Duval v. W. T. Carter & Bro.

207 S.W.2d 962, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 1060
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 4, 1947
DocketNo. 4479
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 207 S.W.2d 962 (Duval v. W. T. Carter & Bro.) 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
Duval v. W. T. Carter & Bro., 207 S.W.2d 962, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 1060 (Tex. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

MURRAY, Justice.

This is a suit in trespass to try title which was filed in the district court of Tyler County by Claude Park Duval and others against W. T. Carter and Brother, a partnership, for recovery of title and possession of an undivided 10.5 per cent interest in the G. L. Martin 640 acres survey in Tyler County. The case was tried before the court without a jury. Judgment was rendered that plaintiffs take nothing by their suit, and they have duly perfected their appeal to this court.

The appellants here, (plaintiffs in the trial court) requested findings of fact and conclusions of law and in response thereto the court filed the following findings and conclusions:

[963]*963"Findings of Fact
“1. This is a suit in trespass to try title, which was filed by plaintiffs against defendants on February 13, 1944, in which plaintiffs seek to recover title to and possession of an undivided 10.5% interest in and to the G. L. Martin Survey, abstract No. 452, in Tyler County, Texas, containing 640 acres, more or less, which was granted by the State of Texas to G. L. Martin on September 16, 1847.
“2. The plaintiffs did not offer any evidence of title by limitation, prior possession or from a common source. Plaintiffs sought to recover the interest sued for by deraigning their title from the State of Texas. From the evidence introduced in the trial of this case, these facts appear: That G. L. Martin died during the year 1865; that the said G. L. Martin was married twice; that of the first marriage.six children were bom who reached maturity, namely, Mary F., who married J. R. Lough-ridge; Angeline (A. E.), who married Dan Donaldson; Emiline, who married John, A. Lockhart; Julia, who married T. B. Conner, L. L.- Martin and G. L. Martin, Jr.,; that of the second marriage of G. L. Martin, two children were born, namely, B. J. Martin and Pauline, who married P. H. Cullen; that the said L. L. Martin, one of the sons of the said G. L. Martin by his first wife, died intestate and left as his sole heir at law his daughter Lora Martin, through whom the plaintiffs in this case claim title.
“3. There is no evidence as to when G. L. Martin and his first wife were married, as to when said first wife died, as to when G. L. Martin and his second wife were married or as to the date of the death of the second wife. About 17 or 18 years elapsed between the issuance of the patent of the Martin survey to G. L. Martin in 1847 and the death of Martin in 1865. It cannot be determined from the evidence introduced in the trial of this case whether the G. L. Martin survey was the community property of G. L. Martin and his first wife or the community property of G. L. Martin and his second wife. By deed dated April 8, 1895, Lora Martin, the only heir of L. L. Martin, purported to convey to Sam Rochester an undivided 93⅛ acres of the G. L. Martin survey. The plaintiffs in this suit claim as collateral heirs of Sam Rochester or as devisees under the will of the said Sam Rochester. There is no evidence that the said Lora Martin obtained any title to any interest in the Martin survey excepting such interest as she inherited from her father, L. L. Martin. There is no evidence as to whether the first wife or the second wife of G. L. Martin had or did not have children by a marriage or marriages to some person or persons other than G. L. Martin, the record being silent as to whether either of those wives was married more than once. From the evidence pertaining to the marital and family history of G. L. Martin and his two wives it cannot be determined whether the said Lora Martin inherited through her father as much as 93½ acres, undivided, in the Martin survey.
“4. Saii Rochester, the grantee of Lora Martin, died in Webster Parish, Louisiana, on or about November 17, 1902. The said Sam Rochester left a will, which was admitted to probate in Webster Parish, Louisiana, and duly exemplified-copies of said will and of the probate thereof and of the inventory of the estate of said testator were introduced in evidence by the plaintiffs. The will of Sam Rochester has not been probated or filed for record.in Texas. The interest of ■ Sam Rochester in the G. L. Martin survey was not specifically devised, but by the residuary clause of his will the testator devised all the residue of his estate to those who, under the laws of descent and distribution of the State of Tex⅞s, would have taken as his heirs at law. The said Sam Rochester was never married, and at the time of his death both his. father and mother were dead. Those who constituted the heirs at law of the said Sam Rochester upon his death were the following: Carrie A. Ventress (wife of Shelly Ventress), a sister; Julia Whitehead (wife of W. J. Whitehead), a sister; Marshall Rochester, a brother; Willie B. Rochester (wife of Hardy Taldon), the only heir of William Rochester, a deceased brother of Sam Rochester; John G. Lane and Lola Lane, the children and only heirs at law of Bettie Rochester Lane, a deceased sister of the said Sam Rochester; Hattie [964]*964Woods (wife of Jim Woods) and Maude L. Woods (wife of J. R. Woods), the descendants and only heirs of Eliza Geren Vick, a de'ceased sister of the said Sam Rochester; ‘ and Carrie Greengard (wife of Mike Greengard); Edna R. Dewing (wife of A. J. Dewing) and J. W. Williams, the children and only heirs at law of Mollie Rochester Williams, a deceased sister of the said Sam Rochester. The plaintiffs in this case claim jointly 5/7 of the interest which Sam Rochester had in the G. L. Martin survey, the plaintiffs collectively having succeeded to all of the estate of the abovenamed persons who- constituted the heirs at law of the said Sam Rochester at the time of his death, excepting only Carrie A. Ventress, a sister of Sam Rochester, and Marshall Rochester, a brother of Sam Rochester.
“5. The evidence introduced in the trial of this case shows that the defendants own title to a substantial undivided interest in the G. L. Martin survey which was derived from sources independent of L. L. Martin, Lora Martin and Sam Rochester.
“6. On June'20, 1906, judgment was rendered in the district court of Tyler County in cause No. 2858, styled ‘The State of Texas y. Sam Rochester, et al’. That was a suit to foreclose a tax lien for delinquent taxes covering a number of years on two-undivided interests in the G. L. Martin survey, one an undivided 93 1/3 acres and the other an undivided 187 acres. The judgment recited that the defendants were served with citation by publication as required by law. The judgment ordered a foreclosure of the lien of the State and authorized a sale of the property to satisfy said lien, subject to the statutory right of redemption at any time within two years after the date of the sale. On September 4, 1906, the sheriff of Tyler County, Texas, executed a deed in favor of Monroe Reese, which recited that a sale had been made pursuant to said judgment and an order of sale issued out of the district court. Said deed contained pertinent recitals, including the recitation that Monroe Reese had become the purchaser at the sale held by the sheriff. The order of sale and return of the sheriff thereon were not introduced in evidence, but defendants offered satisfactory proof showing that many records in the office of the district clerk were missing and that a thorough search for such order of sale and sheriff’s return had been made and that the same could not be found.

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Bluebook (online)
207 S.W.2d 962, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 1060, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duval-v-w-t-carter-bro-texapp-1947.