Dunn v. Epperson

175 S.W. 837, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 447
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 18, 1915
DocketNo. 1375.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 175 S.W. 837 (Dunn v. Epperson) 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
Dunn v. Epperson, 175 S.W. 837, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 447 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinions

It is conceded by appellants Fee, Jackson, and Stewart in their brief, and not questioned by either of the other appellants, that, if Tumlinson acquired the title of Nancy Walker to the original certificate No. 566, the title to the land in controversy was in B. H. Epperson September 6, 1878, when he died. Plaintiffs were unable to show by direct evidence that Tumlinson had acquired that title, and undertook to prove the fact by circumstances. For this purpose plaintiffs offered and the court, over objections to portions thereof interposed by said appellants and appellant Dunn, hereinafter stated, admitted as evidence, documents as follows: (1) A certified copy from the General Land Office of the proof made by Tumlinson of the loss of the original certificate issued to Nancy Walker as heir of William Walker, to procure the issuance of the duplicate certificate. The proof consisted of (1) the certificate of one Stone, "printer and publisher Texian Advocate," dated April 15, 1848, showing that a notice by Tumlinson, as the owner thereof, of the loss of "the headright of William Walker, number not recollected, for three-quarters of a league of land issued by the board of land commissioners for Washington county in August, 1836," had been published in the Victoria Advocate "for nine weeks from the 18th of November, 1846"; and (2) the affidavit of said Tumlinson, made November 3, 1848, "that he was the just and legal owner of the certificate issued to William Walker by" said board of land commissioners "for three-quarters of a league and labor of land, No. _____, dated in August, 1838, that he had never sold, alienated, or transferred the same in any manner, that it has been lost, and that since lost he has neither heard or known of the same." (2) A transfer, dated September 27, 1851, recorded in Red River county October 27, 1880, to Paschal from Tumlinson, in which he described the certificate thereby conveyed as follows:

"A land certificate for three-fourths of a league and one labor, it being originally the certificate No. 566 issued in the county of Washington to Nancy Walker as heir at law of William Walker deceased, and transferred by her by chain of transfers to me."

Plaintiffs then proved by instruments recorded in Red River county said October 27, 1880, that Paschal transferred the certificate to Temple, who transferred it to Shugart, who transferred it to Morrill, who by a deed dated February 10, 1860, transferred it to said B. H. Epperson.

Plaintiffs further proved facts, among others, as follows: At the instance of said Epperson, surveys were made by virtue of the duplicate certificate as follows: In Titus county, in November, 1860, a survey of 8,055,188 square varas, and a survey of 7,301,109 square varas; the last-mentioned survey being the land in controversy here. And in Red River county, on Blossom Prairie, in May, 1867, a survey of 8,839,169 square varas. In a letter, dated July 21, 1870, to the Commissioner of the General Land Office, Epperson as the owner thereof abandoned the survey of 8,055,188 square varas made in Titus county, and on March 31, 1871, said commissioner issued and delivered to Epperson a certificate, No. 16/383, authorizing him to locate 12,448,892 square varas, as the part then unlocated of the duplicate certificate. Said certificate No. 16/383 seems to have been applied by Epperson to the survey of 8,839,169 square varas which had been made in 1867 by virtue of the duplicate certificate. In April, 1872, the Commissioner of the General Land Office issued and delivered to Epperson a certificate, No. 17/224, authorizing him to have 3,609,723 square varas surveyed as the balance then unlocated of said certificate No. 16/383. By virtue of said certificate No. 17/224, a survey of said quantity of land, to wit, 3,609,723 square varas, was made for Epperson in Red River county in November, 1874. The survey of 7,301,109 square varas in Titus *Page 841 county, and the surveys of 8,839,169 and 3,609,723 square varas, respectively, in Red River county, together aggregated the amount of land specified in the duplicate certificate. Each of the three surveys was patented to the heirs of William Walker, deceased; the one in Titus county March 29, 1871, as hereinbefore stated, and those in Red River county April 18, 1872, and September 12, 1876, respectively. The patent on the survey in Titus county was delivered by the Commissioner of the General Land Office to Epperson at the time it was issued, and it was shown that the patents issued on the two surveys in Red River county were found after the death of said Epperson among papers belonging to him. During his lifetime Epperson subdivided the survey on Blossom Prairie, in Red River county, and sold parts of same to different parties. After his death the other parts of the survey were sold by his legal representatives. The deeds conveying the respective parts of said survey were all of record in Red River county as long ago as 1880. It seems that the purchasers of parts of said survey, at or about the dates of their respective purchases, took, and thereafterwards, either in person or by their vendees, continued in actual possession each of the part he had purchased, and paid taxes assessed against the same. No claim of title adverse to the title asserted by Epperson to said survey seems ever to have been made by any one. But it appeared that the purchasers of the parts of said survey, or their vendees, commenced and prosecuted in the district court of Red River county a suit against the unknown heirs of William Walker, deceased, and. Nancy Walker, deceased, to remove cloud from their title to the land, and that the suit resulted in a judgment rendered May 31, 1888, awarding them the relief they sought. The land in controversy was inventoried as property belonging to said Epperson's estate after his death. It seems to have been overflow land and used only as a pasture until 1909, when appellant Dunn sold it to appellants Fee, Jackson, and Stewart; except that the testimony of the witness Susan Smith indicated that she and her first husband, Brad Welch, claiming under a sale of 192 acres thereof by Epperson to James Welch, Brad Welch's father, for many years lived on a part of said 192 acres. It was shown that the taxes on all but 200 or 300 acres of the land for the years 1874, 1875, and 1876 were assessed against Epperson, and there was testimony sufficient to support a finding that for many years after Morrill conveyed to Epperson it was known in the neighborhood as the "Epperson land," and that no other person than Epperson asserted a claim to any part of it except the 192 acres mentioned as having been claimed by Welch. In fact, it seems that no claim to any of the land surveyed by virtue of the duplicate and unlocated balance certificates mentioned, other than the one asserted by Epperson and his vendees and heirs, was ever made by any one in any way prior to September, 1901, when Spartan Berry and Alice O. Martin, as the heirs of William Walker, Jr., brother to Nancy Walker, conveyed the survey in controversy to one Cole, whose title appellant Dunn acquired, except that in 1886 the William Walker under whom the appellant Yantis claimed conveyed it to a trustee to secure a debt he owed to one F. E. Walker.

It is insisted that the recitals in the proof of loss of the original certificate and in the transfer from Tumlinson to Paschal were inadmissible to prove that Tumlinson owned the original certificate, and that the other facts shown of themselves did not authorize a finding that Tumlinson owned said original certificate. It is not believed that either of the contentions should be sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
175 S.W. 837, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunn-v-epperson-texapp-1915.