Gordon v. Hall

69 S.W. 219, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 230, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 277
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 28, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 69 S.W. 219 (Gordon v. Hall) 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
Gordon v. Hall, 69 S.W. 219, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 230, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 277 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought on the 15th day of November, 1900, by the appellants, W. D. Gordon and Allen A. Townes, against appellees, H. L. Hall, J. W. Markham, M. Clountz, and J. H. Bounds, in the form of an action of trespass do try title to recover and obtain a partition of the Joseph Reese 840-acre survey situated in Grayson County, Texas. Gordon claims an undivided three-fifths, and Townes an undivided one-fifth interest in the land, and they alleged that appellants owned the other one-fifth.

The appellees answered by plea of not guilty, the statutes of three, five, and ten years limitations, improvements in good faith, and prayed judgment for title and possession of the land as against the appellants.

The case was tried before a jury, and after the evidence was heard,, a verdict was peremptorily instructed for the defendants; and from the judgment entered on it this appeal is prosecuted.

The evidence shows that the land in question was patented on the 7th day of May, 1872, to the heirs of Joseph Reese by virtue of duplicate certificate No. 167, issued January 5, 1858, in lieu of headright eertificote No. 743, issued January 25, 1839. Original' certificate No. 743 was, by order of the probate court of Brazoria County, Texas, made in partition proceedings of the estate of Joseph Reese, sold on the 1st Tuesday of June, 1857, to C. K. Reese, a son of the original grantee. The report was duly confirmed by the court, and a deed made to the purchaser in pursuance of the order of confirmation. It.is admitted that C. K. Reese acquired title to the certificate by virtue of said pro *232 ceedings and sale. From the statement of facts before us, it appears undisputed that C. EL. Eeese entered into a contract with E. J. Townes, by the terms of which the latter was to procure a duplicate certificate in lieu of certificate No. 743, and for his services the former agreed to give him (Townes) one-fourth of the duplicate certificate.

C. K. Eeese died in 1858, leaving a will by which he bequeathed to his executors, A. G. McCormick and E. Stevens, all his property, to be held by them in trust for the benefit of his children, and to be conveyed by his executors to his children, share and share alike, as they became of age. His executors were not required to give bond, and they were made, by the will, guardians of the children, and clothed with full power to manage his estate independent of the probate court. The will was duly probated, and McCormick only qualified as executor. He inventoried three-fourths of the certificate as belonging to the estate of his testator. The agreement made between C. EL. Eeese and E. J. Townes, by which the latter was to procure a duplicate certificate of certificate No. 743 and receive for his services one-fourth of such certificate, was recognized by McCormick as executor of the estate of C. EL. Eeese. Townes procured a duplicate of certificate No. 743, the duplicate being No. 167, and placed it in the hands of H. E. Taylor, of Fannin County, for location. In 1860 a part of the duplicate certificate was located on the land in controversy in Grayson County, and patent issued May 17, 1872, to Joseph Eeese, his heirs and assigns. E. J. Towns died in 1875, leaving a will by which he appointed Chas. S. West independent executor. A. G. McCormick as independent executor of Chas. EL. Eeese, and Chas. S. West as independent executor of E. J. Townes, made a verbal agreement by .which they agreed that West, -as independent executor of E. J. Townes, was to have the survey in controversy and another tract of 160 acres of land in Grayson County located by the samé certificate, and that A. G. McCormick, as executor of the estate of Chas. EL. Eeese, was to have the unlocated balance of said certificate. C. S. West, as executor of Townes, in 1875 executed a deed to H. E. Taylor conveying the undivided 160 acres of the land in controversy and also 160 acres in Grayson County, located by virtue of the same certificate. On September 28, 1898, H. E. Taylor, by his deed of that date, conveyed to appellee, H„ L. Hall, the undivided 160 acres of the lands in controversy. The deed recited that it was the land-conveyed to H. E. Taylor by C. S. West as executor of E. J. Townes, who died in 1865. He left surviving him as his only heirs five children, whose names are Allen E. Townes (one of the appellants), N. Cobb Townes, Mrs. Mila T. Morris, Mrs. Pattie E. Eector, and Mrs. Pollie T. Carlton. Mrs. Carlton, as one of the heirs of Townes, joined by her husband, Fred Carlton, on the 7th day of August, 1898, by deed of that date, conveyed to appellee, H. L. Hall, her undivided one-fifth interest in all the lands involved in this suit, the deed reciting that the interest conveyed was that to which she. was entitled as an heir at law of Bobt. J. Townes. In October, 1900, prior to the institution of this suit, N. Cobb Townes, Mila T. Morris, and *233 Pattie E. Rector, conveyed all their undivided interest in the land in controversy to the appellant, W. D. Gordon.

In the abstract of title filed in this case by the appellee, R. L. Hall, the deeds from H. E. Taylor and the one from Pollie T. Carlton and her husband, above described, appear; and there is also set out in his abstract of title a judgment rendered in March, 1900; by the Court of Civil Appeals of the Fifth Supreme Judicial District of Texas, in the ease of H. L. Hall v. Unknown Heirs of Joseph Reese, Ho. 3768, quieting Hall’s title and possession of the land in controversy. The opinion of the court recites the facts upon which the judgment was rendered, and it appears therefrom that it was based upon the findings that R. J. Townes acquired title thereto by virtue of his agreement, hereinbefore stated, with C. K. Reese, and the partition made by their executors above referred to, and that Hall was in possession of the premises, claiming the same through Townes, as his source of title, by virtue of the deeds made to him (Hall) by Taylor and Pollie T. Carlton. The opinion is reported under the style of Hall v. Reese’s Heirs, in 58 Southwestern Reporter, 974, and is here referred to for the purpose of verifying our holding that it is based upon the findings stated.

The other appellees claim through Hall on contracts made subsequent to his purchase from Taylor and Mrs. Carlton.

These undisputed facts, standing alone, in our opinion conclusively show that appellants and appellees claim title to the land in controversy through R. J. Townes as a common source, and that under such source appellants have title to four-fifths and appellees one-fifth of the premises.

“Evidence that the defendant claims title under the common grantor is prima facie proof that such grantor had the title at the time he undertook to convey the right which the defendant claims; and this necessarily involves the assumption that he had acquired the title of all previous owners. The true rule as to proof of common source means this, if it means anything. The rule is statutory in this State; and to permit a defendant to defeat its operation by showing the naked fact that previous to the time the grantor undertook to convey, some third party had title, would render it nugatory. * * * Since plaintiff must prove his title in order to recover, it would seem that when he has shown title under the common source, that proof by defendant, however made, that the common grantor had no title ought to be a defense.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.W. 219, 29 Tex. Civ. App. 230, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-hall-texapp-1902.