Durham v. Luce

140 S.W. 850, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 671
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 24, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 140 S.W. 850 (Durham v. Luce) 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
Durham v. Luce, 140 S.W. 850, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 671 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This is an action of trespass to try title, brought by appellees against the appellants, D. S. Durham, the Eastern Texas Railroad Company, and the Texas Southeastern Railroad Company, to recover a tract of 27% acres of land, a part of the Juan Jose de los Reyes league, in Trinity county.

The defendants answered by filing general exceptions to plaintiffs’ petition, general denials, and pleas of not guilty, and, in addition, among other things, the defendant D. *852 S. Durham pleaded that the tract of land involved in this suit, together with an adjoining tract of 80% acres, was sold and conveyed by these plaintiffs to his brother, W. R. Luce, on December 3, 1900; that by mutual mistake on the part of plaintiffs and the other grantors in said deed, and his brother, W. R. Luce, and of the officer preparing said deed, the field notes inserted in said deed, although intended to cover the 27% acres of land involved in this suit, do not include the same, but only the metes and bounds of the 80%-acre tract adjoining this tract, although said deed from plaintiffs to W. R. Luce expressly avers that the tract of land therein conveyed contains 108 acres; that it was definitely understood and agreed between the grantors and grantee in said deed that the definite quantity of 108 acres of land was conveyed by said deed, and it was further understood and definitely agreed that the 27%-acre tract involved in this suit comprised a part of said 108 acres of land so conveyed; that the plaintiffs herein and the other grantors in said deed, and the grantee therein, W. R. Luce, were then and are yet ignorant and unlearned people, without sufficient learning and knowledge to discover said mistake at said time, and that said mistake was not discovered by any of said parties, or by this defendant, until August 1, 1909; that at the time of the sale of said land by plaintiffs to W. R. Luce the said W. R. Luce paid them a valuable consideration therefor, to wit, $600, which was the reasonable market value of the whole of said land, including the 27% acres; that immediately after said sale, as aforesaid, the plaintiffs placed the said W. R. Luce in possession of said 27% acres of land, the dwelling house and other improvements being situated thereon; that immediately thereafter plaintiffs moved from the county, and have never since claimed said land, or challenged W. R. Luce or his vendee’s ownership or possession thereof, until shortly before the filing of this suit; that the said W. R. Luce, acting upon the representations of the plaintiffs herein that the land he was purchasing from them and their covendors, contained 108 acres and included the 27% acres involved in this suit, the said W. R. Luce purchased said land; otherwise, if he had known it did not contain said 27%-acre tract, he would not have purchased same; that immediately after the said W. R. Luce purchased said land he was placed in actual possession thereof by the plaintiffs herein, and made permanent and valuable improvements thereon; that by deed, dated August 27, 1901, the said W. R. Luce and wife, Minnie O. Luce, sold and conveyed to this defendant the 108-acre tract of land intended to be conveyed to him by said T. L. Luce and others, as aforesaid, which included the tract of land involved in this suit; that by mutual mistake of all parties to said deed the field notes inserted in said deed do not cover and describe the 27%-acre tract involved in this suit, although it was the intention of the parties that same should do so, the officer or party preparing said deed to this defendant having been .led into error in the preparation of said deed by the description inserted in the former deed from plaintiffs and others to W. R. Luce, which he used and referred to as an aid and guide for the preparation of this said deed; that neither of said parties discovered or noticed said mistake at the time of the execution and delivery of said deed, nor did the officer preparing said deed notice the mistake in the same; that the grantors in said deed and the grantee therein (this defendant) were at that time, and at all times since, ignorant and unlearned people, neither of whom were capable of or possessed of sufficient knowledge to calculate the quantity of land embraced in field notes contained in said deed, or to calculate or figure a set of field notes covering a tract of 108 acres of land, and that the 27% acres involved in this suit was not included therein; that the mistake in the description of said deed was not discovered by either of said parties until on August 1, 1909, when a surveyor was running lines on different tracts of' land in that county, for the purpose of locating tracts of land and timber belonging to the Southern Pine Lumber Company; that this defendant paid the said W. R. Luce and Minnie O. Luce the sum of $600 for said land, and at the time he purchased the same he believed he was getting a deed to the 27%-acre tract involved in this suit, as well as to the 80%-acre tract described in the deed above referred to, and if he had known that he was not getting deed to said 27%-acre tract he would not have purchased the other tract of 80% acres; that the said W. R. Luce and wife, Minnie O. Luce, at the time they made said deed, believed they were selling and conveying to this defendant 108 acres of land, including the 27% acres of land involved in this suit; that the sum of $600 paid by this defendant to W. R. Luce for said tract of land was full value for said 108 acres of land at the time he purchased the same, and was greatly in excess of the value of said 80%-acre tract alone; that immediately after this defendant purchased said land he was placed in possession of the 27%-acre tract involved in this suit, and has since continuously resided on and possessed the same; that since this defendant purchased said land he has made valuable and permanent improvements thereon, such as clearing land, building fences around said land, building feedhouse on said land, building underground cistern on said land, and building new dwelling house on said land, and other improvements, to the value of $600, all of which were made before he discovered the mistake in the description in the foregoing deeds. This defendant prays *853 judgment, correcting and reforming tlie two deeds above referred to, so as to cause tbe description therein to cover and include the land involved in this suit, or a judgment against plaintiffs for specific performance, and, in event the court should refuse to grant said relief, then defendant asks for judgment against the plaintiffs for the recovery of said land, and, should none of the aforesaid relief be granted, then defendant prays the court that he may have judgment for the value of his improvements placed upon the said land.

In reply to this answer, plaintiffs filed a supplemental petition, containing, among various exceptions and pleas, a plea of limitation of four years against defendant’s prayer for the correction of the deeds from plaintiffs to W. R. Luce and from W. R. Luce and wife to defendant Durham.

The cause was tried in the court without a jury, and judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiffs against all of the defendants for the land in controversy.

Succinctly stated, the facts disclosed by the record are as follows:

Prior to and on the 3d day of December, 1900, plaintiffs owned and resided upon the tract of land in controversy, which, together with an adjoining tract, supposed to contain 80% acres of land, constituted their homestead.

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Bluebook (online)
140 S.W. 850, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durham-v-luce-texapp-1911.