Duren v. Bottoms

129 S.W. 376, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 355, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 535
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 16, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 129 S.W. 376 (Duren v. Bottoms) 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
Duren v. Bottoms, 129 S.W. 376, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 355, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 535 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, Associate Justice.

Mrs. Elizabeth Taylor, a widow, *358 with her two children, William Jasper Taylor, and Lavinia Taylor, immigrated to Texas in 1835. She married Zack Bottoms in 1838, and eight children were born of this marriage. She died in .the year 1852 and Zack Bottoms died in 1901. In 1855 William Jasper Taylor and Lavinia Taylor entered into a written contract with Seaton Moore and W. C. Daniel by which they employed Moore and Daniel to apply to the Legislature of the State of Texas for a certificate for a league of land, the agreement containing the statement that the grantees considered themselves entitled to receive a certificate for a league of land as the heirs of Elizabeth Taylor, their deceased mother. In this contract it was stipulated that Moore and Daniel should locate the certificate when obtained, and should pay all expenses for locating and surveying, and that they should receive one-half the land so located for their trouble and expense. The instrument then concludes as follows: “In fact wre hereby transfer to them one-half of said certificate when obtained and give them entire control of the whole of said certificate to locate and survey.”

In 1856 the Legislature of the State granted a certificate for six hundred and forty acres of land to the heirs of Elizabeth Taylor. On September 23, 1857, W. C. Daniel conveyed all his interest in the certificate to John Henderson by deed containing covenants of warranty of title against the heirs of Elizabeth Taylor, and reciting that William Jasper and Lavinia Taylor were her sole heirs. On the 30th of March, 1859, John Henderson conveyed all his interest in the certificate to Jesse Duren by deed with covenants of warranty of title. By deed dated August 26, 1860, Jesse Duren conveyed the certificate to Phillip D. Duren with covenants of warranty of title, and reciting that the certificate had been located in Houston County. By deed dated August 26, 1869, Seaton Moore transferred the certificate to W. C. Daniel.

The certificate mentioned above for six hundred and forty acres of land was first located in Houston County in September, 1861, but this location was abandoned, and in 1874 the certificate was relocated upon six hundred and forty acres in Foard County by W. H. Cundiff as agent for Phillip D. Duren, and that is the land in controversy.

Plaintiffs in this suit represented some of the Bottoms heirs, and others of those heirs joined in the suit as interveners, and they, together with plaintiffs, sued to recover of defendant the entire survey. In 1907 plaintiffs procured the issuance of a patent to the land to the heirs of Elizabeth Taylor, deceased. On January 5, 1909, all of Phillip D. Duren’s interest in the land was sold to W. H. Howard, who intervened in this suit.

By the judgment four hundred and ninety-six acres of the land was awarded to plaintiffs and the interveners who joined with them in the suit, except William Jasper Taylor, and one hundred and forty-four acres of the land was awarded to defendants and intervener W. H. Howard jointly, the judgment reciting that the said one hundred and forty-four acres was the interest formerly owned in the survey by William Jasper Taylor and Lavinia Taylor. William Jasper Taylor was denied a recovery. Hone of the heirs of Seaton Moore nor of *359 Lavinia Moore were parties to the suit. From the judgment rendered, Phillip D. Duren and W. H. Howard have appealed.

The several transfers of the certificate, together with the contract executed by William Jasper Taylor and Lavinia Taylor in favor of Seaton Moore and W. C. Daniel, were introduced in evidence, save and except that the recitals contained in some of them, in effect that William Jasper Taylor and Lavinia Taylor were sole heirs of Elizabeth Taylor, deceased, were excluded upon objection thereto by plaintiffs,. and the exclusion of those recitals is. made the basis of appellants’ first assignment of error. Appellants insist that the recitals were admissible as tending to show an open, notorious and adverse claim by them and those through whom they deraign title, and as tending to show a ratification of the locative contract above mentioned on the part of the other heirs of Elizabeth Taylor; also as tending to show a transfer of the certificate from all the heirs of Elizabeth Taylor.

It is well settled that an unlocated land certificate is a chattel, tile title to which may pass by paroi sale and delivery as other chattels. In the ease of Lockridge v. Corbett, 31 Texas Civ. App., 676 (73 S. W., 98), it was held that long possession of a land certificate under claims of right, accompanied with acts of dominion and control, “may, in the absence of opposing proof in a contest arising after the witnesses to the supposed sale are dead, be sufficient to support the presumption of a sale.” Other authorities cited in appellants’ brief are to the same effect. We do not believe those authorities are applicable in this case. In most of the cases where the rule invoked was applied the evidence showed that the parties against whom it was enforced knew of the adverse claim asserted to the certificates. In this case there was no evidence to show that the Bottoms heirs ever knew of the adverse claim to the entire survey of land in controversy by Phillip D. Duren or the parties through whom he claimed.

Besides, the written conveyances through which Phillip D. Duren claims, and the recitals in some of them that the title thereto was deraigned through William Jasper Taylor and Lavinia Taylor, referred to as the sole heirs of Elizabeth Taylor, deceased, are inconsistent with the idea that Phillip D. Duren or the parties through whom he claimed acquired any title to the certificate by paroi conveyances from the other heirs of Elizabeth Taylor, as such evidence strongly tends to show that the grantees in such instruments claimed title only through those instruments. As a rule, self-serving declarations are not admissible in support of title in favor of the declarant, and for the reasons above given we think there was no error in the ruling complained of. Parker v. Spender, 61 Texas, 164.

On February 15, 1858, the Legislature by special Act authorized the issuance to the heirs of Elizabeth Taylor of another certificate, the same being for one league and labor of land less the six hundred and forty acres for which the certificate above mentioned had already been issued. This certificate was located in Rusk, Cherokee, Montague, Knox and Donley Counties, but the locations in the three counties last named were afterwards canceled by the Commissioner of the General Land Office. In 1876 a suit was instituted by James H. *360 Turner in the District Court of Rusk County against Seaton Moore, Zack Bottoms and the heirs of Elizabeth Taylor, whereby plaintiff sought a partition between himself and the other parties to the suit of a tract of land consisting of eight hundred and fifteen acres situated in Rusk and Cherokee Counties, and also other lands on which the certificate last named had been located. In that suit a judgment by agreement was rendered, by the terms of which the land in Rusk and Cherokee Counties was divided between the various parties, but the commissioners of partition, appointed in the suit, reported.

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Bluebook (online)
129 S.W. 376, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 355, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duren-v-bottoms-texapp-1910.