Curdy v. Stafford

30 S.W. 551, 88 Tex. 120, 1895 Tex. LEXIS 446
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1895
DocketNo. 266.
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 30 S.W. 551 (Curdy v. Stafford) 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
Curdy v. Stafford, 30 S.W. 551, 88 Tex. 120, 1895 Tex. LEXIS 446 (Tex. 1895).

Opinion

GAINES, Chief Justice.

—This suit was brought by the defendants in error to recover of the plaintiffs in error a tract of land consisting of 960 acres, which was patented to one L. C. Cunningham, as *123 assignee, by virtue of a bounty warrant issued to Eobert B. Owens. The plaintiffs below recovered a judgment, which was affirmed in the Court of Civil Appeals.

Both parties claimed title under Cunningham, the patentee; the plaintiffs below by virtue of a deed executed by Cunningham to them, and dated May 14, 1892; the defendants under a conveyance executed May 29, 1872, from one Eowand, as assignee of the estate of L. C. Cunningham in bankruptcy, to one Levine.

The deed from Cunningham to plaintiffs contained this recital: “This deed is a substitute for a deed made heretofore, in which the situation of the land was not properly described.” The conveyance was objected to by the defendant, upon the ground, in substance, that it was irrelevant; and it is now insisted, that it was incompetent to convey title by reason of the fact that it showed upon its face that a former conveyance of the land had been made by the grantor. To the pi’oposition we can not assent. The deed passed the title of the grantor to the grantees, by estoppel, if not as a direct conveyance. The deed for which this was intended as a substitute was doubtless a conveyance to the grantees or to W. D. Stafford, the deceased husband of Mrs. Stafford, and the father of the other grantees.

The defendants, in connection with other conveyances antecedent and subsequent, offered in evidence the deed from Eowand, assignee, to Levine, which was objected to upon the grounds: first, because it is void for uncertainty of description; second, because no authority was shown for its execution; and third, because no title was shown back of the deed. The deed was excluded by the court on account of the vagueness of the description. That description is as follows: “All the right, title, and interest which L. C. Cunningham had and claimed in and to a part óf bounty warrant number 2930, for 1280 acres of land, issued to Eobert B. Owens, April 13, 1838, by B. B. Bee, Secretary of War, to have and to hold unto him, the said G. W. Levine, his heirs or assigns, forever, all the aforesaid right, title, and interest which the said L. C. Cunningham had and claimed in and to a part of the above described bounty warrant.” The language of a deed is the language of the grantor, and if there be a doubt as to its construction, it should be resolved against him. Again, if an instrument admit of two constructions, one of which would make it valid, and the other of which would make it void, the former must prevail. An instrument which purports to convey “apart” of a certain designated tract of land, but which does not describe that part, is void for uncertainty. But one which purports to convey that part of a certain tract, which is owned and claimed by the grantor, is not void upon its face, for it may be shown by extrinsic evidence what particular part the grantor so owned and claimed. So a description of the thing conveyed as the interest had and claimed by the grantor in a part of certain land, is capable of being made certain, because it points out the part conveyed as the part in which the interest is owned and claimed. Besides, *124 since a land certificate is capable of division only by a separate appropriation by one or more of the owners, of a tract or tracts of land in his own individual right by virtue of his own interest in the certificate, it would seem, that when we speak of a part owner’s interest in a part of a certificate, we necessarily mean all his interest in the part owned by him. But even if the description in question admits of the construction that it means Cunningham’s interest in an undefined part of the certificate, it may also, without doing violence to the language, be construed to mean the part which he owned and claimed; and that construction should be adopted which would give effect to the conveyance, rather than that which would destroy it. We conclude, therefore, the objection on the ground of uncertainty in the description can not be maintained.

It is sufficient to say, as to the third ground of objection to the deed, that it was not necessary for the defendants to show title in Cunningham. He was the common source of the titles of both parties, and it was sufficient for defendants to establish an older title as emanating from that source.

The second objection presents a more serious question. The bankrupt act of 1867 provides, that “a copy, duly certified by the clerk of the court, under the seal thereof, of the assignment made by the judge or register, as the case may be, to him, as assignee, shall be conclusive evidence of his title as such assignee to take, hold, sue for, and recover the property of the bankrupt.” Act of March 2,1867, sec. 14. Whether this was intended or not to apply to suits other than those in which the assignee should be a party we are not prepared to say, and we find it unnecessary to decide the question. In connection with the deed of the assignee, the defendants introduced in evidence, without objection, copies of L. 0. Cunningham’s certificate of discharge, of his list of assets, of the deed of assignment, and of the order of the court directing the assignee to sell the assets of L. C. Cunningham & Co. Unless the assignment itself is evidence that the title of Cunningham passed to the assignee, the regular course would have been to have introduced in evidence a copy of the order adjudicating Cunningham a bankrupt, or if the original record of that order was lost, then to have proved its existence by such secondary evidence as was obtainable. But the objection to the deed of the assignee to Levine was not that the order adjudicating Cunningham a bankrupt was not proved, but that no authority was shown for the execution of the deed. This objection can not be sustained. The proceedings from the District Court of the United States in Bankruptcy lead inevitably to the conclusion that Cunningham was adjudged a bankrupt, and that Rowand was appointed the assignee of his estate; and they show authority in the assignee to sell the land and make the conveyance. They are indirect evidence, it is true, and may of themselves have been incompetent for the purpose of showing the assignee’s authority, if the proper objection had been made.

*125 After the defendants’ bill of exception to the exclusion of the assignee’s deed was allowed, the plaintiffs made application to the court to amend it, so as to show that more specific objections had been interposed to the deed and to the proceedings from the bankrupt court. The application was refused—presumably for the reason that such objections were not in fact made.

It appears, however, from the defendants’ bill of exceptions, that the court excluded the deed upon the first objection urged to it, namely, for vagueness of description, and that the other two objections were overruled. By cross-assignments of error, the appellees, the plaintiffs in the trial court, seek to call in question the action of the court in not excluding the copies of the proceedings of the bankrupt court. It is a sufficient answer to this assignment to say, that the record does not show that any objection was ever offered to the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.W. 551, 88 Tex. 120, 1895 Tex. LEXIS 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curdy-v-stafford-tex-1895.