Creal v. Gallup

231 F. 96, 145 C.C.A. 284, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1640
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 21, 1916
DocketNo. 2813
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 231 F. 96 (Creal v. Gallup) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Creal v. Gallup, 231 F. 96, 145 C.C.A. 284, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1640 (5th Cir. 1916).

Opinions

NEWMAN, District Judge.

This case was “trespass to try title” under the laws of Texas and the contest was over 160 acres of land in Tyler county, in the Eastern judicial district of Texas.

[97]*97The plaintiffs brought suit against the defendants for 640 acres of land, and the defendants disclaimed all the survey of land described in plaintiffs’ petition except 160 acres, which was claimed by the defendant Monroe Reese, and held by his tenant, Griffin Creal, tinder the 10-year statute of limitation of the state of Texas. The plaintiffs’ reply to this claim of defendants of 160 acres under the 10-year statute of limitation was that the defendant Reese had claimed to have acquired title by possession and the 10-year statute of limitation to 160 other acres of land adjoining the land in question. The 160 acres of land now in dispute is part of section 21, while the land as to which plaintiffs set up that defendants had made an additional and prior claim was in section 6.

To show that the defendant in error Monroe Reese had made a claim to 160 acres of land in section 6, the plaintiffs offered in evidence an answer alleged to have been made by the defendant Reese in an intervention by the Houston Oil Company, against Monroe Reese, in the case of Maryland Trust Company v. Kirby Lumber Co. et al. (no opinion). In this alleged answer of Monroe Reese he asserted a claim, under the statute of limitation of 10 years, to 160 acres of land in section 6, but the same was not signed by him or by his attorney, nor was the affidavit appended to the answer signed by him or by his counsel, or sworn to by him, though the blanks for such signatures and attestation appear in the instrument.

Counsel for the plaintiffs, in offering in evidence in this case the answer of the defendant in the former case, made this statement:

“The purpose of the evidence is to show that the defendant in this case has been claiming 160 acres of land off of section No. 6, which adjoins the land sued for in this case, and the improvement on which he is suing to base his claim of limitation in this case was partly on section 6 and partly on section 21, involved in this ease, and it is our contention under the authorities that he, having asserted claim to the land out of section 6, is precluded from asserting a claim to land out of section 21.”

The court, having considered this evidence and the objections thereto, then and there overruled such objections, and received the instrument in evidence over the objection of the defendants, to which action of the court the defendants then and there excepted, and tendered their bill of exceptions thereto, which was made a part of the record.

Counsel for plaintiffs in error in their brief referring to this answer of Reese in the equity case say:

“It docs appear, however, that it was duly filed as his answer to the intervention filed against Mm, that he based Ms defense thereon, and that it was considered by the master and the court in passing upon such defense to the intervention. It will also be noted that no objection was raised by the plaintiffs in error to the admission of the answer on the ground that it was unsigned or unsworn to; and, having been admitted without such an objection being raised to it, it is in the case for all purposes as fully as if it had been signed and sworn to.”

In addition to the fact that the record states, as above, that this pleading was objected to and the objection overruled, it appears that it was specifically objected to on the ground that it was improper and incompetent as impeaching evidence or for any other purpose.

[98]*98There was other evidence in the case, part of which was the testimony of Monroe Reese, the defendant, and much of Reese’s testimony was contradictory of the statements made in the paper which purports to be his answer in the other case. Part of Reese’s testimony, as stated in the record, is as follows:

“That with reference to the land sued for on section 6, he never did claim anything on section 6 until he bought the title; that he thinks he bought it about 1894; that he never claimed any limitation of section 6 through his own possession; that he claimed under the ones he bought from; that he did not claim in said suit that he had been on section 6 after he bought it long enough to mature a title; that he does not know how long the parties he bought from had been in possession; that they were there when he moved to the country.
• “On cross^xamination the witness testifies that he did not claim title to section 6 under his own possession; that there might have been a judgment rendered against him in 1898; that he thinks he bought the land on section 6 in 1894; that he bought it whenever the deed shows; that he don’t know where the deed is; that he is not sure whether it was in 1894 or not, and don’t think it was; that he bought the place before the judgment was rendered against him on section 6; that Texas & Louisiana Lumber Company got a judgment against him, but he don’t remember when it was; that he never bought the land on section 6 until he got that title; that he thinks it was bought in 1900; that the people he bought the claim of this land from were not defendants to the suit in 1908, that he knows of; that when he was sued in 1908, they got judgment against him, but he had never bought it at that time; that he claimed in the Houston Oil Company suit, in which judgment was rendered against him in 1909, under the possession of his vendors, that he could not tell how long his vendors had been living there, but that they were living there when he came there, and that he moved there in 1892; that in the Houston Oil Company suit in 1909 he set up that he had bought the title from his vendors; that he claimed the title through the possession of his vendors ; that he claimed it through their possession; that he set up in his answer that he claimed under their possession; that is, under the possession of the xoarties he bought it from.”

The court directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs, and such verdict was returned and judgment entered thereon against the defendants and in favor of the plaintiffs for the-160 acres of land in section 21. In the court’s instructions to the jury, after discussing the law somewhat with reference to the 10-year statute of limitation in Texas, he proceeded in this way:

“It is in evidence in this case that on the 11th day of January, 1909, in a suit pending in the United States Circuit Court for the Southern District of Texas, at Houston, the defendant being a defendant in the litigation to which I refer, appeared before that court by counsel and filed an answer, in which he alleged, among other things, the following facts:
“ ‘The defendants show to the court: That they have never asserted any claim or title in any manner, nor have they trespassed upon any other lands described in said pleadings except the land alleged, set out, and fully described, which land is described as follows: Part of the E. F. Jones survey in Tyler county, Tex., being 150 acres of said Jones survey surveyed for Eliza Oglesby, and about 16 miles south, 30 degrees west, from Woodville; beginning at the S. W. comer of said Jones survey, a stake, a pine bears 38 degrees E. 3 varas; thence W. 950 varas to Jones >S. W. corner, a stake, pine bears 38 degrees E. 3 varas; thence N. 950 varas to Jones N. W. corner, a pine bears 35 degrees west 8 varas; thence E. 950 varas, Jones N. E. comer, a stake; thence S.

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Bluebook (online)
231 F. 96, 145 C.C.A. 284, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 1640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/creal-v-gallup-ca5-1916.