Davidson v. Wallingford

32 S.W. 1030, 88 Tex. 619, 1895 Tex. LEXIS 525
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1895
DocketNo. 324.
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 32 S.W. 1030 (Davidson v. Wallingford) 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
Davidson v. Wallingford, 32 S.W. 1030, 88 Tex. 619, 1895 Tex. LEXIS 525 (Tex. 1895).

Opinion

GAINES, Chief Justice.

—This suit is an action of trespass to try title, and was brought by the defendants in error to recover of plaintiffs in error a tract of 640 acres of land, patented to W. W. Walling-ford, by virtue of a bounty warrant issued to him as a soldier of the Bepublic, on the 2nd day of July, 1838. The defendants pleaded not guilty, and the statute of limitations of five years.

The plaintiffs claimed the land in controversy as the heirs of thepatentee, and in support of their title introduced in evidence the deposition of T. J. Wallingford, who testified, in substance, that members of the family had told him that W. W. Wallingford had resided in Gonzales County, and that he died in 1846, on his way to Mexico; that his father and mother were both dead, and that he left brothers and sisters surviving him, eight in number; that the witness was a son of one Bichólas Wallingford, one of the brothers of W. W. Wallingford, who was dead; that the plaintiff, L. B. Wallingford, was also a son of Bichólas, and that the other plaintiffs were the nephew and nieces of the witness.

Sundry portions of the deposition of this witness were objected to, but were admitted by the court. Exceptions were taken, and the rulings of the trial court in admitting the evidence were assigned as error-in the Court of Civil Appeals and in this court. We think none of the objections were well taken. The interrogatory objected to, as. shown by the defendants’ bill of exceptions number 2, in our opinion can not be deemed leading, but if so, the fact elicited by it was testified to by the witness in other parts of his deposition, so that if the admission of the answer was erroneous, the error was harmless. It was competent to prove the death of W. W. Wallingford by the dec *622 larations of members of the family, who were themselves dead. The fact that he once taught school in Gonzales County is, in view of the issues developed by the testimony, irrelevant, but is so utterly without bearing on the case in any possible aspect as to render all the objections to it frivolous. It could not have possibly prejudiced the ■defendants.

Under their plea of not guilty, the defendants asserted title to the land under a transfer of the certificate from W. W. Wallingford to one P. B. Bickford, claimed to have been made before the location of the survey. P. B. Bickford was the husband of E. J. Bickford, one of the defendants, and had been dead some years when the suit was brought. In support of this defense the defendants relied mainly upon the testimony of Mrs. E. J. Bickford, whose depositions were taken by them and offered upon the trial. She testified, that her husband had possession of two certificates granted to W. W. Wallingford, one of which was located upon the land in controversy, and that he claimed to own them. She also deposed, that he “frequently spoke of owning the certificates, and of the transfer of them from W. W. Wallingford. He said he lost the transfer of them while crossing the Colorado River.” Upon objection on part of the plaintiffs, the testimony quoted was excluded. The testimony was clearly hearsay, and there was no error in the court’s ruling.' The answers of the witness, which were objected to, as shown by defendants’ bills of exceptions numbers 10 and 11, were subject to the same objection, and were properly excluded.

It was proved, that about five years before the suit was brought one E. M. Phelps leased the land to E. T. Thompson, who was one of the defendants in the suit, and that Thompson went into possession under the lease, and continued in possession until the time of the trial. Shortly after the lease was made, Phelps sold the land to Mrs. Bickford, one of the defendants. The lease contained a stipulation, that upon its termination the lessor should pay Thompson for such improvements as he might put upon the premises, not to exceed in value $1000j and also, that in the event Phelps determined to sell the land, the lessee should have a prior right to purchase. The defendant Thompson, being upon the stand as a witness for the defendants, testified upon cross-examination, in effect, that he had been willing to turn over the land to whomsoever had the better title and would pay him for his improvements, and that he had an agreement with the plaintiffs’ attorneys, that if they gained the case they would pay therefor. This testimony was admitted over the objection of defendants, and we think that this was error. Upon the conveyance by Phelps to Mrs. Bickford, Thompson became her tenant, and he certainly remained such until he repudiated the lease, neither willingness to turn over the premises to whomsoever had the better right, nor the promise of plaintiffs’ attorneys to pay him for his improvements, if they recovered the land, in any measure affected this relation.

*623 It was error, for the same reason, to admit Thompson’s testimony that Phelps never offered to sell him the land. It does not appear that he ever offered to bay. But even if it did so appear, we do not see that the fact would have affected the rights of the parties. Phelps’ violation of his agreement to give him a preference in case of a sale, would at most have entitled him to abandon the lease. At all events, it is clear that as long as he remained upon the land he continued the tenant of Mrs. Bickford and of her grantees, her codefendants in the suit. Heflin v. Burns, 70 Texas; 347; Hearne v. Lewis, 78 Texas, 276.

There was no error in the exclusion of the deed from Mrs. Bickford to Wertheimer. The certificate does not show that the person who acknowledged the deed was either known to the officer or proved before him to be the person whose name was signed to the conveyance. Since the Bevised Statutes went into effect, the certificate of the officer must show that the person making the acknowledgment was known to him to be the grantor in the conveyance, or that proof of the fact was made before him. McKie v. Anderson, 78 Texas, 207. There was no attempt to prove the deed at common law.

It is assigned, that the court erred in refusing to give to the jury an instruction to the effect that a title to a land certificate could, be transferred by a verbal sale, without a written assignment; and we are of opinion that there was error in refusing the instruction. The jury may have concluded that no written conveyance was proved; and yet the circumstances adduced in evidence were such as may have induced them to believe that Wallingford sold the certificate to Bickford. The trial judge was probably of the opinion that he had sufficiently charged the law on that subject in his general instructions. But as we think, the court’s charge, as pointed out in defendants’ assignments, was erroneous in several particulars. We doubt if the instruction upon that issue was not calculated to mislead rather than enlighten the jury. That portion of the charge is as follows: “Such sale may be presumed by you from facts and circumstances in evidence, but such circumstances must show not only that the possession of the certificate was transferred by W. W. Wallingford to.P. B.

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.W. 1030, 88 Tex. 619, 1895 Tex. LEXIS 525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davidson-v-wallingford-tex-1895.