seems to have been under his claim to the entire survey, except as to a tract of about four acres owned or claimed by one A. J. Ball from about 1859, inferentially in privity with Barker. West of this Ball tract was a field of some 15 acres controlled by Barker. From 1862 until April 8, 1868, when Gouts purchased, the property was vacant. As soon as Gouts purchased it, in 1868, he claimed the entire tract, less, perhaps, the small quantity held by Ball. Gouts did not himself live upon the land, but his tenant occupied a house which was within the 15-acre field from the date of Gouts’ purchase until about the year 1879, when it seems that the property was divided into town lots. This tenancy, as indicated, began immediately upon the purchase by Gouts, and the field, though perhaps not cultivated during the first year of the occupancy, was cultivated from about 1870 until 1879, during which time, as also above indicated, Gouts claimed the land outside of the 15-acre field.”

*237 Article 3343 of the Revised Statutes provides, that “any person who has the right of action for the recovery of any lands, tenements, or hereditaments against another having peaceable and adverse possession thereof, cultivating, using, or enjoying the same, shall institute his suit therefor within ten years next after his cause of action shall have accrued, and not afterward.” Article 3348 defines peaceable possession as being “such as is continuous and not interrupted by adverse suit to recover the estate.” When the possession has not been continuous, that is, when there has been a break in the occupancy, the possession preceding the break does not in any manner affect the title. Since the plaintiff in error had attained her majority and was unmarried at the time Joshua Barker took possession, an unbroken possession by him and those claiming in privity with him for the statutory period would have defeated her title. On the other hand, since the first possession was abandoned and she was a married woman at the time the land was again adversely occupied and held, it is clear that limitation would not have begun to run against her until the death of1 her husband in 1893, unless the laws which suspended the operation of the statute of limitations during the time the possession was abandoned had the effect to make the two possessions in legal contemplation continuous. The trial court and the Court of Civil Appeals both held that such was the operation of these laws. In so holding, we think they were in error. Doubtless the lawmaking power, under certain limitations, might have provided that a possession in fact abandoned during the continuance of the war or until .a certain time after its termination should be deemed continuous for the purposes of the statute of limitations. In other words, it might have provided that the statute should continue to run notwithsanding a break in the possession occurring during the designated period. But in our ■opinion it was the purpose neither of the legislatures nor of the constitutional conventions which made the several provisions for suspending the operation of the statute of limitations during the war to give to such provisions so wide a scope. The first act was passed in 1862, and related ■only to contracts for the payment of money. Pasch. Dig., art. 4630. But a more comprehensive provision was enacted in 1863. In so far as it effects the question under consideration, it reads as follows: “All statutes of limitations on all civil rights of action of every kind, whether real or personal, are hereby suspended until one year after the close of the war between the Confederate States and the United States.” * * * Pasch. Dig., art. 4631. The constitutional convention of 1866 passed an ordinance in the following’words: “In all civil actions, the time between the 2d day of March, 1861, and the 2d day of September, 1866, shall not be computed in the application of any statute of limitations.” Pasch. Dig., art. 4631a. Section 43 of article 12 of the Constitution ■of 1869 reads as follows: “The statutes of limitation of civil suits were suspended by the so-called Act of Secession of the 28th of January, 1861, and shall be considered as suspended within this State, until the acceptance of this Constitution by the United States Congress.” The follow *238

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.W. 525, 92 Tex. 234, 1898 Tex. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collier-v-couts-tex-1898.