Dean v. Furrh

124 S.W. 431, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 495, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 635
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 13, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 124 S.W. 431 (Dean v. Furrh) 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
Dean v. Furrh, 124 S.W. 431, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 495, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 635 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

WILLSON, Chief Justice.

— The suit was by appellee Furrh against appellants Dean and wife and appellees M. J. Whelan and the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Bailway Company, to try the title to fifty acres of the J. W. Croft survey in Harrison County, and for damages alleged to have been caused to appellee by appellants cutting timber growing thereupon. The petition was in the form ordinarily followed in such' actions, but in addition to the usual allegations averred title to be in appellee by virtue of the five and the ten years statute of limitations. Appellants answered by a plea of not guilty and set up title in themselves to the land under said five and ten years statute of limitations. Appellee Whelan answered by a general denial, a disclaimer of any interest in the land, and specially that under a purchase thereof from appellants he had cut timber on the land of the value of $28.62, which he tendered in court for such disposition as the court might make of same. The railway company answered by a plea of not guilty, and adopted as its own the allegations in the answer of appellee Whelan. The verdict of the jury was in favor of appellee Furrh and against appellees Whelan and the railway company for the sum of $13.12 as the value of timber cut by them on the land. On this verdict the court rendered a judgment in favor of Furrh against Dean and wife for the land in controversy, and in favor of Furrh against Dean and his wife, Whelan and the railway company, for the sum of $13.12 as the value of the timber cut, and for costs. Dean and wife alone appeal.

After Stating the Case as above. — While it seems from the record the controversy on the trial in the main was one merely as to the boundary lines between parts of the Croft survey owned respectively by Furrh and the Deans, the effect of pleas of not guilty interposed by defendants in the suit was to require the plaintiff (Furrh) to prove that he had title to the land he sought to.recover. Gaffney v. Clark, 118 S. W., 330. As links in his chain of title he offered, and the court over appellants’ objection admitted as evidence (1) the will of H. M. Hood, Senior, dated April 10, 1864, naming his wife, Mary M. Hood, and A. B. Stone and T. C. Hood as executors; and empowering them at their discretion to sell any of the testator’s real estate in Harrison County; and (2) a deed dated December 26, 1865, from Mary Hood and T. 0. Hood as executors of said will, to F. M. Hearne, which Furrh contended conveyed the land in controversy. The objection urged to the admission of the will as evidence was that it did not appear ever tp have been probated as was required by law. The decree, if one was made, establishing the will and admitting it to probate, was not offered as evidence. The rule seems to be that “without the probate, the will itself as a title to property . can not be received as evidence.” Abbott’s Trial Ev., sec. 59, p. 139; Ochoa v. Miller, 59 Texas, 461. Appellants contend, however, that without the probate the will was admissible under the provisions of *498 art. 2312, Sayles’ Statutes, as amended by the Act approved April 23, 1907 (General Laws, p. 308). As so amended, said article declares that “every instrument of writing which is permitted or required by law to be recorded in the office of the clerk of the County Court, and which has been, or hereafter may be so recorded, after being proved or acknowledged "in the manner provided by the laws of this State in force at the time of its registration, or at the time it was proved or acknowledged, or every instrument which has been or hereafter may be actually recorded for a period of ten years in the book used by said clerk for the recording of such instruments, whether proved or acknowledged in such manner or not, shall be admitted as evidence in any suit in this State without the necessity of proving its execution; provided no claim adverse or inconsistent to the one evidenced by such instrument shall have been asserted during that ten years; provided, that the party to give such instrument in evidence shall ■ file the same among the papers of the suit in which he proposes to use it, at least three days before the commencement of the trial of such suit, and give notice of such filing to the opposite party or his attorney of record; and unless such opposite party, or some other person for him, shall, within three days before the trial of the cause, file an affidavit stating that he believes such instrument of writing to be forged. And whenever any party to a suit shall file among the papers of the cause an affidavit stating that any instrument of writing, recorded as aforesaid, has been lost, or that he can not procure the original, a certified copy of the record of any such instrument shall be admitted in evidence in like manner as the original could be,” etc. We do not think the effect of the statute quoted was to render admissible as a muniment of appellee Furrh’s title a certified copy from the probate records in the office of the county clerk of Hood’s will. The purpose of the Legislature in amending article 2312 as indicated, appears to have been, as recited in the emergency clause of the amendatory Act, “to relieve persons whose titles' to their lands have been clouded by insufficient acknowledgments and proofs taken and made by ignorant and incompetent officers.” Evidently the Legislature had in mind such instruments as deeds, bonds for title, mortgages, etc., the execution of which could be proved before notaries, court clerks and other officers, who could not be assumed always to be familiar with the requirements of the law in regard to the proof of such instruments, and whose official acts were evidenced by their certificates endorsed upon or attached to the instruments; and did not have in mind such an instrument as a will, the execution of which could be proved only in an open court before an officer who, it could be assumed, was familiar with the requirements of the law, and whose act was required to be evidenced by an order or judgment entered of record. The provisions of the article as amended furnish further evidence that it is not applicable to a will or copy of a will offered as evidence. For instance, to dispense with proof of the execution of the instruments referred to in the statute, the party who wishes to use same must have filed it “among the papers of the suit in which he proposes to use it.” Such a requirement indicates that the Legislature had in mind an instru *499 ment over which the party desiring to use it might have a right of possession and control. As to a will filed for probate he could have no such right, for the law requires that it shall, after it has been so filed, remain in the office of the county clerk. Sayles’ Stats., arts. 1885 and 5351. Again, the statute provides that by filing an affidavit that an instrument it refers to was forged, the party contesting its admission as evidence may put the other party on proof of its execution. If a will has been duly probated, such an affidavit would not require a party desiring to use it as evidence to offer other evidence of its execution. An attack of that character on a will duly probated could be made only by a suit brought for the purpose. Its verity could not be attacked in a collateral proceeding. Halbert v. DeBode, 28 S. W., 58. Until it has been duly probated it is not admissible as evidence of title (Ryan v. Texas & P. Ry. Co., 64 Texas, 239; Sayles’ Stats., art. 5352), and therefore it could not be rendered admissible, as a deed could be, when attacked as a forgery, by proof collaterally that it was duly executed.

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Bluebook (online)
124 S.W. 431, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 495, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dean-v-furrh-texapp-1910.