Gresham v. Chambers

16 S.W. 326, 80 Tex. 544, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1034
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1891
DocketNo. 6586.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 16 S.W. 326 (Gresham v. Chambers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gresham v. Chambers, 16 S.W. 326, 80 Tex. 544, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1034 (Tex. 1891).

Opinion

HOBBY, Presiding Judge.

The appellee, Mrs. Margaret Chambers, on the 18th day of August, 1886, instituted this action of trespass to try title to the land in controversy, against several defendants, in- *546 eluding appellants Walter Gresham and J. A. Robertson. They disclaimed as to any portion of the land to which their codefendants L. L. and C. F. Shields set up title, setting the same out by metes and bounds, and as to the balance, the four hundred and thirty acres involved, they pleaded not guilty and set up a cross-action against their warrantor J. M. Hayes. He answered October 3, 1887, admitting the sale of the four hundred and thirty acres to appellants, and also pleaded not guilty as to plaintiff.

Appellee in her supplemental petition to the answer of all the defendants, containing a general demurrer and general denial, pleads that the deed of Josiah Wilbarger and wife Margaret Wilbarger to Bartlett Sims, bearing date October 29, 1839, with Josiah Clifton and Thomas Glasscock as subscribing witnesses, acknowledged before Cicero Hash, clerk County Court of Bastrop County, by H. S. Morgan, deputy, and conveying all their rights, title, claims, and interest in and to a certain league of land in Bastrop County granted to Martha Barker by Talbot Chambers, commissioner of Milam’s Colony, under which she alleges defendants claim title, is a forgery.

On March 21, 1887, E. Wilkes filed an affidavit stating that -<ihe believes the deed executed, or purporting to be executed, by Josiah Wilbarger and wife Margaret Wilbarger to Bartlett Sims to be a forgery.”

The cause was tried at the October term of the District Court of Coleman County, Texas, on October 5, 1887, by a jury, and a verdict was rendered for C. F. and L. L. Shields for the land described in their answers, and in favor of plaintiff for the land described in the petition as against Walter Gresham and J. A. Robertson, and in favor of defendants Walter Gresham and J. A. Robertson against J. M. Hayes, warrantor, for the sum of $860, with interest, etc.

Judgment was entered by the court in accordance therewith. This judgment is now before us on appeal, prosecuted by the defendants Gresham and Robertson.'

It-appears from the record in the case that the plaintiff in the lower court, Mrs. Margaret Chambers, is the heir at law of Mrs. Martha Barker, to whom as a colonist in Milam’s Colony title was extended to a league of land by Talbot Chambers, the commissioner thereof. The land was located in one survey in Bastrop County, which conflicted with an adjoining tract known as the Jose Antonio Havarro grant.

Appellants offered in evidence the original deed to this Barker league from Josiah Wilbarger and wife Margaret, the appellee, now Margaret Chambers, to Bartlett Sims, dated in October, 1839. It was excluded, as is shown by a bill of exceptions, which ruling is assigned as error, and will be subsequently noticed. Although so excluded it is disclosed by the evidence that a copy of this instrument was on file in the Land Office.

*547 On February 8, 1850, an act was passed by the Legislature authorizing said Sims to raise the said survey, which it recited was made for him, as far as it conflicted with the Navarro grant. The Commissioner of the Land Office was also directed to issue to Sims a certificate to the extent of the conflict, which he was authorized to locate on the vacant public domain. Special Laws 1849-50, chap. 125, p. 85.

In 1851 Bartlett Sims executed to J. R. McCall a bond for title, obligating himself to convey the certificate, when issued, and to cure the defect in the act referred to.

An act of the Legislature of August 13, 1856, was passed authorizing the heirs of Martha Barker to raise the survey in Bastrop County to the extent it conflicted with the Navarro, and directing the issue of the land certificate by the Commissioner to the said heirs, and authorizing its location, as before stated. Special Laws 1856, chap. 126.

The certificate, No. 5032, was issued on September 3, 1856, under this latter act, for nine million four hundred and seventy-nine thousand one hundred and seventy-eight square varas, and was located in Coleman County on the land in controversy, four hundred and thirty acres of it only being involved in this appeal. On January 27, 1857, Sims conveyed the certificate to J. R. McCall, the conveyance being recorded in Travis, Coleman, and Brown Counties, in 1858, 1862, and 1885, respectively.

McCall, on February 23, 1857, conveyed the certificate to Charles Proctor, which conveyance was acknowledged and recorded in the counties last named. On December 11, 1857, said Proctor conveyed it to J. M. Hayes. This conveyance was also acknowledged and recorded. At the time the conveyance to Hayes was executed. Proctor delivered with it the deed from Wilbarger and wife, the appellee, to Sims and the deed from Sims to McCall.

Hayes located the certificate on the land in controversy, paid the government dues, obtained the patent dated October 11, 1860, and has paid all taxes due on the land' until he conveyed it to appellants in July, 1885.

Such is a synopsis of the material facts established by the evidence.

As before stated, the deed from Wilbarger and appellee his wife, as shown by bill of exceptions, was excluded. It was witnessed by Josiah Clifton and Thomas Glasscock and is proved up for record by the former before Cicero Nash, clerk of the County Court of Bastrop County, on February 26, 1857, and is acknowledged also by appellee before H. S. Morgan, deputy of said Nash, on same day. It recites that the parties reside in Bastrop County, and after reciting the consideration paid by Sims conveys to him and his heirs, etc., “all their right, title, claim, and demand in and to said league granted to Martha Barker by Talbot Chambers, commissioner of Milam’s Colony. ’ ’ The obj ection *548 to the admission of the deed in evidence was that it is void for want of description of the land conveyed.

The subscribing witness Josiah Clifton testified that he was 15 years old when he signed the deed as a witness with Thomas Glasscock; that he remembered the circumstances connected with the execution of the. same. The appellee, then Mrs. Wilbarger, was his aunt. She acknowledged to him that she signed the deed. He also testified to the valuable consideration paid by Bartlett Sims for the league.

H. S. Morgan testified that he was the deputy county clerk in 1857 who took the acknowledgment of appellee to the above mentioned deed, but he did not recall any of the circumstances attending it. He knew it from his belief that the acknowledgment was in the handwriting of Hash, the clerk, and the signature was his own. The deed was identified by both of these witnesses.

In connection with this deed other testimony was offered by the appellant for the purpose of aiding the description of the land and as tending to show a sale of the certificate to Sims by appellee. The appellants offered to prove by the witness J. E. McCord that the Martha Barker league in Bastrop County is located near the town of Bastrop, in said county, and within the limits of Milam’s Colony. That the parties to the deed lived in that county at the time of the execution of the instrument.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.W. 326, 80 Tex. 544, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1034, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gresham-v-chambers-tex-1891.