Crockett v. Arkansas-Louisiana Gas Co.

125 S.W.2d 1101
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 6, 1939
DocketNo. 5364.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 125 S.W.2d 1101 (Crockett v. Arkansas-Louisiana Gas Co.) 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
Crockett v. Arkansas-Louisiana Gas Co., 125 S.W.2d 1101 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

HALL, Justice.

This is an action in trespass to try title brought by appellants against appellees and involves 100 acres of land, a part of the Coy League in Marion County. All appellees answered by general denial, plea of not guilty, and specially alleged title under the several statutes of limitation. Trial was to a jury. At the conclusion of all testimony the court instructed a verdict for appellees, defendants below, and judgment was entered for them accordingly. From that judgment appellants prosecute this appeal.

Appellants’ several propositions present the contention that the evidence raised issues of fact which should have been submitted to the jury: (1) As to whether there < was an outstanding deed from Charles Sharp to H. J. Harwell conveying the land in controversy; (2) whether the deed dated November 22, 1886, and recorded November 30, 1886, from Harwell *1102 to H. T. Brooks was a forgery; and (3) respecting the claims of appellees under the several statutes of limitation.

Minor C. Crockett and Drury D. Sharp claim title to the land in controversy by inheritance from their father, Charles Sharp, as his sole heirs, and appellant Dudley claims title to an undivided interest in the land by assignment from them. Appellees claim under a deed, alleged to be lost, from Charles Sharp to H. J. Har-well, and by deed of record from H. J. Harwell to H. T. Brooks, against which an affidavit of forgery was filed by appellants; and under the five and ten year statutes of limitation. It is undisputed that Harwell went into possession of this land about 1884, built a house thereon, cultivated and used the land until 1886. It is further undisputed that H. T. Brooks took possession of said land about 1886 and continued in possession of same until his death in 1906, and his widow continued in possession thereof until her death in 1910. Thereafter this land, together with the remainder of the Brooks estate, was held by the heirs of H. T. Brooks and wife until it was partitioned among them in 1916. The tract in controversy here was awarded to Dr. C. H. Brooks who on November IS, 1919, conveyed it to Isaac Crawford, one of the appellees. On the same day, November IS, 1919, Isaac Crawford conveyed the east one-half of this land to Jimmie Bennett. Both the Crawford and the Bennett deeds were recorded in the Deed Records of Marion County on December S, 1919. Isaac Crawford and Jimmie Bennett are now in possession of the land in controversy, and the other ap-pellees hold the leasehold estate and mineral interests under them.

We shall discuss first the question whether the deed dated November 22, 1886, and recorded November 30, 1886, from Harwell to Brooks, was shown to be a forgery and effective to prevent the application of R.C.S. Article SS09, commonly known as the five year limitation statute. Or, stated another way, was there sufficient evidence introduced with respect to the question of forgery of this deed to warrant the submission of such issue to the jury? The.deed in question had been of record in Marion County for fifty years when its genuineness was first questioned. It was in proper form and acknowledged according to law. Evidence was admitted, which was not contradicted, that both grantee Brooks and the officer who took the acknowledgments of Harwell and his wife bore a good reputation for honesty and fair dealing. Joe Brooks, witness for appellees, also testified that he was present when Harwell approached his father, H. T. Brooks, to sell him the land in controversy. His testimony in this respect was:

“Q. You spoke of your father buying some land from Henry Harwell. What land did he buy? ' Was that the Crawford' and Bennett tract? A. He bought a hundred acre block, and Crawford and Bennett own it now.
“Q. Tell the jury in your -own words, what you remember .about that transaction .of your father buying the land from Henry Harwell. A. Well, Mr. Harwell was-wanting to move out of down in that part of the country, and he came to my father and asked him if—
“Q. Were you there when Mr. Harwell, came to your father? A. Yes, I was on the gin-yard there.
“Q. Your father was there at the gin? A. Yes, and he came up there and asked my father—
“Q. Who came? A. Mr. Harwell; and he wanted to sell this hundred acres to. him.
“Q. Was there any one with him? A.. When he first came there, there was no one with him, but later he went back and came again and Mr. Sharp was with him. He brought Mr. Sharp with him, and he was just a young man; Mr. Charley Sharp was.
“Q. Go ahead and tell what happened. A. Well, they talked and I couldn't tell you what all they said at the time, but anyway they talked this matter over, and .my father told him, ‘Just fix up the deeds and papers and I will buy it,’ .and so they went on then, and my father and these two men went over to the Justice of the Peace, and I don’t know what took place over there. Sharp and Mr. Harwell and my father all went off together, and were gone quite a while, and my father told meat the time, he said—
“The Court: Was it after they came back from the Justice of the Peace’s office or before they went? A. It was before they went. They went right on over there, and after he came back from the-Justice of the Peace my father said, ‘Well, I bought me a piece of land.’
*1103 “Q. Was Mr. Sharp there when your father said that? A. Yes.
“Q. Was Mr. Harwell there? A. Yes.
■“Q. You didn't go with them? A. No.
“Q. And Mr. Harwell and Mr. Charley Sharp and H. T. Brooks, your father, all went over to the Justice of the Peace? A. Yes.
“Q. What Justice of the Peace was that? A. John M. Taylor.”

This testimony was uncontradicted. Harwell and his wife both testified, Mrs. Harwell stating- that she signed the instrument but that the initial “F" in her •signature was not written by her. When asked about her husband’s signature in the • deed, she testified: “Q. Does that or ■not, appear to be Mr. Harwell’s signature? A. Well, it doesn’t look much like it, but I wouldn’t be right sure.”

She testified further that she had no recollection, of appearing before the officer taking her acknowledgment. H. J. Harwell testified that he sold the land to H. T. Brooks in 1886, but he had no recollection about the deed in question. When interrogated about his signature he testified :

“Q. I hand you Exhibit ‘a’, Mr. Harwell, which purports to be a deed from Henry J. Harwell and Era F. Harwell, his wife, to H. T. Brooks covering 100 acres of land in Santos Coy Survey of Marion County, Texas, dated November 22, 1886. I will'ask you to examine said deed and state whether or not that is your signature. (An interruption).
“Q. Examine the instrument all over, Mr. Harwell. A. That is not the way I sign my name at all. I don’t know who wrote that but I didn’t — who wrote that?
“Q. Could you swear, Mr. Harwell, that you did not sign the deed? A.

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125 S.W.2d 1101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crockett-v-arkansas-louisiana-gas-co-texapp-1939.