Dohoney v. Womack

19 S.W. 883, 1 Tex. Civ. App. 354, 1892 Tex. App. LEXIS 69
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 22, 1892
DocketNo. 10.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 19 S.W. 883 (Dohoney v. Womack) 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
Dohoney v. Womack, 19 S.W. 883, 1 Tex. Civ. App. 354, 1892 Tex. App. LEXIS 69 (Tex. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinions

Plaintiffs brought this suit as the heirs of John D. Womack, Jr., and Archie Womack, to recover of the defendant, E. L. Dohoney, a two-thirds interest in a tract of 825 1/2 acres of land of the S. M. Fulton survey, in Lamar County. They pleaded their title, deriving it from one W. W. Stell; recognized an interest of one-third of the land in the defendant as the grantee of Mrs. Mollie E. Pass, one of the heirs of John D. Womack, Jr., and Archie Womack; alleged that the deed of conveyance from W. W. Stell to John D. Womack, Sr., *Page 357 had been lost or mislaid; and that the defendant claimed the entire tract under an after deed from Stell, which inured to their benefit as well as his own.

The defendant answered, that he had purchased certain portions of the land at tax sales; that he had bought 65 acres from one McCuistion; that he had purchased the entire tract from the said Mollie E. Pass and her husband, and that he had procured a deed therefor from the said W. W. Stell, which conveyed to the defendant a legal and equitable title, because no deed had ever been executed from Stell to the said John D. Womack, Sr.

The case was tried without a jury, and resulted in a judgment for the plaintiffs for two-thirds of the land, and a decree of partition. Defendant has appealed, and has assigned errors for which he seeks a reversal of the judgment of the court below.

The court's findings of fact were as follows:

"1. That W. W. Stell had a valid title to all the land described in plaintiffs' petition, and that plaintiffs and defendant claim through him as a common source.

"2. That W. W. Stell bargained and sold the said land in 1864 to John D. Womack, Sr., and received the purchase money therefor, and that afterward, about 1867 or 1868, he executed a deed to said Womack for said land, which deed is lost.

"3. That on April 21, 1868, John D. Womack, Sr., by deed, sold and conveyed said land to Wm. H. Womack.

"4. That on the 23d day of February, 1870, Wm. H. Womack, by deed, conveyed said land to John D. Womack, Jr., and Archie Womack.

"5. That plaintiffs and Mrs. Mollie E. Pass are the sole surviving heirs of Archie and John D. Womack, Jr., and that as such plaintiffs inherited an undivided two-thirds interest and Mrs. Mollie E. Pass an undivided one-third interest in and to said land.

"6. That on the 4th day of December, 1885, Mrs. Mollie E. Pass, joined by her husband, conveyed by deed all her interest in said land to E. L. Dohoney, the defendant.

"7. That in June, 1887, W. W. Stell executed a quitclaim deed to the defendant, without any consideration except as recited therein, to-wit, the purpose to supply the lost deed from Stell to John D. Womack, Sr., mentioned in No. 2 of the preceding findings."

There is also a statement of facts in the record.

W. W. Stell acquired his title to the land by deed from B. F. McCuistion, as administrator of his wife Mary McCuistion, deceased. This deed was admitted in evidence over the objection of the defendant, without proof of the proceedings in the Probate Court ordering the sale and confirmation thereof. A bill of exceptions was taken and the action of the court assigned as error. The subsequent introduction of the same *Page 358 deed by the defendant was a waiver of the error in its admission in behalf of the plaintiffs. Again, as Stell was common source, it can not be seen how the error was material, if it was error at all.

In order to lay the predicate for the introduction of secondary evidence to prove the contents of the alleged lost deed from W. W. Stell to John D. Womack, Sr., witnesses were permitted by the court to testify on the stand as to the execution and loss of such a deed, without a preliminary affidavit. The evidence of a witness on the stand may suffice instead of such affidavit. Parks v. Caudle, 58 Tex. 220; Trimble v. Edwards, 84 Tex. 497. But it is contended that the proof of the execution of the deed is not sufficient to sustain the finding of the court.

W. W. Stell, the alleged grantor, testified: "About the year 1864 I sold the land described in plaintiffs' petition to John D. Womack, Sr. He paid me cash the purchase money, which was about $8000 in Confederate money. I thought until recently that I made him a deed for the land at the time he purchased the same, but recently I have investigated the records, and am now of the opinion that I only then made him a bond for title, from the fact that McCuistion did not make me a deed until 1867. Until I searched the records I had firmly believed that I had made a deed, and now I have no other reason for believing that the deed was not made than the fact that I failed to find it by such search. I now think that I have made three different deeds to this land.

"Sometime between the 1st day of April, 1867, and the 1st day of April, 1868, F. W. Miner, representing the Womack side of the question, approached me about this land and said his client wanted a deed from me. The matter was satisfactorily settled at that time, and I am confident that I made Womack a deed for the land then, though I could not swear positively that I did make it. I am perfectly well satisfied now that I first made a title bond to John D. Womack, Sr., and that I again, in 1867 or 1868, made a deed when approached by F. W. Miner.

"In June, 1887, the defendant, E. L. Dohoney, informed me that no deed was of record from me to John D. Womack, Sr., stating at the same time that he held a fee simple title from all the heirs of said Womack; said Dohoney thus induced me to sign him a quitclaim deed to supply this loss or lack of recorded deed from me to John D. Womack, Sr. Defendant knew at the time he received this last mentioned deed from me of the former sale to said Womack, and also of the fact that the purchase money had been paid by said Womack to me. E. L. Dohoney has never paid me anything for said 825 1/2 acres of land, nor did he pay me anything for said deed. Womack paid me cash for the land, and I have never claimed the land since I sold to him, nor do I now claim any interest in it. It has been known ever since said sale as the Womack land, and so recognized by me, and I am perfectly satisfied with said sale now." *Page 359

The deed from W. W. Stell to E. L. Dohoney recited that, "for and in consideration of the fact that sometime between April 8, 1867, and April, 1868, for value received, I sold and conveyed the hereinafter described land to John D. Womack, now deceased; and whereas, my deed to said Womack was never recorded and is now lost or mislaid and can not be found; and whereas, E. L. Dohoney is now the owner of said land, by purchase and conveyance from the assignees and surviving heirs of said John D. Womack, deceased; now, therefore, to pass whatever technical or legal title may appear from the record to remain in me to the real and equitable owner, I have granted, sold, and conveyed, and by these presents do grant, bargain, and sell and convey unto the said E. L. Dohoney, and to his heirs and assigns, a certain tract of land," etc. * * * "To have and to hold the above described premises, together with all and singular the rights, members, improvements, hereditaments, and appurtenances thereto in any way belonging, unto the said E. L. Dohoney and his heirs and assigns forever, in fee simple; it being understood that this is only a quitclaim deed."

Dohoney was claiming the land by tax deeds, by a deed from McCuistion for 65 acres out of 100 acres sold to J. W. Wooldridge by Archie Womack, Jr., and by a deed from Mrs. M. E. Pass and husband for their right, title, and interest in the land.

F. W.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W. 883, 1 Tex. Civ. App. 354, 1892 Tex. App. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dohoney-v-womack-texapp-1892.