Conrad v. Hughes

195 S.W. 1181, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 626
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 5, 1917
DocketNo. 7360.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 195 S.W. 1181 (Conrad v. Hughes) 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
Conrad v. Hughes, 195 S.W. 1181, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 626 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This is a suit brought by the heirs of Frederick Cole, deceased, against appellee and other defendants to set aside a judgment of the district court of Ft. Bend county rendered on November 7, 1908, in a suit brought by appellee Hughes agaipst Peter Conrad and a number of other defendants to recover a tract of 567% acres of land, a part of the Peter -Conrad one-fourth league grant in said county.

The petition of appellants is in the form of a motion for new trial filed in the suit last mentioned, and in addition to the allegations of the grounds upon which the judgment is sought to be set aside and a new trial granted, alleges ownership of an undivided one-half of the 567% acres of land, and prays recovery of title and possession thereof against defendants. All persons in possession of the land claiming under said judgment were named as defendants, and served with citation upon said motion or petition. This petition was filed on June 30, 1914. On the 10th day of November, 1914, W. P. Hughes filed a reply to the motion for new trial, in which he denied all and singular the allegations made in said motion. (1) He denied that Frederick Cole ever owned any interest in the Peter Conrad one-fourth league of land; (2) denied that Frederick Cole was the son of Jeremiah Cole and Elizabeth Cole, as alleged in the petition; (3) denied that Frederick Cole was of unsound mind; (4) that since the rendition of the judgment in the case of W. P. Hughes v. Peter Conrad et al., he had sold the land to C. F. Helmuth, I. Artmann, Fred L. Tesch, and Charles F. Tesch. The other defendants Helmuth, Art-mann, and Tesch filed an answer in reply to said motion for a new trial, adopting the answer filed by W. P. Hughes. The defendant C. F. Helmuth filed an affidavit charging that the original instrument purporting to be a deed from Peter' Conrad to Jeremiah Cole was a forgery.

The undisputed evidence in support of the allegations of the petition excusing the delay in bringing the suit to set aside the judgment in the ease of Hughes v. Conrad, shows that Frederick Cole, who was one of the parties defendant in said' suit was a nonresident of this state, and was cited by publication. 1-Ie was non compos mentis from his childhood, and died intestate in an asylum in Maine on January 9, 1913, and he was not represented upon the trial of said cause except by an attorney ad litem appointed to represent all of the nonresident defendants. The appellants are his heirs at law. The overwhelming evidence shows that he was a son of Jeremiah and Elizabeth Cole, who died in 1839 and 1841, respectively. As the son of said parties he inherited one-half of their estate. In support of their claim of title to a one-half interest in the land in controversy, appellants, after filing affidavit of loss of the original instrument, offered in evidence the record of the original grant from the commissioners of Austin’s Colony to Peter Conrad of the one-fourth league of land of which the land in suit is a part as shown in Record Book A of the Deed Records of Ft. Bend county. The record of this grant was No. 57 in said record book. Immediately following the record of this grant in said book was the following record numbered 58, which was also offered in evidence by appellants:

“Republic of Texas, County of Brazoria.
“That Peter Conrad at present of the county and republic aforesaid have this day sold, alienated and released unto Jeremiah Cole of the county and republic aforesaid all my title, interest and claim as well for myself, heirs and legal representatives to the within quarter league of land' for and in consideration of the sum of sixteen *1182 hundred and fifty dollars, the receipt of which I hereby acknowledge.
“Given under my hand and seal this 29th day of January, 1S38. Peter Oonrad. L.-t.
“Test: Willis A. Paris. Thos. Oole. G. W. Cummings. Robert H. Grimes.
' “The foregoing transfer from Oonrad to Cole in the original is attached to the translation of the original grant to Oonrad, and was entered of record the 11th day of May, 1838.
“Joseph H. Barnard,
“County Clerk and Recorder.”

These records -were offered in evidence under the following agreement of attorneys representing the parties:

“That the record of the instrument offered in evidence shown in Book A, pages 55, 56 and 577, Deed Records of Pt. Bend county, Texas, and the said indorsement following as recorded in said Deed Book A is in the handwriting of Jos. H. Barnard, who was then county clerk of Pt. Bend county, Texas, and that the said book is the original book of entry as originally transcribed from the original instrument by said clerk. * * * The undersigned parties for the purpose of saving expense have and do hereby agree with each other that either party may use in evidence either the record or a certified copy thereof, or the original of any instrument of record without filing among the papers of this case either the original or certified copy thereof and give three days’ notice thereof, and without accounting for the oiiginal of such instrument, provided always that such instrument offered would be admissible in evidence if the party offering; same had complied with the provisions of article 3700, Revised Statutes of Texas. Either party reserves the right to object to any instrument when offered in evidence upon any grounds other than those waived by section 1 of this agreement.”

The defendants objected to this record as evidence upon the following grounds:

“(a) We desire to interpose an objection to the introduction of that deed what purports to be a deed from Peter Gonrad to Jeremiah Cole. In the first place, the deed, we claim, has no such description of the property attempted to be conveyed that is sufficient to make a valuable deed; in other words, that the deed itself simply says, or what purports to be a deed, that he transfers the within quarter of league of land, and that that of itself is insufficient to convey the title because it can refer to any quarter league of land as well as to the Oonrad quarter league.
“(b) We object to the memoranda that the clerk attempts to make with reference to that deed, for the reason that he had no authority to make it; it was not within his duty to make a memoranda of that sort — the law required him to make a copy of the instruments that were filed in his office that had been properly acknowledged, and any private memorandum or notation that the clerk may have on his docket with reference to any instrument that he recorded, a certified copy of it could not be used in evidence.
“(c) We further object to it for the reason that it was not acknowledged or proven as the law required instruments at that time to be proven in order to be admitted to record. The statute at that time required an instrument that was admitted to record that could be recorded by the clerk to be proven by some subscribing witness.
“(d) Now, to restate the position that we take with reference to that deed, the first is that it insufficiently described the land, they claim that by reason of the memorandum, which they say was made by the clerk at the recording of the deed, which we object to, that that goes hack-to the other instrument.

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225 S.W. 555 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1920)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 S.W. 1181, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conrad-v-hughes-texapp-1917.