Halbert v. Debode

40 S.W. 1011, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 615, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 124
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 3, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 40 S.W. 1011 (Halbert v. Debode) 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
Halbert v. Debode, 40 S.W. 1011, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 615, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 124 (Tex. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

We adopt appellants’ statement of the nature and result of the suit, which is as follows:

“This suit was a consolidation for trial of four originally distinct actions of trespass to try title to four several tracts of land, embracing altogether 1426 acres, in the District Court of Hill County, in which appellants (Mollie P. Halbert, S. A. Lane, and T. F. Threadgill, all married women, joined by their husbands) were plaintiffs and appellees, (whose names it is not necessary to mention) the defendants.
“The petitions of plaintiffs were, in the usual statutory form, while the answers of defendants consisted of pleas of not gully, of three and five years’ limitations, of improvements in good faith, and cross bills. The plaintiffs by supplemental petitions set up coverture, in avoidance of defendants’ pleas of limitations.
“The suit as consolidated was tried before a jury, resulting on Octo-Jber 24, 1895, in a verdict and judgment for all the defendants who filed answers, and from t^his judgment plaintiffs have duly perfected and prosecuted this appeal.”

Two of the cases included in this consolidation were before on appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals of the Fifth Supreme Judicial District. Halbert v. Carroll, 25 S. W. Rep., 1102, and Halbert v. De Bode, 28. S. W. Rep., 58.

Conclusions of Fact.—The tracts of land involved in this suit were located and patented under the Robert S. Patton league certificate. The certificate was acquired by John E. Cravens and John G. Gooch by purchase under a regular chain of transfers from Patton, on July 13, 1857, and the patents were issued of various dates from April, 1873, to June,, 1877,—the surveys having been made in 1869,—to John E. Cravens, and John G. Gooch as assignees. The undivided interest in the certificate by virtue of which the lands were located, conveyed to John E. Cravens, was the community property of him and his wife, Mary B.

John E. Cravens died intestate in 1860, leaving his wife and his children, Mollie P. Cravens and Earle E. Cravens, the only heirs to his estate. Mary B. Cravens died in 1862, devising her entire estate to Mollie P. and Earle E. Cravens. Mollie P. married B. F. Fortson on the 3rd of July, 1873, and remained his wife until the 24th of January, 1883, when he died, and on the 14th of December, 1884, she married H. A. Halbert, who is joined with her as a plaintiff in this suit. Earle E. Cravens died intestate, during her minority in 1880, and left her sister Mollie P. her only heir.

John G. Gooch died in 1866, and left a will, which was duly probated, appointing Gideon J. Gooch his independent executor. On April 1, 1874, Gideon J., as such executor, conveyed to Jesse Calhoun hia *619 testator’s interest in the land located by virtue of the Patton certificate, and in July, 1877, Jesse Calhoun made a deed conveying his interest in said land to the appellants S. A. Lane and T. F. Treadgill.

On the 25th day of February, 1862, George F. Alford was, by the Probate Court of Anderson County, appointed administrator de bonis non of the estate of John E. Cravens, deceased, and on the second day thereafter gave bond and qualified as such administrator, and entered upon and continued to perform his duties as administrator of said estate until in July, 1879, when the estate was partitioned and the administration closed.

The land was located by J. T. Ratcliff at different times between the 27th of October, 1867, and July, 1879. These locations were made by virtue of a written contract, dated October 24, 1867, made between Ratcliff and George F. Alford, administrator of the estate of John E. Cravens, deceased. This contract recited that Alford acted for the estate of John G. Gooch, under authority from Gideon J. Gooch, executor. By the terms of the contract, Ratcliff undertook to locate the R. S. Patton certificate on the best vacant lands he could find in Hill and McLennan Counties, and to pay all expenses of locating and obtaining patents, and was to receive for his services one-third of the land. This contract was by the administrator reported to and approved by the County Court of Anderson County on December 1, 1876, and on thd 6th day of August, 1878, the administrator, in pursuance of an order of said court, made when the contract was approved, executed a deed to Ratcliff conveying him the lands in controversy.

After this deed was made, the subsequent proceedings in the administration of the estate show that said lands were no longer regarded as assets of Cravens’ estate, but they were regarded and recognized as the property of Ratcliff. After this deed was made and reported to the court by the administrator, and his action approved, the appellant Mollie P. Halbert contested the report of the administrator for a final settlement of the estate, and, on a compromise made between them and the administrator, it was agreed that all contests were withdrawn, and that all objections to annul reports of sales and contests relating thereto should be dismissed at the cost of the estate, and that the administrator should be discharged. This agreement was carried out.

The estate of John E. Cravens was finally settled and partitioned among the heirs by said court at its July term, 1879, said Mollie P. being a party, and Earl E. Cravens, the only other heir, being also a party, and represented by her special guardian, Gideon J. Gooch. In this partition the orders of the court and the deed executed by the administrator to J. T. Ratcliff are referred to and acquiesced in by the parries.

In the report of the commissions, which is embodied in the court’s decree, describing the land set apart to Mollie P. (then Mollie P. Fort-son), is the following description: “1078 acres in Hill County, part of 3,170 patented to Cravens and Gooch, assignees of Robert S. Patton, *620 * * * 1015 acres out of said 3170 acres [the number of acres located by virtue of the Patton certificate] having been set apart to J. T. Ratcliff for his locative interest on November 30, 1876 (see Book J, page 281, Minutes County Court, Anderson County), leaving a balance of 2155 acres undivided between said Mollie P. Fortson and the estate of John G. Gooch,—$2695.” “182 acres in Hill County, part of 364 acres located by said J. T. Ratcliff for Cravens & Gooch under R. S. Patton certificate, and when patented is to be equally divided between said Mollie P. Fortson and the estate of John G. Gooch—$455.” The decree sets aside to Earl E. Cravens “216 acres located by J. T. Ratcliff for Cravens and Gooch, under the R. S. Patton certificate, and when patented is to be equally divided between the estate of John G. Gooch, deceased—$450.”

On August 8, 1877, the appellants S. A. Lane and T. F. Threadgill, joined by their husbands, conveyed to Thomas B. Greenwood and John Young Gooch one-half of their interest in the R. S. Patton land in Hill County, Texas.

On April 7, 1880, the appellants Lane and Threadgill, joined by their husbands, as plaintiffs, filed their suit in the District Court of Anderson County to partition the R. S. Patton lands in Hill County, making Thomas B. Greenwood and John Young Gooch and. Mollie P. Fortson (now Mollie P. Halbert) defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
40 S.W. 1011, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 615, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halbert-v-debode-texapp-1897.