Hanrick v. Gurley

54 S.W. 347, 93 Tex. 458, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 254
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1900
DocketNo. 804.
StatusPublished
Cited by156 cases

This text of 54 S.W. 347 (Hanrick v. Gurley) 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
Hanrick v. Gurley, 54 S.W. 347, 93 Tex. 458, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 254 (Tex. 1900).

Opinions

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

Edward Hanrick, a citizen of Alabama, under whom all the parties to this action claim, died in the year 1865, intestate and without wife or children, leaving the following as his nearest kindred: (1) E. G. Hanrick, the son of a deceased brother; (2) Elizabeth O’Brien, a sister; (3) James Hanrick, and (4) John Hanrick, brothers. All of these were aliens, subjects of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, except E. G. Hanrick, who ivas a citizen of Alabama. John Hanrick died in 1870, without issue and unmarried. James Hanrick died in 1875, leaving the following children: Nicholas, Ellen, and Annie Hanrick, Catherine O’Neil and Elizabeth Clare, and the following grandchildren, issue of a deceased daughter: Eobert, Mary, Bridget, and Elizabeth Whelan. At his death, Edward Hanrick owned the following lands in Texas: Five leagues in Falls County, originally granted to Pedro Zarza; eleven leagues in Falls County, originally granted to Antonacio de la Ser da; one league in Falls County, and ten leagues in Williamson County, originally granted to - Aguirre. He also had claims, the nature of which the record does not fully show, to other lands in Liberty, Milam, and Bell counties. This action was begun on the 17th day of December, 1878, by Elizabeth O’Brien and the persons above named as children and grandchildren of J ames Hanrick against E. G. Hanrick and Phillip O’Brien and his wife, Eliza M. O’Brien, in trespass to try title to recover an undivided two-thirds interest in the Serda and Zarza grants, the petition- being in the ordinary form, except that it specially alleged plaintiffs’ title by inheritance from Edward Hanrick and their alienage, as before stated, in connection with which an act of the British Parliament not necessary to be stated was set up; and admitted that E. G. Hanrick was entitled to an undivided one-third interest in the land sued for, and charged that Eliza M. O’Brien and Phillip O’Brien wrongfully claimed an interest in the land to which they were not entitled.

In 1879 there was a dismissal as to the defendants Phillip and Eliza M. O’Brien, and later, Elizabeth O’Brien, one of plaintiffs, having conveyed her interest before the suit was brought, discontinued her action. By various subsequent amended petitions and interventions, Phillip and Eliza M. O’Brien were brought back into the case as defendants, .and E. J. Gurley, W. H. Powers, W. E. Kendall, Charles Babbige, and his wife, Carrie Babbige, William Brady, and others who need not be named, became defendants or interveners. Brady, Eliza M. O’Brien, and Ellen Hanrick died pending suit and their respective legal representatives were made parties. By the amended pleadings, the cause was made to assume *464 the character of a suit not only to recover the interest claimed by the plaintiffs, but for an adjudication of the rights of all parties and for a partition.

By the amended pleadings of plaintiffs, many parcels of the two grants in question were sought to be excluded from the controversy by the allegations that they were held by persons claiming them adversely to the estate of Edward Hanrick, deceased, and that E. G. Hanrick, claiming to be the sole heir and the administrator of the deceased, had compromised with such claimants by releasing to them the entire title of the estate to the parcels so held, and that plaintiffs acquiesced in and ratified such conveyances, with the prayer that such lands, specifically described, should be set aside to E. G. Hanrick, valued at zero, and that the remainder of the two grants, also specifically described in exhibit F to the petition, be partitioned. All other parties claiming adversely to E. G. Hanrick adopted such allegations and prayer, and the controversy now is over the land described in exhibit F.

The claims of the parties, as they were alleged in the pleadings and shown by the evidence, were as follows:

The plaintiffs claimed the one-third inherited bjr James Hanrick from Edward Hanrick. Three of such plaintiffs, Nicholas, Annie, and Ellen Hanrick, however, alleged that they had executed deeds dated respectively August 21, 1877, and April 3, 1878, purporting to convey to Eliza M. O’Brien, the wife of Phillip O’Brien, all their interest in the lands of the estate of Edward Hanrick, but that such deeds were made without consideration, and in trust for the purpose of enabling suit for the recovery of such lands to be brought in the name of a native American citizen, under the misapprehension that such suit could not be maintained in the grantors’ names, they being aliens, and that the grantees in such deeds had conveyed interests in the lands to some of defendants, and prayed for a cancellation of all such deeds. The evidence at the trial established these allegations. None of the parties now before this court contest this claim except Powers and the Babbiges, and except that E. G. Hanrick urges certain defenses of limitation and res judicata -predicated upon the conveyances of the legal title of these parties to Eliza M. O’Brien.

The interest which had been inherited by Elizabeth O’Brien was conveyed by her to Eliza M. O’Brien on May 11, 1878, and one-half of such interest was conveyed by Eliza M. and Phillip O’Brien to William Brady on November 27, 1878. After the institution of this suit, Phillip and Eliza M. O’Brien made the following deeds to William Brady: May 24, 1879, 1000 acres; January 10, 1880, 2000 acres; December 14, 1880, 1000 acres; October 11, 1881, 1000 acres. All of these deeds were properly recorded and the four last stipulated that the quantities of land conveyed might be selected By Brady out of any lands which should be set apart to Phillip or Eliza M. O’Brien in partition of the estate of Edward Hanrick.

The claim of Brady’s estate is therefore for one-half of the interest originally inherited by Elizabeth O’Brien, and 5000 acres to be taken *465 out of the other half of such interest; and, by his pleadings filed before his death, he elected to take the 5000 acres out of such lands as might be set aside to Eliza M. O’Brien in the Serda grant, so far as it should suffice, and the remainder out of the Zarza. As to this claim, controversies exist between him, Powers, and Babbige. Phillip and Eliza M. O’Brien, on the 15th of November, 1882, executed a deed to W. H. Powers, conveying all their interest in the Serda grant, and Powers, by virtue of this conveyance, claims not only such interest as Phillip and Eliza M. O’Brien held under their deed from Elizabeth' O’Brien, but also the interest which the deeds from Nicholas, Ellen, and Annie Han-rick purported to convey to her, asserting that he purchased for value without notice of the trust upon which the plaintiffs alleged the latter deeds were executed.

On March 8, 1884, Phillip and Eliza M. O’Brien executed to Chas. Babbige a mortgage on her interest in the Zarza grant, reciting such interest to be one-sixth thereof, and, under this mortgage and a sale made in pursuance of an attempted foreclosure thereof, Mrs. Carrie I. Babbige asserts title to one-sixth interest, both by virtue of the conveyance from Elizabeth O’Brien to Eliza M. O’Brien "and also by virtue of the conveyances to the latter from Nicholas, Annie, and Ellen Hanrick, her claim under the latter deeds being that the mortgage was taken without notice of the trust alleged.

On the 9th day of August, 1884, Phillip and Eliza M. O’Brien, by deed reciting and confirming the previous conveyances to Brady, conveyed to W. E.

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Bluebook (online)
54 S.W. 347, 93 Tex. 458, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanrick-v-gurley-tex-1900.