Freeman v. Wm. M. Rice Institute

128 S.W. 629, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 191, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 489
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 2, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 128 S.W. 629 (Freeman v. Wm. M. Rice Institute) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Freeman v. Wm. M. Rice Institute, 128 S.W. 629, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 191, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 489 (Tex. 1910).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Chief Justice.

This is an action of trespass to try title brought by appellant against the appellees to recover 1,054 acres of land on the Thomas Tanner league in Newton and Jasper Counties.

The defendants each pleaded not guilty, and severally disclaimed as to certain portions of the land, and as to the respective portions claimed by them severally pleaded title by limitation.

*194 Upon the trial, after hearing the evidence introduced by plaintiff, the court below instructed the jury to return a verdict for defendants, which was done and judgment rendered in accordance therewith.

The land in controversy is a part of a league patented to Thomas Tanner on February 2, 1842. In 1855 Tanner and wife conveyed to Benjamin Collier and S. S. Stafford. In 1857 S. S. Stafford conveyed to John M. and Reuben W. Wade by a deed recorded in the deed records of Early County, Georgia, February 26, 1864. Plaintiff offered in evidence an examined copy from, the records of Early County, Georgia, of a deed from John M. and Reuben W. Wade to Thomas E. Speight, executed May 17, 1861, and recorded February 27, 1864, in said Georgia deed records. The Court excluded this copy on the ground that plaintiff had failed to make a sufficient showing of the loss of the original deed to entitle him to introduce secondary evidence of the execution and contents of such deed. Plaintiff then introduced deeds showing a chain of title from Speight to himself. The first deed in this chain was one from Speight to Holmes and Cowart, executed January 15, 1864. This deed, the original being introduced in evidence, was filed for record in Early County, Georgia, on February 26, 1864, and was recorded in said Georgia deed records upon the page of the record immediately following the record of the deeds from Stafford to Wade and from Wade to Speight. The three deeds having been evidently filed at the same time and recorded in the order of their execution, the reasonable inference is that they were filed by Holmes and Cowart, or some one for them. In connection with the examined copy of the deed from the Wades to Speight, plaintiff introduced the following evidence:

First, the following affidavit of plaintiff:

“Joseph Freeman, being duly sworn according to law, says that he is the plaintiff in the above-styled cause; that he, the said plaintiff, claims title to the land involved in said suit by chain of title from and under the State of Texas, to wit, 1,054 acres in the east end of the Thomas Tanner league of land situated in Jasper and Hewton Counties, Texas. That two of the original deeds constituting links in his chain of title are lost or destroyed, to wit, the original deed from Samuel S. Stafford to John M. Wade and Reuben W. Wade, and from the said John M. and Reuben W. Wade to Thomas E. Speight, each conveying said tract of land. That affiant found recorded copies of said deeds in the office of the recorder of deeds for Early County, Georgia. That the said clerk made diligent search at my request, and in my presence, among the records and archives of said office, and failed to find same. Affiant also inquired at the office of George McDonald, who lives in Cuthbert, Georgia, and who has charge of the estate of Arthur Hood, deceased, and who has possession of "the papers and documents pertaining to the lands and property of the said estate, and the said George McDonald, after search among the. said papers of said estate, declared that the said lost deeds were not among the said papers. Affiant also states that he made inquiry of Mrs. Mattie Wood and her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Holmes, and Joe Vincent, each of whom formerly owned an interest in said land, and each declared that said lost instruments were not among their papers. Affiant further *195 states that he has searched and caused search to be made by the clerk of the Superior Court of Clay County, among the papers of a suit in said court by the heirs of Josiah Vincent against C. B. Holmes et al., in which suit an interest in said land was claimed by said heirs, and that said lost dee'ds are not among said papers. Affiant has also searched among papers of Anthony Hutchings, deceased, whose wife was interested in said land, and who for many years looked after the interests of all the parties owning interests in same and paid the taxes thereon, and said lost deeds are not among said papers.
“Affiant has made diligent and careful search in all the places where said lost deeds were most likely to be found, and has been unable to find them, or other trace of them than the record above mentioned.”

Second, the deposition of plaintiff Freeman, in which he testified as ' follows:

“I inquired in the clerk’s office of the Superior Court of Early County, Georgia, for the original deeds from Samuel S. Stafford to Jno. M. Wade and Reuben W. Wade, and from Jno. M. and Reuben W. Wade to Thos. Speight. The said clerk made diligent search in my presence for said deed among the records in his office, and was unable to find said deed. I also made inquiry from Geo. McDonald, who lives at Cuthbert, Ga., and who attends to all the business for the Hood estate, which had an interest in the land in suit. I also made inquiry from Mrs. Mattie Holmes and Joe Vincent, each of whom formerly had an interest in the land in controversy. These were all the persons who had any interest in said land at the time I bought the same. Neither of said deeds have ever been in my custody or possession.”

Third, the testimony of plaintiff’s attorney that he had made diligent search in the records and archives of Jasper and Newton Counties and failed to find said deeds. He also introduced the deposition of James N. Evans, who testified that he was 73 years old; that he was clerk of the court of Early County from February 10, 1862, until March 1, 1864, and afterwards deputy clerk; that as such clerk he was the custodian of the deed records and recorder of deeds; that he found pages 320, 321 and 322 of book K in his handwriting (these are the pages which contain the record of the three deeds above mentioned), and that he recorded the deeds in said book K. That he had before him what he considered the original instruments, and that he recorded them correctly. That it was his custom to compare the copies with the originals. Witness was acquainted with Samuel S. Stafford, who was a lawyer, and John M. and Reuben W. Wade, who were merchants; was acquainted with the handwriting of S. S. Stafford, as he filed many papers with him.

This witness further testified: “I think I was familiar with the handwriting of Reuben W. Wade, but can not now recall what particular means I had of becoming acquainted with it, except that he was the bookkeeper for the firm of J. M. and R. W. Wade, and I had dealings with that firm. I was less acquainted with the handwriting of J. M. Wade, and do not remember what opportunities I then had of becoming familiar with it, but I believe I would then have recognized his signature.”

*196

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Bluebook (online)
128 S.W. 629, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 191, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeman-v-wm-m-rice-institute-texcrimapp-1910.