Fleming v. Giboney

17 S.W. 13, 81 Tex. 422, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1380
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1891
DocketNo. 6898.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 17 S.W. 13 (Fleming v. Giboney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fleming v. Giboney, 17 S.W. 13, 81 Tex. 422, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1380 (Tex. 1891).

Opinion

MARR, Judge, Section A.

Appellee, as plaintiff below, instituted this suit of trespass to try title against the appellants on the 4th day of February, 1888, to recover a certain tract of land of 1476 acres located and surveyed in Haskell. County, Texas, by virtue of a headright certificate for one-third of a league of land, granted under the Constitution of the Republic of Texas, and issued on the 11th day of February, 1839, by the board of land commissioners of Harrisburg County to one John Gibney, upon proof that he Avas a single man and a resident of the Re *425 public on the 2d .day of March, 1836, etc. The plaintiff claimed to have been the wife of John Giboney and his sole surviving heir at the date of his death, which occurred in the year 1857, and that he was the identical person to whom the certificate was granted, though it will be seen that there is slight variation in his name from that as given in the certificate. The defendants deny the identity of John Giboney, the husband of the plaintiff, with the grantee of the' certificate, and also claim the land through mesne conveyances and under a deed bearing-date February 12, 1878, reciting a consideration of $2, and purporting to have been executed by one John Gibney to Barnes Parker, conveying- to the latter the land in controversy. But they offered no evidence whatever, outside of this deed and that afforded by the similarity of the name, of the identity of this John Gibney, who made the above deed, with the original grantee. The causé was tried before the court without a jury and judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff.

The sole, or at least the controlling, question presented on this appeal is the sufficiency of the evidence to support the conclusion and the judgment of the court below, which in effect found that John Giboney, the husband of appéllee, was in fact the party to whom the certificate was granted.

The following is a full summary of the evidence bearing on this issue: By deposition the plaintiff testified, that she was 73 years old and knew John Giboney since she was a child. He died in Grimes County, Texas, December 31, 1857, and had no children, and that she was his surviving wife and only heir. John Giboney married plaintiff in Missouri August 9, 1838. They lived together in Missouri until April 1, 1839, when they came to Texas and settled in Harrisburg County. About December 1, 1839, they moved to Grimes County. Plaintiff has lived in Grimes County ever since. John Giboney received a head-right certificate from the government of Texas for one-third league of land. It was issued to John Giboney and for his benefit and his family. He never sold it. “I know that my husband John Giboney received a headlight certificate from the government of Texas for one-third league while he resided in Harrisburg County. My recollection is that said certificate was issued by the board of land commissioners of Harrisburg County to my husband John Giboney, and for his benefit and his family. I know that he never sold it. I know that the certificate for one-third league of land in my husband’s name was located in what is now known as Haskell County, Texas. The survey was made by John Isbell about May 25,1854. I do not, however, recollect the exact date. I have Mr. Isbell’s receipt for the certificate under which the survey was made; do not know the exact date of the survey. Judge Jesse Grimes paid the patent fees. Judge Grimes delivered the patent to me some time during the year 1859, and I held possession of the patent until I sent it to Haskell County for record about two years ago; *426 the patent after its record was returned to me. I turned it over to my attorney two. or three months ago.”

The patent and certificate to John Giboney were introduced in evidence. Mrs. Giboney also testified that her husband wrote a plain and legible hand. From an indorsement on the certificate it appears, however, that the surveyor, even, who located it spelled the name of the grantee as “Gibbeney.”

J. B. Stevenson testified by deposition: “Formed John Giboney’s acquaintance in Grimes County in 1844; knew him until his death in 1857. He had no children. John Giboney was entitled to and received a certificate for one-third league. Don’t know number or date of certificate, or by what authority it issued. Was co-executor with plaintiff in the will of John Giboney; made an inventory of the estate, which was appraised and filed "in Probate Court of Grimes County. The certificate for one-third league of land referred to was placed on the inventory of said estate, and was in the name of John Giboney. The patent was issued to John Giboney. Don’t know who located certificate, nor who paid patent fee or surveyor’s fee. Mrs. Elizabeth Giboney was the owner of the land when the patent issued. John Giboney could write better than witness. It was not his custom to make his mark.”

We do not see the bearing of this last fact, since there is no proof so far as we can discover that John Giboney or the grantee of the certificate ever signed his name by that method, either in the application for the certificate or in making the proof in support thereof or otherwise. There is no further evidence on the subject beyond this fact.

Rufus Grimes testified by deposition: “Knew John Giboney in Grimes County in 1848 or 1849, until his death in 1857. He resided in Texas during all this time. Don’t know whether John Giboney was entitled to certificate or not. My father procured a patent to John Giboney to the land in question. Don’t know number nor date of certificate. "Understand that the patent procured by my father in favor of John Giboney in 1859 covers land in Haskell County. Have seen patent to one-third league in Haskell County. Don’t know who located the certificate, nor who paid surveyor’s fee. My father paid patent fee for John Giboney or his widow. Patent was delivered to her. When patent issued it was the property of John Giboney. He was a married man during the time I knew him. His wife was Elizabeth Giboney. They had no children. He could write a plain, legible hand; never knew him to make a mark in signing his name.”

R. M. Hall, Commissioner of the General Land Office, testified by deposition, that a headright certificate was issued to John Gibney February 11, 1839, by board of land commissioners of Harrisburg County, for one-third league, which was located, and patent issued February 26, 1859. The field notes of the survey show that they were made by Wm. *427 Howeth, deputy surveyor of Cooke Land District. They were returned to the Land Office by J. H. Isbell. The survey was made May 20, 1856. Fame in certificate is spelled Gibney. Patent issued to John Gibney; no transfer on file. The certificate recites that “John Gibney appeared before the board of land commissioners and proved according to law that he arrived in this country in the fall of the year 1835, and that he is a single man and entitled to one-third of a league of land.” Certificate, was filed in Land Office October 7, 1856. Original patent issued to John Gibney February 26, 1859.

The records of the Land Office disclosed the fact that only one certificate had ever been issued to either John Gibney or to John Giboney, and that is the one located on the land in controversy, and was issued in the name of John Gibney.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 S.W. 13, 81 Tex. 422, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleming-v-giboney-tex-1891.