Harris v. Brower

22 S.W. 758, 3 Tex. Civ. App. 649, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 344
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 7, 1893
DocketNo. 257.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 22 S.W. 758 (Harris v. Brower) 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
Harris v. Brower, 22 S.W. 758, 3 Tex. Civ. App. 649, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 344 (Tex. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

COLLARD, Associate Justice.

The statement of the nature and result of the suit, made by appellants and accepted by appellees, is as follows:

“Appellees, Mary K. Brower and Marion H. Lawder, joined by her husband John F. Lawder, as plaintiffs in the court below, brought this suit in the ordinary form of trespass to try title, against the appellants, Annie P. Harris, Rebecca L. Harris, J. W. Harris, Lillie B. Fisher, Walter P. Fisher, and Charles Welch, as defendants in the" court below, for the recovery of the Christopher C. Goodman survey of land in Coryell County, Texas, patented to the heirs of R. Lawder, assignee of said Christopher Goodman; said suit having been brought on July 3,1888, in the District Court of Coryell County, Texas, and which cause was subsequently, on a change of venue, removed into the District Court of Mc-Lennan County, Texas.

“ The said defendants therein plead, first, general demurrer; second, plea of not guilty.

“ There was a trial had before the court, without the intervention of a jury, and judgment rendered for the plaintiffs, appellees, for the recovery of the lands sued for. Defendants appealed, and assign errors.”

The facts are as follows:

Rynd Lawder and Mary K. Irwin intermarried in 1837. Rynd Lawder died in May, 1841, leaving his wife, plaintiff Mary K. Brower, and his only child, plaintiff Marion H. Lawder, surviving him. The widow administered upon the estate of deceeased in Matagorda County, Texas. He “ held and claimed ” the C. C. Goodman certificate for one-third of a league of land, which was located in Coryell County upon the land in suit, and patented to the heirs of Rynd Lawder, assignee of Christopher C. Goodman. The evidence does not show when the certificate was located, by whom it was located, or when the patent issued, but at the trial the patent was in the possession of the attorneys for defendants.

Defendants claim title by virtue of the following proceedings in the Probate Court of Matagorda County, in the succession of Rynd Lawder, deceased:

Petition of Mary K. Lawder, administratrix of the estate, to the March. Term of the court, 1846, to sell the Jacob Schenck 640 acres of land, the C. C. Goodman 640 acres bounty claim, “ C. C. Goodman’s certificate for one-third of a league of land, located and surveyed on Reed’s Creek in *652 this [Matagorda] County,” Rynd Lawder’s 320 acres bounty certificate, his certificate for three months pay in the army. The petition asked the sale to pay debts of the estate, upon a credit of twelve months.

On the 31st of March the court ordered the sale as prayed for in the petition, “on a credit of twelve months, with good and approved security.”

We find in the record a notice of the scale, dated 5tli of April, 1846, signed by the administratrix, stating that the sale will be made of the property as ordered on the first Tuesday in May following, “ on a credit of twelve months, with good and approved security.”

On the 6th of May, 1846, the administratrix made report of sale, under oath, of all the property ordered sold, “ on a credit of twelve months, with good and approved security”—not stating what the security was, or in what form—showing that the two Goodman certificates were sold to William L. Delap, the 640 for 840, and the third of a league for $90. ¡No confirmation of the sale by the court was shown, and no other orders of the court in the succession, except as stated. The land in suit was located and patented by virtue of the C. C. Goodman one-third league certificate.

It was admitted on the trial, that defendants had all the title in the land in controversy that vested in Delap by the foregoing proceedings in the Probate Court.

Defendants also introduced a deed by Delap’s administrator, Thomas Forester, dated June 29, 1849, conveying the Goodman one-tliird of a league certificate, made by order of the Probate Court of Matagorda County, which deed recited, that it was made in lieu of a deed made by Delap to Forester in his (Delap’s) lifetime, which former deed contained an error of description of the certificate. The deed was recorded in Matagorda County the 11th day of March, 1850, and in Coryell County on August 4, 1881.

Also, a deed by Forester to Samuel W. Fisher, of date March 7, 1850, in consideration of 8150, to the same certificate, which was recorded in Matagorda County on March 9, 1850, and in Coryell County on August 4, 1881.

Also, a deed of Fisher to defendant John W. Harris, in consideration of $200, conveying to Harris the same certificate, dated October 19, 1854, recorded in Coryell County on August 4, 1881. The administratrix made no deed of conveyance to Delap of the certificate sold to him.

Mrs. Mary K. Brower, formerly Mrs. Lawder, testified on the trial, that she made sale of the certificate located on the land in suit to Delap; that is, she put it up for sale and it was bid in by him, but that she did not convey it to him, because he did not comply with the terms of the sale; that ‘ ‘ he never paid anything for it. ’ ’

She was asked on cross-examination if it was not a fact, that when she *653 sold the certificate she took personal security for the amount of the purchase price of the same, and if she did not so report to the court. She answered, “It is not a fact, and I did not so report, but did report that the certificate was sold to Delap on a credit of twelve months, with good and approved security, but I did not report that he had paid for it, as he did not.”

She was also asked, if she remembered who it was who became personal security for the note given for the purchase price of the certificate; and she answered, “ I know nothing of such note or of any person becoming security for one.”

She was also asked, what she had done with the note received for the purchase price of the sale of the certificate, and if she was certain she had not collected it. She answered, “I never had sucha note, and know nothing about it.”

We conclude that the court below, upon her testimony, found as a fact, that no note with security was given for the purchase price of the certificate, and that Delap paid nothing therefor; and we conclude that the evidence warrants the finding.

Opinion.—Assignments of error by appellants assail the judgment of the court below upon several grounds, but they may be summed up in the propositions, that the court erred in not holding that the proceedings in the Probate Court of Matagorda County established title in Delap to the Goodman one-third of a league certificate, and consequently to the land located by virtue thereof, and that the lapse of time, in connection with the acts of ownership by Delap and his vendees, shows a conclusive presumption of law of ownership on the part of the appellants, and that an order of confirmation of the sale had been made.

It is true, that at the time the sale was made by the administratrix to Delap, the statute did not require a confirmation of the sale to perfect the sale, and that such confirmation was not specifically prescribed until the Act of May 11, 1846, which took effect July 13, 1846. Hart. Dig., arts. 1016, 1017, 1018, 1058, 1059, 1099.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Stark v. Osborn
221 F. 557 (Fifth Circuit, 1915)
Turner v. Pope
137 S.W. 420 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 S.W. 758, 3 Tex. Civ. App. 649, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-brower-texapp-1893.