Garrett v. Spradling

88 S.W. 293, 39 Tex. Civ. App. 60, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 239
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 12, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 88 S.W. 293 (Garrett v. Spradling) 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
Garrett v. Spradling, 88 S.W. 293, 39 Tex. Civ. App. 60, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 239 (Tex. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

*62 BIDS OH, Associate Justice.

This is an action of trespass to try title, brought by appellee in the court below against D. L. Garrett, Jolly Ivey and his wife, Emily Ivey, for the recovery of 190 acres of land, part of the 320-acre survey patented to James Garrett, assignee of W. H. Garrett. Appellant D. L. Garrett disclaimed any interest in the land individually, but claimed same for the estate of James Garrett, of which he was the executor, and in that capacity answered by general demurrer, general denial, plea of not guilty, limitations of three, five and ten years, suggested improvements in good faith, and filed a sworn plea, alleging that the two deeds, purporting to be executed by appellant Emily Ivey (then Holbert), joined by her husband, J. T. Holbert, one to J. R. Allcorn and his wife, Susan B. Allcorn, for 100 acres out of said W. H. Garrett survey, and the other to S. M. Woodrum for 90 acres out of said survey,' and which deeds constitute links in appellee’s chain of title to the land in controversy, were never in fact executed by said Emily Holbert and her husband, J. T. Holbert, but were forgeries.

Appellants Emily Ivey and her husband, Jolly Ivey, answered by general demurrer, general denial, plea of not guilty, and adopted that part of the answer of appellant D. L. Garrett alleging that the two deeds above mentioned were forgeries.

Jas. B. Burdett, by his guardian, W. W. Burdett, filed a plea of intervention, claiming title to the land in controversy, but as the grounds upon which he claims title to same do not in anywise affect the questions presented on this appeal, it is unnecessary to state them.

The case was submitted to the jury by the court below on special issues, which, being found by the jury in favor of appellee, judgment was rendered in his favor for the land in controversy.

Appellant’s first and second assignments of error are as follows:

“1.—The court erred in permitting the plaintiff to read in evidence the sixth direct interrogatory propounded by plaintiff to his witness W. 8. Allcorn, and the answer thereto, which answer is as follows: 'My father bought this land from J. H. Holbert and wife. J. H. Holbert and wife, at the time the land was bought by my father, resided in Bell County, Texas, at or near the town of Belton. He bought the land about 1877. He paid for the land in sheep. It was all paid for.’ Because the deposition of said witness did not show that the deed of conveyance claimed to have been made by Emily Holbert, a married woman, conveying her separate estate, had been acknowledged in the form prescribed in the statute for a married woman conveying her separate estate, and did not show who the officer was, either by name or title, or where he lived, whether authorized to take acknowledgments or not, and did not show whether or not the officer who took the acknowledgment knew the grantor or his wife, Emily Holbert, or was introduced to them, or that they were proven to him by any one to be the persons whose names were signed to the instrument; and because the interrogatory and answer thereto does not show that the instrument was explained to Mrs. Emily Holbert, as is required to pass title to the separate estate of a married woman; and because there was on file among the papers of the case an affidavit charging forgery, if such deed was ever in existence, and the execution of the deed had not been proven. All of which is fully shown by defendant’s bill of exception number 1.
*63 “2.—The court erred in permitting in evidence the eighth interrogatory, and the answer thereto of plaintiff’s witness W. S. Allcorn, who testified by deposition that he had then in his possession a deed executed by J. H. Holbert and wife to J. E. Allcorn; that the deed was destroyed by fire in the year 1887 in Walker County, Texas. The deed was made in the year 1877, as well as witness remembers, in the summer. J. H. Holbert and his wife signed and acknowledged said deed. I can not remember before what officer it was acknowledged. Mrs. Holbert’s acknowledgment was to the deed. I did not see her appear before the officer, but the officer’s certificate of acknowledgment was to the deed, taking her separate acknowledgment to the deed. I can not remember the name of the officer who took the acknowledgment. The certificate of acknowledgment showed that she appeared before the officer and was privily examined by him, separate and apart from her husband, and the certificate showed that he had fully explained the deed to her, and that she had acknowledged to him upon her privy examination, separate and apart from her husband, that she had willingly signed the deed as her own act and deed, and that she did not wish to retract it. It was a general warranty deed.
“Because the same was irrelevant and immaterial, and because the evidence in the case, nor the deposition of the witness, did not show that there was any deed executed and acknowledged by J. T. Holbert and his wife, in the form prescribed by law, conveying any portion of the property in controversy; and because there had been an affidavit filed with the papers in the case charging that, if such a deed had ever been in existence, that the same was a forgery, and its execution had not been proven, and because the deposition of said witness did not show that the deed or conveyance claimed to have been made by Emily Holbert, a married woman, had been acknowledged in the form prescribed in the conveyance of the separate estate of a married woman.”

Appellants’ only proposition presented under this assignment of error, which is as follows: “In an action of trespass to try title, when the defendant files an affidavit that a deed under which plaintiff claims title is a forgery, the burden of proving the execution of the deed attacked is east upon the plaintiff,” is not germain to the assignments, and on that account, we are not required to consider same. However, in our opinion, these assignments are not well taken, as the testimony, while perhaps not sufficient within itself to prove the due execution of the deeds to which it referred, was admissible in connection with other testimony in the record, as tending to prove such execution, and it was proper for the court to permit same to go to the jury for their consideration.

Appellants’ sixth and seventh assignments of error are as follows:

“6th.—Because the court erred in permitting the plaintiff, T. C. Spradling, to testify that he knew the land in controversy, and had acted as agent for S. M. Woodrum for some land, and bought some once owned by him; that he was agent for Woodrum for some of the W. H. Garrett land; that it was out of the southwest corner of the survey—ninety acres more or less; that he knew what Mr. Woodrum did with the ninety acres; he sold it to James Cotton; that he knew it *64

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Bluebook (online)
88 S.W. 293, 39 Tex. Civ. App. 60, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrett-v-spradling-texapp-1905.