Ellender v. Holland

221 S.W.2d 990, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1999
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 9, 1949
DocketNo. 4572
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 221 S.W.2d 990 (Ellender v. Holland) 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
Ellender v. Holland, 221 S.W.2d 990, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1999 (Tex. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

WALKER, Chief Justice.

This proceeding is an action in trespass to try title, brought by the widow and heirs of E. S. Holland against James Ellen-der and wife,' Lois M. Ellender, and W. H. Crosby and S,‘ H. Crosby,' to recover the title to and possession of ,⅛. tract of land occupying the western end of the G. W. Wooley Survey in Tyler County. The Patent describes this survey as containing 115 acres; and according to its field notes, the survey is a rectangle, of which- the western boundary runs north and south a distance of 200 varas, and the northern boundary runs east and west a distance, either of 3244 or 3274 varas. The tract for which plaintiffs sue is 1196 varas wide, measured from the western boundary of the survey.

Defendants plead not guilty and the various statutes of limitation, and in the alternative alleged title under these' statutes to either of two tracts of land, one included with the other, which lie upon, the W.ooley Survey east of plaintiffs’ eastern fence. This fence is 735 varas from the western boundary of the_ Wooley Survey, and the larger tract claimed by defendants adjoins this fence and covers the Wooley Survey to the distance of 400 varas eastward. It is the northern part of an enclosure; the northern fence of this enclosure is on or near the northern boundary of the Wooley Survey, and the western and eastern fences of this enclosure extend south of the Wooley Survey (124.7 váras on the east and 126 varas on the west) to a public road, and the southern fence of the enclosure runs along the edge of this road.. The smaller tract, included with the larger, has an irregular shape and is also enclosed; its northwestern corner is at the northwestern comer of the larger enclosure claimed by defendants and it extends roughly in a southeasterly direction across the south line of the Wooley Survey to the road.'

The Wooley Survey was patented to G. W. Wooley on January 25, 1887, as a pre-emption survey and it was conveyed by the patentee and wife to Mariah E. Williford on. August 5, 1887. The said Mariah E. Williford conveyed it to E. S. Holland on June 13, 1901, excepting however two tracts namely, a 25 acre tract conveyed by her to Rice on November 10, 1887, and a 48.3 acre tract conveyed.by her to .Snell in 1888. At the time of the conveyance to him, E, S. Holland was married to the plaintiff now suing "as his widowj Mrs. Rebecca Holland, and ít was shown that the remaining plaintiffs (other than formal parties) were the said E. S. Holland’s heirs. This evidence, with the evidence referred to hereinafter concerning the location of the Rice and' Snell tracts, constituted plaintiffs’ proof of title. Plain[992]*992tiffs'also proved'that E. S. Holland and his family: resided' .upon the western end of the. Wooley • Survey from 1901, until Holland’s death, 'which occurred in Decemr her, 1933, and that Mrs. Holland, and-from time to time various ones among- her children, continued to reside there until during 1943. ■ Plaintiffs’ proof -of possession and claim is discussed hereinafter in more detail. . . ;

The defendants S. H. and W. H. Crosby neither proved nor claimed title to any of the land in suit.

Defendants James and Lois M. Ellender proved a deed to. the defendant Lois M. Ellender from defendant S. H:. Crosby, made during the marriage of said defendants Ellender, which purported to convey a 100 acre tract described as a part of Section 2, B. B. B. & C. Railroad Company Surveys, Block 4, in Tyler County. They also proved .other conveyances under which Crosby claimed, but they did not prove a chain of title out of the sovereignty of the soil to that part of Section 2 which may be in conflict with the Wooley Survey. They attempted, instead, to invoke the 5-year and 10-year, statutes of limitation, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. arts. SS09, 5510,, by proof of. possession and claim. It, is not clear to us that, Section 2 actually conflicts with the Wooley "Survey. There is a great deal of convincing proof that it did not, and the record exhibits no authority for McBride’s re-survey of Section 2 in 1919. However, this matter is immaterial. It is plain "from S. H. Crosby’s deed to Lois M. Ellender , and the collateral proof that" the tract purportedly conveyed by this deed was in conflict with the Wooley Survey; and, indeed, that the northern boundary of this 100 acre tract coincided with the northern boundary of the Wooley Sur'veyl It is also.plain from the metes and bounds description in this deed and from the" collateral proof that the larger enclosure of the defendants Ellender follows the northern boundary and the western and eastern boundaries of this 100 acre tract down to the road lying south of the. Wooley Survey.

-, The cause- was tried to the. court sitting without a jury. The trial-court, found that defendants Ellender had a limitation title to .the .smaller- enclosure- claimed, by them- and adjudged, to them the title to this tract. Title to and possession of the remainder of the tract fo'r which’ pláintiffs sued was adjudged to plaintiffs. From this judgment defendants James and Lois M. Ellen-der have appealed. The plaintiffs have not appealed and have not assigned error to that part of the judgment rendered against them in behalf of said defendants Ellender.

Defendants James and Lois M. Ellender have assigned three Points of Error for reversal. These Points need not be stated; all are overruled under and by reason of the following conclusions.

(1) Plaintiffs proved a record title from the sovereignty of the 'soil to the tract for which they sued.

We have summarized plaintiffs’, chain of written . title. The. only incident of this title to which defendants Ellender refer as a matter for reversal is a consequence -of the description .in Mariah E. Williford’s deed to E. S. Holland. That description, so far as relevant, reads: “All that certain tract — situated in Tyler County — containing 115 acres, and known as the G. W. Wooley headright and' fully described in a deed from G. W. Wooley’ and wife to me dated Aug; '5, 1887. (This deed referred to G. W. Wooley’s patent and described the ' survey by metes and bounds as does the patent) — save and except 25-acres deed to J. S. Rice,' Nov. 10, 1887, and recorded in Book O, page 450, of the Deed Records, Tyler County, and 48-3/10 acres deed to Samuel David 'Snell in the year 1888 which deed is not of record and reference is hereby made to said deeds together with the record thereof for description. The interest herein conveyed being 40-7/10 acres or all of my remaining interest in said 115 acre tract.”

In order to prove .title to the land sued for by them, plaintiffs had to prove that the Rice and Snell tracts were not located within the tract for which they sued. Defendants Ellender say that plaintiffs did not prove the location of either tract. The .following .evidence, is relevant to the question thus, made. . '

The ;proof..of the location of th,e Rice tract need not be .discussed .in detail. [993]*993Tatum, a surveyor, fixed this-tratt upon and across the eastern end of the .Wooley Survey, the northern boundary measuring 727 varas westward from the northeastern corner of the' survey. The deed to Rice was not put in evidence, but no objection was made to Tatum’s testimony; and it is apparent that Tatum had before him the field notes in Rice’s deed when he made the survey upon which his testimony was based. He certainly thought that he had found the northwestern and northeastern ■corners of the Rice tract, and from these the balance of the tract could be constructed.

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Bluebook (online)
221 S.W.2d 990, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellender-v-holland-texapp-1949.