Frazer v. Seureau

128 S.W. 649, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 416, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 551
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 20, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 128 S.W. 649 (Frazer v. Seureau) 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
Frazer v. Seureau, 128 S.W. 649, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 416, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 551 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

HEILL, Associate Justice.

The appellee, Clemence Suzanne Laure Seureau, a feme sole, brought this suit on November 30, 1907, in the ordinary form of an action of trespass to try title, against the appellants, J. F. Frazer and George H. Hermann, to recover 373% acres, described by metes and bounds, of the William Hardin league, situated in Harris County, Texas. On September 16, 1908, the plaintiff filed her first amended original petition, in which, in addition to the statutory form of an action of this character, she alleged that she and those under whom she claims and whose title she has have had and held peaceable and adverse possession of the premises described, cultivating, using and enjoying the same, claiming the same under title and color of title for more than three years after defendants’ cause of action or their claims, if any they have, accrued, and before the commencement of this suit, and therefore she pleaded the three years statute of limitations. She also, under appropriate allegations, claimed title under the five and ten years statutes ■ of limitation.

The defendants, on December 7, 1908, filed their second amended original answer, which consisted of a general demurrer, pleas of not guilty, the three, five and ten years statutes of limitation. They further pleaded that if plaintiff owns any land in the Hardin league it is all situated within the 500-acre tract conveyed by Daniel T. Coit and wife, Eliza Coit, to Walter C. Converse in the deed dated August 2, 1841, recorded in “G,” page 464, Harris County deed records, and that defendant Hermann owns the land immediately south thereof, and that the south line of said 500-acre tract is found and located on the ground as follows: Beginning at a point in the center of Buffalo Bayou where the east line of the said Hardin league crosses the same; thence south along the east line of the Hardin league, same being indicated by a fence, 5263 feet to a point; thence west 3780 feet to a point; thence north at 5291 feet pass a stake on bank of Buffalo Bayou, at 5318 feet in all to a point in the center of Buffalo Bayou, following the meanders of same to the place of beginning.

The defendants then prayed for an order locating and fixing the *419 boundary line and especially the south boundary line of said 500-acre tract as above described.

The case was tried without a jury and judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff for the land sued for.

The trial judge found the following facts:

“1. That the.tract of land in controversy is a rectangular strip, containing 34.3 acres off the south end of a certain 373%-acre tract—a part of what is known as the Phelps 500-acre tract—on the south side of Buffalo Bayou in the William Hardin league in Harris County, Texas.
“2. That the south line of said 34.3-acre tract is the south line of 373%-acre tract, and the south line of said Phelps 500-acre tract, and has been known and recognized as the south line of said Phelps 500-acre tract for over twenty-five years.
“3. That in the year 1894, G. N. Phelps put a tenant on said 373%-acre tract, and caused said tract to be fenced, and that said tenant was in possession thereof, using the same when, in the year 1898, the defendant Hermann, without the knowledge or consent of either Phelps or his tenant, constructed a fence across the 373%-aere tract on the north line of said 34.3-acre tract and took possession of the latter tract and" changed the south line of the Phelps tract to the point where defendants claim.
“4. That thereafter, on July 26, 1904, the said G. H. Phelps, by valid conveyance, conveyed the 373%-acre tract to August Seureau, at which time the latter and the plaintiff were, and for some time past had been, husband and wife.
“That subsequent to said last mentioned date and prior to the institution of this suit, the said August Seureau died, leaving his wife, the plaintiff herein, surviving.
“6. That after defendant Hermann had removed the fence from the south line of the Phelps tract, as claimed by plaintiff, in 1898, he conveyed the premises by a deed to the defendant Frazer, in said deed calling for the south line of the Phelps tract, and shortly after the said date, probably six months, the defendant Frazer placed "the said piece of land in cultivation, the said cultivation commencing about the 1st day of January, 1895. The court finds that ten years limitation has not run from the said 1st day of January, 1895, up to the filing of this suit. The court 'concludes that there is not title in the defendant from the sovereignty of the soil.”

We adopt the foregoing conclusions of fact, with the explanation that it is evident that the year “1895” appearing in the sixth conclusion is a cleric error, for the preceding part of the finding shows that Hermann did not convey to Frazer until in 1898, and that it was “shortly after said date, probably six months, the defendant Frazer placed said piece of land in cultivation,” which must have been the first day of January, 1899, instead of the “1st day of January, 1895.” Besides, the evidence shows that Frazer did not get possession of the disputed strip until some time in the latter part of 1898 or the first part of the year 1899.

The conclusions of law reached by the trial court on the facts found were “that the plaintiff having shown prior possession of the *420 land in controversy to that under which the defendants claim, and a claim by Phelps and use and enjoyment by him through a tenant, and a regular chain of title connecting herself with such possession, and the defendants having shown no title in themselves or either of them, is entitled to recover, and that judgment should be in her favor for the land sued for.”

We believe that the evidence is reasonably sufficient to support the conclusions of fact of the trial judge, and that his conclusions of law upon such facts are correct, as we shall demonstrate in considering the defendants’ assignments of error.

The third assignment, which is the first insisted on, is as follows:

“The plaintiff failed to show that she had any legal or equitable title to the property in controversy on which she could recover at the time when the suit was filed, and plaintiff failed to set up in her petition by amendment a title acquired after the filing of the suit; the judgment should therefore have been for the defendants.”

The contention of defendants under the assignment is that, inasmuch as plaintiff showed no title in herself or in those through whom she deraigned title, but relying simply on the prior possession of Phelps, and a deed, which was in fact a mortgage, from Phelps and wife to her husband, and a quitclaim deed made after the suit was instituted, she could not recover.

It is elementary that prior possession of the plaintiff or of his vendor, is sufficient without more to entitle him to recover against a naked trespasser. Parker v. Ft. Worth & D. C. R. R. Co., 71 Texas, 133; Magerstadt v. Lambert, 39 Texas Civ. App., 472 (87 S. W., 1069); Teagarden v. Patten, 48 Texas Civ. App., 571 (107 S. W., 912); Beauchamp v. Williams, 115 S. W., 132; Saxton v. Corbett, 122 S. W., 77.

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Bluebook (online)
128 S.W. 649, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 416, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frazer-v-seureau-texapp-1910.