Cook's Hereford Cattle Co. v. Barnhart

147 S.W. 662, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 487
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 24, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 147 S.W. 662 (Cook's Hereford Cattle Co. v. Barnhart) 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
Cook's Hereford Cattle Co. v. Barnhart, 147 S.W. 662, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 487 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

FLY, J.

This is an action of trespass to try title instituted by Alice B. Barnhart, ap-pellee, against Cook’s Hereford Cattle Company and others, to recover a certain tract of land, a part of the Pedro Flores Morales survey No. 1,414 or parts of A. B. & M. survey No. 1, patented to Louis Unger, containing 51 acres of land. The Cattle Company answered by a plea of not guilty, and the other appellants joined in that plea, and, in addition, claimed title from that company, and prayed for judgments on their warranty. A jury trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for appellee against all the appellants, and against the Cattle Company in favor of the other appellants on their warranties. There was evidence which tended to show that appellee had been in peaceable, adverse possession of the land in controversy, cultivating, using, and enjoying the same for a period of more than 10 years prior to a time in 1910, when a certain boundary fence that had inclosed the land in appellee’s inclosure was removed by the Cattle Company. There was also evidence tending to show a verbal agreement upon the part of appellee that the fence could be moved and placed on the line now claimed by appellants to be the true boundary line between the Morales tract on the north and the lands of appellants on the south.

Under the statement of the facts herein given, the court, after defining peaceable and adverse possession, instructed the jury: “Now, if you believe from the evidence that the plaintiff, Alice B. Barnhart, and her deceased husband, have successively had and held peaceable and adverse possession (as those - terms have been defined) of the land described in her petition, cultivating, using, or enjoying the same for any period of 10 *663 years after said possession commenced and before the removal of the fence by the Cattle Company in 1910, and that she did not agree in 1906 with Mason Maney, as agent of the Cattle Company, that the fence might he removed and rebuilt, so as to exclude the land in controversy from her possession, and did not authorize her agent, Needham Smith, to so agree for her, then you are instructed that such, possession was sufficient to vest title in the plaintiff by limitation, and you will return yoúr verdict for plaintiff for the said land. You are further charged that if you believe from the evidence that plaintiff and her deceased husband successively had and held peaceable and adverse possession (as those terms have been defined) of the said land for any 10 consecutive years, cultivating, using, or enjoying the same prior to the month of March, 1906, then plaintiff acquired full title, and you will find your verdict for her for the said land, although you may further believe from the evidence that plaintiff during said month of March, 1906, did agree with Mason Maney as agent of the Cattle Company that the fence might be removed and rebuilt so as to exclude said land from her possession, or that she did authorize her agent, Needham Smith, to so agree for her.”

[1] The whole charge herein copied is assailed through the first assignment of error; the only proposition thereunder being: “Adjoining landowners can agree by parol as to the location of a partition line between their respective lands, and be bound thereby, regardless of whether title to the same was acquired in either party to such agreement by limitation or otherwise.” It has been repeatedly held in Texas that a boundary line between tracts of land owned by different persons may be established by the parol agreements of such owners, and that such agreements will not be obnoxious to the provisions of the statute of frauds, in regard to the conveyance of real estate. Houston v. Sneed, 15 Tex. 307; Coleman v. Smith, 55 Tex. 254; Hefner v. Downing, 57 Tex. 576; Cooper v. Austin, 58 Tex. 494; Johnson v. Johnson, 65 Tex. 87; Le Comte v. Toudouze, 82 Tex. 208, 17 S. W. 1047, 27 Am. St. Rep. 870. As qualifying and explaining the rule, it is held that there must doubt exist as to the true division line, and, where the parties know the divisional line, such an agreement would not be binding, because it would be a parol conveyance of land and prohibited by the statute of frauds. Harn v. Smith, 79 Tex. 310, 15 S. W. 240, 23 Am. St. Rep. 340.

Under the facts in this case, the parties, as well as every one else, knew the divisional line between the two tracts, for it was plainly marked by a fence that had occupied its position for more than 20 years. There might have been a doubt as to the true boundary line between the two tracts, but there was absolutely no kind of doubt as to the location of the true divisional line between the land owned by appellee and that owned by appellants, and the whole object to be attained by the agreement was not to fix a boundary, but to obtain title to 51 acres of land to which appellee had a title by limitations. It amounted to a parol conveyance of the land, and was within the scope of and obnoxious to the statute of frauds. Yerbal agreements for the settlement of an uncertain boundary is binding between the parties because no title is affected thereby, as neither could be said to have title to the disputed tract, and neither had any evidence of title, but such verbal agreement cannot be sustained where the title is clearly in one of the parties. Browne, Stat. Fraud, § 269.

[2] The title that appellee had acquired to the 52 acres of land by limitation was just as full, strong, and complete as though it had come to her through a regular chain of title, and could no more be conveyed by an oral transfer than it could have been had it been evidenced by a record title. “The statute has given to the adverse, continuous, hostile possession, shown by the proof in this case, a certain effect. It results in the consummation of a title — a title as full and absolute as any other perfect title.” Bruce v. Washington, 80 Tex. 368, 15 S. W. 1104. In the ease of Cannon v. Oil Company, 138 S. W. 803, the facts were that a party whose title to land had been perfected by limitation was requested to move her line to a certain place and assented, but the court held: “It goes without saying that a mere verbal relinquishment of her claim to the land, made after title had vested in her by limitation, would not affect such title.”

Yerbal agreements as to unknown boundaries are permitted in the interest of peace and tranquillity, and to prevent strife and dissension among the citizens, for, as is well known, there is no more prolific breeder of trouble between neighbors than a disputed boundary, but the principle cannot be stretched so as to be the means of divesting one party of his title to land and investing it in another. There was no contest or dispute as to the boundary line between the Cattle Company and appellee, no difficulty whatever in ascertaining it. The county surveyor testified that the west corner of the Morales survey is still on the ground showing the original bearing tree, and the north corner of the A. B. & M. No. 2 is on the ground. There was no doubt as to the correct location of the south line of the Morales and the north line of the surveys south thereof. An agreement, therefore, to fix the line as indicated by the field notes and objects on the ground amounted to a parol conveyance of 51 acres of land by appellee to the Cattle Company. The court properly charged the jury that the parol agreement did not divest *664 appellee of her title.

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Bluebook (online)
147 S.W. 662, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooks-hereford-cattle-co-v-barnhart-texapp-1912.