Duke v. Houston Oil Co. of Texas

128 S.W.2d 480, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 1122
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 1, 1939
DocketNo. 3440.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 128 S.W.2d 480 (Duke v. Houston Oil Co. of Texas) 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
Duke v. Houston Oil Co. of Texas, 128 S.W.2d 480, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 1122 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinions

On August 10, 1836, the Republic of Texas issued Land Certificate No. 420 to Samuel M. Williams, who on February 20, 1837, by an instrument in writing, transferred same to James Henderson. James Henderson, by an instrument in writing, on March 21, 1837, transferred this certificate to George Ryan. Under and by virtue of this certificate, on March 7, 1840, 640 acres of land in Hardin County (then in Jefferson County) were surveyed for George Ryan. This survey was approved as correct by A. H. Delano, County Surveyor of Jefferson County, on November 22, 1840. On August 19, 1841, George Ryan executed to James Henderson the following instrument:

"Whereas James Henderson did bargain and sell transfer and assign unto George Ryan a certain Section of land, containing six hundred and forty acres, as per certificate No. 420 granted and sold by the Government of Texas to the said James Henderson, as will more fully appear reference thereto being had; Now this Indenture witnesseth that the said George Ryan for and in consideration of the sum of one dollar to him in hand paid the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, hath and doth by these presents bargain and sell, retransfer and convey unto the said James Henderson his heirs and assigns, all the aforesaid section of land, situate in Texas, and doth hereby authorise the said James Henderson or his Attorney to cancel or erase if necessary, the said conveyance and transfer of the said section of land so made by the said James Henderson to the said George Ryan, so that it may be located in the name of the said James Henderson, and to do any other act required for the effectual location of said section of land.

"In witness whereof we have hereunto set our hands and seals this nineteenth day of August, A. D. one thousand eight hundred and forty one.

"George Ryan (LS)

"James Henderson (LS)"

"Witnesses

"Jas. H. Wilson.

"Jas. A. Mason."

This instrument was proved up by the witness James A. Mason, and filed for record and recorded on July 3, 1848, in Jefferson County, Texas. This was seven years after its execution, and eight years after the land was located under the certificate for George Ryan, and six years after the patent had been issued to George Ryan.

Patent was duly issued by Sam Houston, President of the Republic of Texas, to George Ryan to the land, on February 26, 1842. (This was after the transfer of the certificate by Ryan to Henderson.) The patent was on field notes identical with those of the survey made for George Ryan in locating the land November 22, 1840.

This was a suit by Laura S. Duke, et al., appellants, claiming under James Henderson, to recover an undivided interest of 200 acres in the George Ryan 640 acre survey above mentioned. Judgment was rendered, on an instructed verdict, against appellants in favor of appellees, Houston Oil Company of Texas, Republic Production Company, and Southwestern Settlement Development Corporation claiming under George Ryan. All other defendants were dismissed from the case.

Appellants offered in evidence to establish their claim to the land, the following chain of title: (a) The instruments mentioned above; (b) will of James Henderson, deceased, dated November 28, 1844, and probated September 5, 1845, in Philadelphia County, Pa., but never recorded in Hardin or Jefferson County, Texas, which devised to his sister, Maria Theresa Henderson, all his estate "real, personal and mixed whatsoever and wheresoever." In the court probating the will, George Ryan and F. A. Ryan on said September 5, 1845, filed an inventory and appraisement of the property of said estate of James Henderson, deceased, and inventoried "21/2 tracts *Page 483 of lands in Texas." (No description of the lands was given); (c) a series of eight or more wills all of which were probated in Pennsylvania — none of them ever probated or recorded in Texas. Through these wills appellants claim the land in controversy, as under James Henderson, deceased. Neither in James Henderson's will, nor in any other of the wills was there any reference whatever to the George Ryan survey of 640 acres of land in Hardin County. Appellants simply claim this land under the general description as "part of the estate" of the testators.

Appellants filed this suit on July 2, 1937. So far as the record discloses, this was the first time they asserted any claim of title to the land since the execution by George Ryan to James Henderson of the instrument (set out above) dated August 19, 1841, and its record in Jefferson County, July 3, 1848; an absolute non-claim of some ninety years.

Appellees claim through the following chain of title: (a) All the instruments set out in appellants' chain of title; (b) deed dated December 26, 1888, from the heirs of George Ryan, to wit: George J. Ryan, Charles A. Ryan, and Mary Cecilia Ryan, of Union County, New Jersey, conveying the entire 640 acres to S. C. Olive and J. A. Sternenberg (George Ryan, to whom the land was patented, died in the City of Philadelphia on July 27, 1851); (c) deeds dated in 1889, 1896, and 1899, conveying the Olive-Sternenberg title to G. A. Sternenberg; (d) regular chain of title from G. A. Sternenberg to Olive-Sternenberg Company, and from Olive-Sternenberg Company to J. H. Kirby by deed dated January 8, 1901, and from J. H. Kirby to Houston Oil Company of Texas by deed dated September 23, 1906; (e) the abstract of title to the George Ryan 640 acres of land contains forty-eight separate instruments of transfer and mortgage subsequent to the deed from the George Ryan heirs to Olive and Sternenberg in 1888. Appellees all claim under and through this chain of title.

Beginning with 1904 and continuing through 1936, appellees and those under whom they claim, paid the taxes on the George Ryan 640 acre survey each and every year before delinquency, except for the year 1925, when the taxes were paid on April 12, 1926. The taxes for 1902, were paid April 18, 1903, and for 1903, the taxes were paid in 1904. The case was tried on an agreement that all the taxes from 1904 to 1936, inclusive, were paid before delinquency; however, the agreement referred to an itemized exhibit, which on its face shows that the taxes for 1925 were not paid (April 12, 1926) until after they became delinquent. Neither party knew of this fact until after judgment was rendered and entered. The record discloses, affirmatively, that appellants, nor those through whom they claim, have ever at any time paid any taxes on the George Ryan 640 acre survey, and as stated above, they have not been in possession of the land, nor made any claim thereto since the execution of the conveyance by George Ryan to James Henderson on August 19, 1841.

The parties made the following agreement: "It is stipulated by the parties that since the Houston Oil Company of Texas got the deed to the land offered in evidence (dated September 23, 1903) that it and the other defendants with it who claim the land have several times each year cruised and inspected the land together with additional very large acreage of land claimed by them throughout this section of the state for the purpose of preventing depredations and other matters of that kind and that twice since 1903 the Kirby Lumber Company has cut the timber from the land under its purchase of the timber from the Houston Oil Company, but that no entry for the purpose of cutting timber lasted more than a few months."

James Henderson transferred land certificate No. 420 to George Ryan on March 21, 1837. Under and by virtue of this certificate, on March 7, 1840, 640 acres of land in Hardin County (then in Jefferson County) was surveyed for George Ryan. This survey was approved as correct by A. H. Delano, County Surveyor of Jefferson County, on November 22, 1840.

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Bluebook (online)
128 S.W.2d 480, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 1122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duke-v-houston-oil-co-of-texas-texapp-1939.