Gibbs v. Lester

24 S.W.2d 527
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 22, 1930
DocketNo. 3324.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 S.W.2d 527 (Gibbs v. Lester) 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
Gibbs v. Lester, 24 S.W.2d 527 (Tex. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

HALL, C. J.

This is, an action of trespass to try title and for damages, brought by appellants to recover the John Gibbs survey in Hutchinson county. The appellants, other than A. A. Lumpkin and A. S. Burleson, claim the land as the heirs of John Gibbs. Lump- - *528 kin and Burleson claim a part of the land as the vendees of such heirs. Appellants’ claim is based upon a land certificate, numbered 159, issued by the Adjutant General of 'the State of Texas on April 9, 1853. This certificate was issued by authority of the Act of Peb. 9, 1850 (3 Gammels Laws of Texas, p. 153). A patent based upon this certificate was issued to John Gibbs on May 7, 1875, granting the land described in the petition. The certificate was issued to John Gibbs under the provisions of said act, because he was with Eannin at the massacre of Goliad. Lumpkin and Burleson claim an undivided one-half interest in the survey through R. H. ICirby, who, acting under certain powers of attorney executed by the heirs of Gibbs, filed a suit which resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs on April 11, 1888. By the terms of the judgment, plaintiff recovered the lands against F. W. McGuire and others, and by mesne conveyances Lumpkin and Bur-leson .acquired their undivided one-half interest. Save and except Lumpkin and Burle-son, the appellants claimed an undivided one-half interest in virtue of being the sole and only heirs at law of John Gibbs, deceased.

The appellees, who were defendants below, claimed to have acquired .title under the provisions- of the three, five, ten, and twenty-five years’ statutes of limitation. It appears that the defense based upon the three and the twenty-five years’ statutes of limitation was abandoned at the trial, in that no proof was offered in support thereof.

Upon the trial, the court defined what constituted title under the statutes of five and ten years’ limitation, what was meant by peaceable and adverse possession, and submitted certain iásues of fact, in response to which the jury found that appellants and the defendant A. P. Gentry were the heirs, and vendees of the heirs, of the identical John Gibbs mentioned in land certificate No. 159. That the rental value of the land from June 26, 1926, to date, was if1,250. That John Glenn had peaceable and adverse possession of the land .in controversy, cultivating, using, and enjoying the same and regularly paying taxes thereon continuously for a period of five years under a deed duly registered, prior to the filing of this suit. That A. B. Caroth-ers and the vendors under whom he claimed had peaceable and adverse possession of the land, cultivating, using, and enjoying the -same and regularly paying all taxes thereon under deeds duly registered, for a period of five years prior to the filing of this suit. That A.' B. Carothers and his vendors and vendees have had peaceable and adverse possession of the lands! in controversy, cultivating, using, enjoying, and claiming the same continuously for a period of ten years before the filing of this suit.

Based upon the verdict, the court rendered a judgment that the appellants take nothing and that the appellees A. B. Carothers, L. T. Lester, and Mary Elizabeth Lester recover title and possession of the land. *

The jury having found in appellees’ favor upon the issues of five and ten years’ limitation, appellants attack these findings, insisting:

(1) That in certain correspondence between Burleson and Glenn, while the latter was in possession of and claiming the land, he had admitted that Burleson had title to one-half of the land, thus destroying the hostile character of his possession to that one-half;
(2) That Carothers had, during the alleged limitation period, filed two suits relating to the land against appellants, thereby interrupting the running of the statutes;
(3) That Glenn failed to pay the taxes for the year 1904; and,
(4) That appellees were not claiming under deeds duly registered.

We will consider these contentions in’ the order named.

The first contention is that the court erred in excluding certain correspondence between A. S. Burleson and John Glenn. These letters were offered for the purpose of showing that Glenn, before his limitation title had matured, admitted that Burleson owned an interest in the land. The letters were objected to because they were irrelevant and immaterial and at most only showed an attempt to settle the difference as to the title.

The first letter was from Burleson to Glenn, dated at Washington City, March 31, 1906, in which Burleson acknowledged receipt of a letter from Glenn dated March 24th. He refers to the fact that Glenn had paid taxes and the expenses of fencing the land, and gives as his opinion that, together with Glenn, they could give a purchaser a good title, and ’says: “I suggest that in fairness it might be, because of the fencing and taxes paid, that you should have three-fifths of the value of the property and I to take the remaining two-fifths. . In your last letter you asked what I was willing to take and how much I was willing to accept for my part of the land, i have that letter of yours now before me. I made in my last letter to you what I thought were fair propositions. You answered in a perfectly fair statement and suggested the payment of money expended for taxes and fences, which I confess had not occurred to me,” etc.

It appears that Glenn had purchased the property from J. H. Truitt on April 16, 1902;, filing his deed for record on December 9, 1903. He had fenced the land with three ¡barbed wires during the early part of the year 1904. In 1906- he conveyed the land to R. W. Wright in exchange for some Amarillo property. Upon finding that the title was not perfectly clear, by agreement, that trade was rescinded and Wright reconveyed the land .to Glenn on February 9, 1906, with the un *529 derstanding that Glenn should perfect his title hy suit or compromise within two years and then reconvey the property to Wright.

Glenn replied to the letter of Burleson mentioned above hy letter dated at Miami, Tex., April 30, 1906, in which he states, in part, as follows:

“Your- proposition on taxes and fence cost all O. K. You state you have not realized anything out of this property. I have got some lease money on some and will be willing to divide same. If you gain suit, I can not complimise as that would let my war-rantor loose. * * * It may he that if you would file suit for land, you and my warrantor could compMmise same. It is not my fight but my warrantor, he said, will defend title. I think if you would file suit then he would except title1 from both of us.”

The third letter is from Glenn to Burleson dated at Miami, May 19, 1906, in which he states that he has seen his attorneys who were'surprised at Burleson wanting Glenn to sue him. He continued:

“I have no fite to make with you. The only way for me to hold my warrantor is for you to sue for possession as I have before stated. I think you have made fair in com-plvrmse but as I have stated I can not entertain proposition for compMmise.

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Related

Neal, Ronnie
Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2008
Frost v. Crockett
109 S.W.2d 529 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1936)
Gibbs v. Lester
41 S.W.2d 28 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.W.2d 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibbs-v-lester-texapp-1930.