Galbraith v. Howard Hume

32 S.W. 803, 11 Tex. Civ. App. 230, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 220
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 5, 1895
DocketNo. 1916.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 32 S.W. 803 (Galbraith v. Howard Hume) 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
Galbraith v. Howard Hume, 32 S.W. 803, 11 Tex. Civ. App. 230, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 220 (Tex. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

TARLTON, Chief Justice.

This is an action of. trespass to try title, involving 492 acres of land, the east one-third of the Patrick Fitzgerald survey in Cooke County. The appellees were plaintiffs in the court below, against the following named defendants: D. S. Galbraith, J. C. Baldwin, W. C. Duncan, Kansas Investment Co., O. S. Bowman, H. E. Ball, J. F. Wellington, Jr., and A. G. Dickerson. The plaintiffs also sued for the cancellation of two deeds of trust upon the land in controversy, executed by the defendant D. S. Galbraith on April 21, 1890, one to the defendant H. E. Ball, to secure the Kansas Investment Co. in the payment of his promissory note for the sum of $3000, due November 1, 1895, the other to the defendant J. F. Wellington, Jr., ■to secure the Kansas Investment Co. in the payment of six promissory notes for $60 each, executed by Galbraith for the interest on the $3000 note, and his five promissory notes for the sum of $120 each, executed by Galbraith for the same purpose.

We adopt substantially the conclusions of fact of the learned trial judge, as follows:

1. The land in controversy is a part of a survey of one-third of a league patented to the heirs of Patrick Fitzgerald by patent dated October 2, 1856. Patrick Fitzgerald died in the year 1838, leaving neither wife nor children surviving him, and was never married. His *235 father, Jahez Fitzgerald, and his mother, Elizabeth Fitzgerald, and a number of brothers and sisters, survived Mm.

2. The certificate by virtue of which the one-tMrd of a league of land was located, having been sold by the administrator of Patrick Fitzgerald’s estate, fell into the hands of Jabez Fitzgerald, the father of Patrick, and was the community property of Jabez Fitzgerald and his wife Elizabeth.

3. Jabez Fitzgerald died in Fannin County, Texas, in the year 1843, leaving his wife Elizabeth and several of their sons and daughters surviving him. He left a will in which his wife Elizabeth was named as his executrix, and at the December term, 1843, of the Probate Court of Fannin County, she qualified.as executrix. In March, 1844, she returned an inventory of Jabez Fitzgerald’s estate, in which was included the Patrick Fitzgerald one-third of a league certificate.

4. Elizabeth Fitzgerald died about November 1, 1845., leaving still open the administration upon the estate of Jabez Fitzgerald. On November 24, 1845, John E. Garnett was appointed administrator de bonis non of this estate, and he returned an inventory thereof, in which he included the Patrick Fitzgerald one-third of a league certificate. In his final account, filed at the October term, 1854, the administrator Garnett refers to the certificate as follows, viz: “One-third of a league of land supposed to be located in Cooke County by Thos. C. Bean, to whom the certificate was delivered by me for. location, the headright of Patrick Fitzgerald, deceased.” Hpon a re-statement of this account by the court, the land is referred to as follows, viz.: “One-third of a league of land in Cooke County, located by virtue of Patrick Fitzgerald’s headright, out of which the locating charges are to be paid to Thos. C. Bean.”

5. About the year 1854, John E. Garnett, as administrator of the estate, entered into a contract with said T. C. Bean, plaintiff’s intestate, for the location of the Patrick Fitzgerald one-third of a league certificate, by the terms of which Bean was to locate the certificate and to procure patent to the land upon which it should be located at his own expense, and for his services and expenses he should have one-third of the land so located. There is no direct evidence as to the mating of this contract between Garnett and Bean, but from the circumstances in evidence it is found as a fact that the contract was made, and that Bean fully and faithfully complied with his part thereof.

6. At the same term of court to which Garnett made his final report as above stated, commissioners were appointed by the court to partition among the heirs of Jabez and Elizabeth Fitzgerald the Patrick Fitzgerald one-third of a league of land, T. C. Bean being one of the commissioners. In pursuance of the appointment, the commissioners partitioned the west two-thirds of the land among the heirs of Jabez and Elizabeth Fitzgerald, dividing it into seven different parcels and designating to which of the heirs they allotted each parcel. Hpon the map or diagram of the land and the subdivisions thereof made by the commissioners and *236 returned to the court, appeared the land in controversy, designated as T. C. Bean’s land. This report of the commissioners was approved by the court.

7. In the distribution of the land among the heirs of Jabez and Elizabeth Fitzgerald in accordance with the report of the commissioners, a tract of 70 acres was allotted to Garrett Fitzgerald, who was one of the sons of Jabez and Elizabeth. Garrett Fitzgerald died soon after the distribution of the lands, leaving a wife and some children. The wife of the defendant Jacob Baldwin is one of these children. The wife of Garrett Fitzgerald died in 1874.

8. T. C. Bean paid the taxes on the land in controversy from the time it was patented to his death. His claim thereto was generally known and acquiesced in by the heirs of Jabez and Elizabeth Fitzgerald, and they never set up any claim thereto until after the death of Bean, which occurred in the year 1887. In the locality where the land is situated, it was generally known and regarded as Bean’s land.

9. After the death of Bean, the defendants J. C. Baldwin and W. C. Duncan procured to themselves deeds and powers of attorney for the land in controversy from all the heirs of Jabez and Elizabeth Fitzgerald, including the defendant Jacob Baldwin. After procuring these deeds and powers of attorney, they conveyed the land to the defendant D. S. Galbraith. Thereupon the defendant Galbraith executed the deeds of trust referred to above in our statement of this ease, to secure the promissory notes therein set out. After the execution of the deeds in trust, and after the Kansas Investment Co. had advanced the money upon the faith thereof, Galbraith reconveyed the land to the defendant J. C. Baldwin, who thereafter conveyed it to his father, the defendant Jacob Baldwin, June 9, 1892. The deed of trust was recorded in Cooke County about April 21, 1890, and the notes secured by the same were payable November 1, 1895.

10. The Kansas Investment Co. advanced the money in good faith, without notice of Bean’s claim to the land, and without the knowledge of circumstances sufficient to put an ordinarily prudent man upon inquiry, but the defendants J. C. Baldwin, W. C. Duncan, D- S. Galbraith and Jacob Baldwin are not entitled to protection as innocent purchasers, for the reason that the facts and circumstances connected with their purchases of said land were sufficient to put a reasonably prudent man upon inquiry, and had such inquiry been prosecuted with reasonable diligence, it would have revealed Bean’s interest in the land. After the defendants J. C. Baldwin and W. C. Duncan procured deeds to themselves to the land, they fenced it and took actual possession of it, and they and the defendant Jacob Baldwin continued to use and occupy it until the date of the trial below, December 27, 1893. Their use and occupancy, however, was not for a sufficient time- before the institution of this suit, viz., January 3, 1893, to establish title under the three years’ statute of limitation.

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.W. 803, 11 Tex. Civ. App. 230, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galbraith-v-howard-hume-texapp-1895.