Foster v. Persinger

30 S.W.2d 378, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 691
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 26, 1930
DocketNo. 2430.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 30 S.W.2d 378 (Foster v. Persinger) 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
Foster v. Persinger, 30 S.W.2d 378, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 691 (Tex. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

PELPHREY, C. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in trespass to try title suit brought by appellee against appellants to 5 acres of land in the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section 33, Texas & Pacific Railway Company survey in Ector county, Tex. Appellants pleaded not guilty and the five and ten year statutes of limitations.

The trial court filed findings of fact and conclusions of law which will here be quoted as showing the facts:

“Findings of Fact.
“The plaintiff derived her title by a special warranty deed from John Hoge, Trustee of the Texas & Pacific Ry. Co., said deed being-dated January 20, 1887, and recorded in Volume 3, pages 57 and 58 of the deed records of Ector County, Texas, on the 20th day of January, 1887, at 10:30 o’clock A. M. I find that the legal title from the sovereignty of the soil ,to the said plaintiff is regular and unbroken and that the said plaintiff, Lovenia S. Per-singer, had a good, valid and existing title to. said land in-this suit on said date of January 20,1887. I further find that the plaintiff has never lived on said land and has never used it from said date. I further find that the plaintiff attempted to pay the taxes on said land when she first bought it, but never attempted to pay them up to about the year 1927. I further find that the defendant, H. C. Foster, obtained title to 542½ acres out of Section 33, Block 42, Tsp. 2-South, Texas & Pacific Ry., Co. Survey situated in Ector County, Texas, of which the land in controversy is a part and I further find that the defendant obtained his title by a general warranty deed from J. L. Martin on the-day of November, 1907. I further find that the title of the said defendant is regular and complete from the sovereignty of the soil to defendants up to date of defendant’s deed on the-- day of November, 1907, save and except the land in controversy.
“I further find that when defendant purchased said 542½, acres from said Martin he had an abstract made and the abstract of title prepared by an abstractor in Ector County failed to place in the abstract the deed of plaintiffs, which was then on record and I further find that the defendants thought they were acquiring full title to all of the 542½ *379 acres purchased from Martin on said date in November, 1907. I further find that the defendants have cultivated part of said land in controversy and have used all of it for grazing purposes and have had same enclosed in tlhe 542½ acres, -which has been under fence from said date of November-, 1907 up to about 1927.
“X further find that the defendants have been using and enjoying said land as their own, thinking they owned same, and that said defendants have even sold part of the land in controversy to other parties.
“I further find that the plaintiff, by her daughter, came to Odessa about 1927, and inquired of the County Officials where her land was situated and that she had the County surveyor to go out and survey the land in controversy. I further find that plaintiff, by her daughter, approached the defendant about the land in controversy and that the defendants told her that there must be some mistake and that' if she had a valid title on record prior to the date he purchased the land from Martin that he didn’t want the land, and that [he didn’t want something for nothing and that he would look into it and do the right thing about it. I further find that defendants have done nothing toward straightening it out up to the time suit was filed in this case.”
“Conclusions of Law.
“Thouglh the defendants had possession of the land in controversy since 1907 and were using and enjoying same, as they had no actual knowledge of plaintiff’s title until 1927 and when apprised of plaintiff’s assertion to ownership the defendants did not assert their claim to the title to the property as against the plaintiff and as no hostile’ assertion of ownership of title by the defendants as against the plaintiff’s title was made by the defendant until this suit was instituted, the defendants have failed to establish their title to the land in controversy by the statutes of limitation. As the defendants have not established their title by limitation and as the plaintiff had a valid deed duly recorded, and whidh deed connected the plaintiff with the title regular from the sovereignty of the soil to the time the defendants obtained their deed connecting them with the title regular from the sovereignty of the soil, with the exception of plaintiff’s outstanding deed of record, the plaintiff is entitled to recover tlhe title and possession of the land sued upon in this suit.”

The documentary evidence shows that the land in dispute was patented to the Texas & Pacific Railway Company May 10,1883; that the railway company deeded it to John Hoge, but not as trustee, on February 17, 1886; that on December 18, 1886, John Hoge, trustee, deeded it to appellee; that on March 4, 1903, John Hoge, by warranty deed conveyed it to T. J. Martin, H. M. Pegues, and W. N. Waddell; that Martin, Pegues, and Waddell, on September 8, 1907, conveyed to J. L.. Martin, who conveyed to H. C. Foster, appellant, September 11, 1907.

Appellants contend that the undisputed evidence and the findings of fact by the court show that they have had peaceable and adverse possession of the land in question, cultivating, using, and enjoying the same for more than ten years after appellee’s cause of action accrued.

H. C. Foster, one of the appellants, testi-. fied: “I have lived in Ector County since November, 1907. I have lived in the house where I am now- living since November, 1907. I am familiar with the deed from J. L. Martin and wife, Elizabeth, to H. C. Foster, dated September 11, 1907. I bought the land described in that deed and had the deed recorded. I thought it was mine plum on until this lady came. Yes, I paid the taxes on it from the time I bought it on. The land was fenced when I received it from Martin and it continued so until this boom and sold along the highway a strip an acre wide, but there was a fence along that part of it until two months ago.- During this time I ha've used this property continuously. I cultivated it some and also used it for grazing. Since I bought it from Martin I have claimed it under the deed I got from Martin; I thought it was mine. I 'have been in possession of it. No suit has been brought to dispose (dispossess) me until this suit was brought and nobody disturbed my possession until this lady came up about two or three years ago. I live on part of this same tract of land and have lived on it since I bought it from Martin. I took it under this deed, claimed it under the deed and have been in possession of it from that time until now.”

J. B. Foster testified: “I am a son of H. C. Foster, I am familiar with the tract of land involved in this law suit. I lived'with. my father two or three years after he first went there, but since then I have lived at the ranch part of the time, and have been away some. I have been familiar with the place, however. He has used and enjoyed it during all these, years. He used it — he farmed one portion and kept the rest for grazing purposes. • It was more valuable for grazing purposes than anything else. As to it being enclosed all the time; it has been enclosed ever since he bought it until a month or so ago.

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.W.2d 378, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-persinger-texapp-1930.