Daniels v. Fitzhugh

35 S.W. 38, 13 Tex. Civ. App. 300, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 66
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 8, 1896
DocketNo. 1510.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 35 S.W. 38 (Daniels v. Fitzhugh) 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
Daniels v. Fitzhugh, 35 S.W. 38, 13 Tex. Civ. App. 300, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 66 (Tex. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

COLLARD, Associate Justice.-

— -This suit was brought in Grayson County, November 2, 1890, by appellants Rice Daniels, Peter Campbell, Mrs. Belle Leslie, joined by her husband Will Leslie, Mrs. E. C. McLean, joined by her husband E. C. McLean, all of whom reside in Grayson County, against appellee Henry A. Fitzhugh, who resides in Travis County, Texas, to cancel patent to appellee for the land in controversy, dated Nov. 4th, 1890, on the grounds that the land had been previously patented and that appellants were the owners and in possesion of the land and had been so for a long time prior to the issuance of the ¡latent to appellee. It was admitted on the trial that plaintiffs below were the owners of the land in controversy, described in the petition, provided it is included in either or all the surveys, — the G. B. Pilant, Robt. Thompson, John Kitchen, Winford Bailey and W. H. Pulliam, — and that the question to be tried is whether or not, at the time of the patent in suit to defendant, there was any vacant land between the Pulliam, on the East., and the Pilant, Thompson and Kitchen surveys on the West, and whether said vacant land was included in defendant’s patent, which called to cover a vacant strip 125 varas wide and 4656 varas in length. The issue was whether there was any such vacancy subject to location at the time of defendant’s patent.

March 13, 1891, defendant Fitzhugh filed a motion to change the venue from Grayson County upon the ground that “there is a combination against him in Grayson County, instigated by influential persons, by reason of which he cannot expect a fair and impartial trial of the cause.” The motion was supported by his own and the affidavits of four other persons, — J. H. Webster, T. E. Newton, James D. Haley, and L. E. Powell. Plaintiffs answered the motion, charging that the affidavits of Haley, Webster and T. E. Newton were obtained by fraudulently and untruthfully representing the contents of the affidavits, and that they were made under misapprehension of the contents, and that *304 they would not have been made had the affiants known the contents of the same, wherefore the affidavits, as they appear on their face, were not in fact made as they appear. The affidavits of Haley, Webster and Hewton are attached to the answer to the motion.

Haley’s affidavit shows that his first affidavit was made before one Haizlip, a notary public, and that he made the affidavit under the following circumstances: “That Haizlip had the affidavit already written out and that he only read to the affiant the portion of the affidavit ‘by reason of which he cannot expect a fair and impartial trial.’ Said Haizlip with a small pencil drew a line from where Electric Belt line was, and from the way he explained I was under the impression that it was an old suit I had heard about several years ago, about a line from Grays Hill, in West of Sherman, through the town; and my idea was that if it was that old suit, and the plaintiffs all residing here and the defendant a stranger, that the way he read the affidavit it was all right. Affiant says that the said affidavits as to a combination against defendant, Henry A. Fitzhugh, instigated by influential persons or a combination of any kind, is not true as far as affiant knows, and that had said portion of said affidavit been read to him he would not have made-said affidavit.”

Webster’s affidavit shows that his affidavit was made before the same notary public, “that said affidavit (his own attached to the motion to change the venue) was read to him by said Haizlip, and that he, affiant, did not read said affidavit. That affiant cannot say Haizlip did not read all of said affidavit to him, but does say that the only portion of said affidavit that affiant caught and understood the meaning of was that it was not probable that defendant could expect to get a fair trial. That said Haizlip explained to affiant that the plaintiffs were influential persons and named them. I only remember the name of E. C. Barks-dale, who I knew to be agent of the Houston and Texas Central Railway, and I understood him to say another was president of a bank or in some way connected with a bank. In all he named five, I think, and that the defendant was a resident of Houston; and Mr. Haizlip explained to me that because defendants (plaintiffs?) were residents of Sherman, and well known, and plaintiff (defendant?) was a resident of Houstpn, that it was not as probable that he could get a fair trial in Sherman as away from there, and he wanted to change it to Bonham, where all would have some show; and all I know about the matter was what Mr. Haizlip told me. The affiant has no acquaintance with and never heard of Mr. Fitzhugh, the plaintiff (defendant?), until that morning when Mr. Fitzhugh came in- the office and Mr. Haizlip introduced me. Affiant says the only one of the plaintiffs that he knows is E. C. Barksdale. Affiant says he does not know of any combination of influential persons, or a combination of any kind, against defendant Henry A. Fitzhugh, — -nothing more than that plaintiffs are residents of the neighborhood of Sherman and defendant resident of Houston; and that had he fully understood, the full meaning of the affidavit he would not *305 have made the same. Affiant says that from the explanation given him by Mr. Haizlip he signed the affidavit with the idea that if Mr. Fitzhugh could not get a fair trial in Grayson he wanted him to get justice, and for both sides to have justice where they thought they could get justice —and they said Bonham.”

The affidavit of T. E. Newton, filed with the answer of plaintiffs to the motion to change the venue, shows “that affiant is not acquainted with either the plaintiffs or defendant Henry A. Fitzhugh. That one J. D. Haizlip, the attorney," of Sherman, just as affiant was leaving the city, the said Haizlip called to this affiant and said to him that he thought that affiant could help him in a law suit then pending in the district court of Grayson County, and asked this affiant to come up to his office, which affiant did; and when affiant went up to said Haizlip’s office he, Haizlip, asked affiant if he didn’t believe that a man that was acquainted in the community didn’t stand a better show to get a verdict than a stranger, and affiant told Haizlip that it looked a little reasonable; then Haizlip told affiant that it would help him, Haizlip, in the above entitled cause, if affiant would make affidavit for him; that he wanted to change the venue in the above cause; and told affiant that L. E. Powell and others had made and signed an affidavit to change the venue. That said Haizlip had said affidavits all ready written up and prepared and ready to sign; that said Haizlip read the last part of the affidavit, to-wit: that the defendant cannot expect a fair and impartial trial, and then asked this affiant to sign and swear to said affidavit, and, at the request of said Haizlip, affiant did sign and swear to said affidavit without reading the same; and affiant further says that he relied upon said Haizlip’s statements as to what the affidavit contained, and that, if affiant hadn’t been misled as to the truth of the contents of said affidavit, that the affiant would never have signed the same; and that affiant would not swear today that there is a combination against the defendant Henry A. Fitzhugh by these plaintiffs, as he, affiant, is not acquainted with the parties to this suit. Affiant says he didn’t intend to swear that, and will not now swear that there is a combination against defendant Henry A.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.W. 38, 13 Tex. Civ. App. 300, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniels-v-fitzhugh-texapp-1896.