Dunn v. Taylor

113 S.W. 265, 102 Tex. 80
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 11, 1908
DocketNo. 1867.
StatusPublished
Cited by105 cases

This text of 113 S.W. 265 (Dunn v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunn v. Taylor, 113 S.W. 265, 102 Tex. 80 (Tex. 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Williams

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action of trespass to try title brought by J. S. Taylor and his wife, Ella G. Taylor, against Dunn, in which Tackaberry intervened, claiming to have purchased the title of Dunn, and in which he and Dunn,. for the purpose of recovering the land, reconvened against the plaintiffs, and also brought in other parties asserting claims to portions of it. All of the other parties claimed under Hrs. Taylor, and the controversy resolved itself into one between Tackaberry, who had title to the land unless it has been lost by limitation, and the other parties, except Dunn, claiming under the five and ten years statutes of limitation. It will therefore be convenient to refer to Tackaberry as plaintiff and to those asserting limitations as defendants. The pleas of limitation were sustained by verdict and judgment in the District Court, and from an affirmance by the Court of Civil Appeals this writ of error is prosecuted by Tackaberry and Dunn.

It will be proper to take up first the assignments which assert that there is no evidence to sustain the verdict and judgment. The land in controversy is 640 acres patented to John Cummings, its western boundary being the Nueces Biver. It appears that many years ago it, with other lands, was enclosed by one Bobert Hall in a pasture used for grazing horses, on three sides by a fence, and on the fourth side by the river, with the banks of which the fence connected at both ends. This enclosure is called the Bob Hall pasture. Hall made no claim to the land and finally sold his improvements to G. W. Cavender. On the 12th day of July, 1882, one F. M. McCaleb executed to Cavender a deed for the Cummings tracts which was recorded July 18, 1882. The defendants connect themselves with this conveyance by deeds as follows:

1. F. M. McCaleb to G. W. Cavender, July 12, 1882, recorded July 18, 1882.

2. G. W. Cavender to W. J. Thornton, July 31, 1886, recorded February 24, 1887.

3. W. J. Thornton and wife to San Antonio National Bank, January 28, 1891, recorded January 31, 1891.

4. San Antonio National Bank to M. T. Taylor, February 9, 1898, recorded February 21, 1898.

5. M. T. Taylor to J. C. Taylor, September 19, 1899, recorded October 26, 1900.

6. J. C. Taylor to Ella G. Taylor, September 20, 1900, recorded October 26, 1900.

7. M. T. Taylor to Ella G. Taylor, January 1, 1901, recorded June 9, 1903.

8. Taylor and wife to Nueces Valley Irrigation Company, July 1, 1903, recorded July 13, 1903.

*84 9. Taylor and wife to J. L. Carr and Emma Carr, March 9, 1902, recorded March 17, 1902.

10. Emma Carr, surviving wife of J. L. Carr, to H. W. Earnest, August 13, 1903, recorded same day.

11. Taylor and wife to M. A. Haas, August 16, 1904, recorded November 2, 1904.

12. Irrigation Company to C. L. Bass, July 15, 1904, recorded July 16, 1904.

The evidence of the different possessions, as well as it can be gathered from the very indefinite and confusing testimony of the witnesses, may be condensed as follows:

In the Fall of 1882 Cavender occupied a house in a pasture adjoining that in which the Cummings tract was enclosed as stated, and not long thereafter began the use of the latter as a pasture for his stock, which use he continued until he conveyed to Thornton at the date of the deed above given. Before that date Thornton lived in and had in use another pasture further up the river than the Bob Hall pasture, but adjoining it, and at some time not shown he thereafter used the latter, also, for grazing purposes and had it so in use when he conveyed to the San Antonio National Bank. Whether or not he commenced so to use it so soon after Cavender’s occupancy ceased as that the possession of the two ma'y be regarded as continuous and unbroken the evidence fails to show, unless an inference may be indulged, from the situations of the different pastures and the character of Thornton’s pursuits that he put the Bob Hall pasture in use within a reasonable time after acquiring it. When he executed the conveyance to the San Antonio National Bank Thornton ceased to hold possession of any character. The evidence as to possession held between the dates of the conveyances from Thornton to the bank and from the latter to M. T. Taylor comes from the witness, Yandervoort, who, in 1893, was employed by the bank as its agent. Hpon his testimony the defendants rely to show possession by the bank during the interval mentioned. Important parts of it are claimed by the plaintiffs to have been hearsay, but for the present purpose we shall assume that no proper objection was made upon that ground and that the statement of Presnall to which he testified is to be considered as evidence upon the question as to the continuity of the possession. Yandervoort’s testimony relates to the possession of the bank through tenants who occupied in the following order: Presnall & Blocker, Cavender, English, Howen and Eardley. As to the occupancy of Presnall and Blocker his earliest knowledge was acquired in 1892, when Presnall told him in Carrizo Springs that they had rented the land from the bank and were in possession. He does not account for the interval between that time and the date of the deed from Thornton to the bank. He saj^s he thinks the bank bought Thornton’s cattle with the pasture and sold them to Presnall and Blocker, from which the inference might possibly arise that the bank in the meantime kept them in the pasture; but, when interrogorated further, he states that he does not know these facts. The only conveyance from Thornton to the bank stated in the record says nothing about the pasture or the cattle, but is for the Cummings land only. *85 His memory is uncertain as to the duration of Presnail and Blocker’s occupancy. His best recollection is that it was for two years, lasting from 1892 to 1894, but he says it may have been for three years. After Presnail and Blocker left, the Cummings and another tract were rented by the witness to Cavender. This was in 1895, the time of the year not stated. Shortly after this renting to Cavender he rented the remainder of the pasture to English. He says there were intervals between the going out of Thornton and the coming in of Presnail and Blocker and between the tenancy of the latter and those of Cavender and English, the length of which he can not state, admitting that they may have been as great as four, five or six months, or even a year. The witness, it is true,, states that he had care takers in the pasture during some of the intervals, which ones he does not know; but further examination elicited the statement that his only knowledge was that persons applied to him for permission to occupy the premises and promised to do so and to take care of them. Whether or not they were ever in possession he did not pretend to know. It is too plain that the fact of possession can not be shown in this way. On account of the differences in the dates at which the defendants became parties to this litigation, limitation is to be counted in favor of some until November 4, 1903, and of others until May 20, 1905.

It seems plain that no continuous and unbroken possession for ten years was shown affirmatively.

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Bluebook (online)
113 S.W. 265, 102 Tex. 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunn-v-taylor-tex-1908.