De Roach v. Clardy

113 S.W. 22, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 233, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 341
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 4, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 113 S.W. 22 (De Roach v. Clardy) 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
De Roach v. Clardy, 113 S.W. 22, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 233, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 341 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

JAMES, Chief Justice.

— Appellants were the plaintiffs in an action of trespass to try title against Mrs. Allie D. Clardy and F. Desloge. Plaintiffs alleged possession in themselves of a certain tract of 53% peres of land, which remained of a larger tract of 150 acres described in *235 a deed from Pedro Aguirre and wife to Zeno B. Clardy and P. Desloge, less parts thereof previously conveyed by Aguirre and wife and three acres in a certain locality.

The amended petition set forth said deed; that plaintiffs were the heirs of Pedro Aguirre and wife; that defendant, Allie B. Clardy, was the sole devisee and independent executrix of Zeno B. Clardy, and alleged that said deed never took effect as a conveyance of any land, for that there was never surveyed for the said Pedro Aguirre and wife three acres of land upon which their residence was at the time the deed was signed and adjoining said residence, and without such survey being made for them of said land said deed did not identify any land so as to operate as a conveyance thereof. That no survey of said three acres having ever been made, said deed, if it had any effect, remained executory, and did not take effect as to any land, and has so remained for four years, more than ten years, and nineteen years after its execution; wherefore the right of the vendees, if any • such right existed to have said survey made of said three acres for Pedro Aguirre or his heirs so as to give effect to said deed, has long since become a stale demand, and said right is also barred by the statute of four years. The prayer was for decree setting aside said deed; that plaintiffs have their title to said land established, and .defendants’elaim thereto, constituting a cloud on plaintiffs’ title, removed, and for general relief.

The above indicates the nature of the case. The result of the trial will be shown by a brief statement from the judge’s conclusions, there being otherwise no statement of facts.

The court found that the deed, as above described, was executed by Pedro Aguirre and wife on July 14, 1887; “that neither plaintiffs nor defendants at any time have surveyed, or otherwise segregated the three acres for Pedro Aguirre or his heirs adjoining his residence, except that sufficient land remains unsold around the residence of Pedro Aguirre to make the quantity of three acres, and that possession of the land around the residence of said Pedro Aguirre has at all times remained in Pedro Aguirre and wife, and since their deaths in their heirs, and that such possession of said land has always been respected by said defendants, and that said defendants have treated the land so held by plaintiffs as the property of Pedro Aguirre, his wife and their heirs, and it was generally understood by the parties that the three acres meant were three acres immediately surrounding the house; that the plaintiffs executed a deed to a portion of the land lying east of the Aguirre home, describing said land as being bounded on the east 119 feet with the lands of Mr. Clardy, and bounded on the north 56 feet with land of Mr. Clardy, which deed was the confirmation deed of one given by Ysabel Aguirre in her lifetime on February 7, 1891.” That Pedro Aguirre and his wife remained in possession of said homestead and resided there until their death, the latter dying in 1892, and that thereafter and up to this time their daughter has remained there, but not by such assertion of claim as makes title to land by limitation, and that neither plaintiffs nor defendants had any title by that character of possession.

The court also found that Z. B. Clardy and F. Desloge paid taxes on 170 acres out of the Elijah Bennett survey No. 11, in the years 1887 *236 and in 1888, and all subsequent years, on 250 acres out of the said survey, and that Victoriano Martinez (husband of one of the plaintiffs) rendered for taxes in 1888, in the name of Pedro Aguirre, 30 acres of said survey, and in 1890 there was rendered and paid on three acres of said survey in the name of Pedro Aguirre, and that for the years 1904, 1905, 1906 and 1907 Chona Lucero, who remained in possession of the Aguirre house, rendered and paid taxes on three acres of said survey and stated that her claim was for three acres of lánd.

The court’s conclusion 'of law was that the deed by Pedro Aguirre and wife operated to vest title in Clardy and Desloge to all the land described as unsold except three acres adjoining the house in which Aguirre and wife resided at the timé the deed was executed. The judgment rendered was that plaintiffs take nothing, and that defendants have and recover of plaintiffs the land involved, describing /the 53(4 acres by metes and bounds, “except three acres of land upon which was situated on the 14th day of July, 1887, the residence of Pedro Aguirre and wife and adjoining said residence.” Plaintiffs have appealed.

The two propositions upon which appellants rely in this court under their assignments are:

", First proposition. — “The granting clause of the deed from Aguirre and wife to Clardy and Desloge being operative only on ‘that portion of a tract of 150 acres . . . except’ (certain tracts before sold), ‘and

excepting further three acres upon which our residence now is and adjoining the same, and which said tract is to be hereafter surveyed for us,’ the grant could not take effect without identifying that on which the grant was to operate by eliminating that on which the grant did not operate. The grantors did not convey the 150-acre tract .by the granting clause and then proidde for exceptions out of it of certain parts, but the granting clause only operated on that portion which remained after withholding from the operative words of conveyance all except that part remaining after eliminating certain parts; and the three acres to be surveyed adjoining and to include the house, not being described so -that they could be identified at the time the deed was executed, the deed attempted to convey a particular part of a larger survey and not an undivided interest, and the part on which the granting clause was intended to operate not being susceptible to identification otherwise than by describing the parts on which the granting clause did not operate, the deed constituted an attempt to convey and describe a particular part of a larger tract of land, and was void for uncertainty as to the particular part on which the conveyance was intended to operate, and did not convey an undivided interest, this not being intended by the parties; and the right given the grantees to select and survey for the grantors three acres adjoining and to include the grantors’ house, never having been exercised, the deed never took effect as a conveyance of any land, but remained executory. Without such selection and survey, or pleading the right and offering to specifically perform the same, said deed was no obstacle to a recovery by plaintiffs, the successors in title of the grantors, in an action of trespass to try title.”

Second proposition. — “The deed under which defendants claim not *237 having vested any title when executed, but having remained executory, the right of defendants to tender performance by selecting and surveying for plaintiffs, especially as to J. A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 S.W. 22, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 233, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-roach-v-clardy-texapp-1908.