Ferguson v. Dodd

183 S.W. 391, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 154
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 6, 1916
DocketNo. 7027. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 183 S.W. 391 (Ferguson v. Dodd) 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
Ferguson v. Dodd, 183 S.W. 391, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 154 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

LANE, J.

Mrs. A. M. Ferguson, the widow, and W. E. Ferguson, C. B. Ferguson, T. *392 E. Ferguson, and H. K. Ferguson, the children, respectively, of J. T. Ferguson, deceased, filed two suits in the Eleventh district court of Harris county, Tex., against H. W. Dodd, J. W. Brown, J Bobit, B. Adoue, J. H. Agen, and S. S. Z. Thompson, in the ordinary form of trespass to try title. The first was a suit to recover a one-fourth undivided interest in a tract of land of about 1,000 acres, a part of a survey of 3,000 acres of land patented to J. L. Stanley in 1838, said suit being numbered 55744 on the docket of said court, and the second was a suit to recover a one-fourth undivided interest in a tract of about 400 acres of land, which is also a part of the same survey, and is numbered on said docket 55750. Upon motion of defendants, the trial court consolidated the two cases and tried them as one case. All of the defendants, except Dodd, Brown, and Agen, were dismissed from this consolidated cause, in so far as the issues presented by this appeal are concerned. The remaining defendants answered by plea of not guilty. After having heard the pleading and evidence adduced, the court found that all that portion of the said Stanley 3,000'-acre survey which J. D. Stanley had not sold prior to his death, and consequently the land sued for by plaintiffs, was at the time of Stanley’s death the separate property of Mrs. Mary A. L. Stanley by virtue of two deeds, one from J. L. Stanley to A. Wynn, and the other from A. Wynn to Mrs. Mary A. D. Stanley, hereinafter more fully described, as a matter of law. The jury having found all issues submitted to it in favor of defendants, judgment was rendered for them for the land sued for. From this judgment, the plaintiffs Fergusons have appealed.

That the assignments of error presented by appellants may be clearly understood, we deem it necessary in the outset to make the following statement:

Three thousand acres (17 labors) of land, situated in Harris county, Tex., was patented to Jonathan L. Stanley in 1838. At the time said land was patented, J. L. Stanley and Mary A. L. Stanley were husband and wife, and said land was their community property. On the 1st day of October, 1840, J. L. Stanley, by his deed of that date, for a recited consideration of $150, conveyed to A. Wynn the said 3,000 acres of land, and for a recited consideration of $100 he conveyed, by the same deed, to said Wynn 100 head of cattle. By a deed dated October 2, 1840, but which was in fact acknowledged and recorded on the 1st day of October, 1840, A. Wynn, for a recited consideration of $100 for the land and $100 for the cattle, conveyed the same land and cattle conveyed to him by J. L. Stanley to Mary A. L. Stanley. Both of said deeds were acknowledged at 10 o’clock a. m., on the 1st day of October, 1840, before the same officer, and were both filed for record at the same hour and actually recorded on the same date, to wit, October 1, 1840. There was no evidence tending to explain the intention of the parties, other than what is shown by the deeds, except the fact that Archibald Wynn was a lawyer, and was, at or about the time of the execution of the deeds mentioned, performing legal services for J. L. Stanley, and in about five or six months after the execution of said deeds he was representing Stanley in a suit brought by J. W. Oates against Stanley to compel him to convey 1,000 acres of the said 3,000-acre survey, to which Stanley had executed a title bond to Oates on the 1st day of October, 1838. In April, 1841, by order of court, Stanley conveyed said 1,000 acres to Oates.

J. L. Stanley died intestate in 1843. There was never any administration on his estate. He left surviving him his widow, Mrs. Mary A. D. Stanley, and his two children, William T. Stanley and Martha A. E. Stanley. Mary A. B. Stanley, after the death of J. L. Stanley, executed and delivered to Wm. Anders a deed to 400 acres, more or less, of the land involved in this suit, and she also executed and delivered to J. J. Cain and George W. Hagey a deed to 1,000 acres, more or less, of said land. Thereafter Wm. Anders conveyed the land so purchased by him to Cain & Hag-ey. The.defendants hold under Cain & Hag-ey, or their assigns. On the 23d day of April, 1870, William T. Stanley, son of J. B. Stanley, deceased, conveyed to J. T. Ferguson “all title, interest and claim” he had in and to any and all lands, lots, and premises to which he was by law entitled, formerly belonging to his father, J. B. Stanley, deceased.

It is apparent from what has been stated that the plaintiffs, who are the heirs of J. T. Ferguson, deceased, base their suit upon the theory that, at the time of the death of J. B. Stanley in 1843, the land involved in this suit was the community property of said Stanley and his wife, Mary A. B. Stanley, and that upon the death of J. B. Stanley one-half undivided interest therein, by law, passed to W. T. Stanley and Martha A. E. Stanley, surviving children of said J. B. Stanley, and that by the deed of W. T. Stanley before mentioned J. T. Ferguson became the owner of a one-fourth ¡undivided interest in said lands, and that defendants’ defense is that by the two deeds hereinbefore mentioned, one from J. B. Stanley to A. Wynn, and the other from said Wynn to Mary A. B. Stanley, passed the title to said land to said Mrs. Mary A. B. Stanley, as her separate property; that Mrs. Stanley had conveyed 400 acres thereof to Anders and 1,000 acres thereof to Cain & Hagey; and that the title to all of said land had passed by mesne conveyances from Cain & Hagey to defendants.

Defendants also insist that, if it be conceded that the two deeds of Stanley to Wynn and Wynn to Mrs. Stanley did not pass the title to said land to Mrs. Stanley as her separate property, they did at least pass the legal title thereto to her, and, this being true, the title of the heirs of j. B. Stanley, or their assigns, was only an equitable title, and that *393 as such equitable owners had the burden of showing that the purchasers of the legal tb tie from Mary A. L. Stanley were not innocent purchasers for value without notice, etc.

Appellants’ first assignment is that the trial court erred in consolidating the two cases upon the motion of appellees.

[1] We do not think the court erred in consolidating the two cases. The parties and issues in both cases were the same, and therefore no harm could have resulted to appellants by such consolidation. We therefore overrule the first assignment.

The only question remaining necessary to be decided, which if decided in favor of ap-pellees puts an end to the entire controversy, is: Was the land involved in this suit, at the time of the death of J. L. Stanley, the community property of J. D. Stanley and wife, Mary A. L. Stanley, or was it the separate property of said Mary A. L. Stanley? If it was the separate property of Mrs. Stanley, William T. Stanley could not, and did not, inherit any interest therein from his father, J. L. Stanley, deceased, and his deed to J. T. Ferguson conveyed no interest in the same to said Ferguson, under whom appellants claim.

[2]

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Bluebook (online)
183 S.W. 391, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-v-dodd-texapp-1916.