Henderson v. Louisiana & Texas Lumber Co.

128 S.W. 671, 61 Tex. Civ. App. 136, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 705
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 13, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 128 S.W. 671 (Henderson v. Louisiana & Texas Lumber Co.) 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
Henderson v. Louisiana & Texas Lumber Co., 128 S.W. 671, 61 Tex. Civ. App. 136, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 705 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

PLEAS AMTS, Chief Justice.

— This is an action of trespass to try title brought by appellee against the appellants, Ike Henderson and wife Fannie Henderson, to recover the title and possession of a .tract of 400 acres of land in Houston County, known as I. & G. M. R. E. Survey Mo. 39.

The defendants disclaimed as to all of the land except 160 acres described in their answer, as to which they pleaded not guilty and title by limitation of ten years.

The trial in the court below was without a jury and resulted in a judgment in favor of plaintiff for all of the survey involved in the suit.

Plaintiff has a perfect record title to the land in controversy, from and under the sovereignty of the soil, and is entitled to recover unless defendants have shown title to 160 acres of the survey under the ten years statute of limitation. The evidence upon this issue is as follows:

Defendants built a house and established their home upon the land, eighteen or twenty years before this suit was filed on February 6, 1909, and have lived thereon continuously to the present time. Both defendants testified that they had claimed 160 acres of the land continuously since they settled thereon. Several witnesses corroborated defendants as to the length of time they had lived on the land.

A. McTavish, a witness for the plaintiff, testified that in 1899 and 1900, he resided in Houston County and was in the employment of the plaintiff, his duties being those of purchasing agent in - the land department of the company, and that he became acquainted with the defendant, Ike Henderson, on June 27, 1900. The circumstances under which he became acquainted with Henderson, and the trans *138 action had with him as detailed by this -witness are, in substance, that in his negotiations as agent of the plaintiff for the purchase from the Yew York & Texas Land Company of a number of surveys of land, among them being the survey in controversy, he discovered that there were many squatters on said lands, and, under an agreement with the Yew York & Texas Land Company, he visited each of these squatters to ascertain what claim he was asserting to the land on which he lived, and to see if a satisfactory arrangement could be made in regard to the matter.

On June 27, 1900, he went to the house of defendants for the purpose above stated. Ike Henderson was not at home, but witness was directed to a field about a mile and a half distant on another survey of land, and proceeding there he found the defendant plowing cotton. The conversation and transaction then had between the witness and the defendant is thus stated by the witness:

“I asked him where he was living and upon what land he was living, and he replied that he was living on railroad land. I asked him if he owned the land he was living on, and he said no, that he asserted no claim to it whatever, that he was simply living there and expected to buy it some day. I then told him my business, 'that I was there to see him for the Yew York & Texas Land Company, to ascertain whether or not he laid any claim to the land, and he said that he did not want any suit or any trouble about the land whatever. I then asked him if he still desired to purchase it, and he said that he did, and I prepared an application to the Yew York & Texas Land Company, and read it over to him, or rather made his mark, and I witnessed same.”

This witness further testified: “I know that Ike Henderson had a little cabin on this survey, and had possibly four or five acres under fence, to which he said he laid no claim, and after the company purchased the land and after he had made application to buy it, he continued to live on the land, and recognized it as belonging to the plaintiff, and worked for the company, and helped to move the timber from the land adjacent to the cabin in which he was living, and worked on a farm in the same survey for the company the greater portion of his time for about three years, and during this entire period of time he asserted no claim to the land. In 1905 or 1906, the defendant, Ike Henderson, worked the company’s farm which, I stated above, was on this same survey, but it may be that it lies adjoining this survey; at any rate it is about one-fourth mile from the house the defendant, Ike Henderson, lived in, and worked said farm on the halves, and he told me. that he expected to make about two bales of cotton, and make payment on the place he lived on. He frequently mentioned making a payment on the place as soon as he got able, and always recognized and said that the property on which he lived belonged to the plaintiff.”

In connection with this testimony plaintiff offered in evidence the following instrument which was identified by MaeTavish as the application made by the defendant for the purchase of the land:

*139 “Colthorp, Texas, June 37, 1900.
"The N. Y. & T. Ld. Co., Ltd.,
Austin, Texas.
"Dear Sirs: — I'hereby apply to you to purchase from you a part of survey Ho. 39, I. & G. H. B. B. Co,, the same being that part upon which my present enclosure is situated and upon which I am now your tenant.
His
Ike X Henderson”
Mark

“Witness: A. MacTavish.”

W. H. McGregor, who succeeded MacTavish in the employment of plaintiff, testified:

. "I went to see Ike Henderson and talked with him four or five times about the land he was occupying. I think the first time I talked with him was October 3, 1908. I went to see him about the rent, and in the conversation I asked him if he had signed the application to buy the land that MacTavish had turned over to me, and he said he did sign it. He asked me what rent I wanted and I told him five dollars a year. He agreed to pay it in two weeks. He put it off from time to time until the fourth or fifth time I went to see him, and then he refused to pay it. The first time I went to see him he did not say that he claimed it. He asked me if he could fence up another tract and I told him he could fence it and use it three years for his trouble. That was a small piece of four or five acres that had been cultivated before that, but it was lying out then. That conversation occurred in a little field away from the house, where he took me to get away from the house. I never heard anything about his claim until the fourth or fifth time I went to see him. I would judge that was in the latter part of Hovember or in December. I did not understand then that he was claiming anything. He said he had not signed that application to buy the land from MacTavish, -and that he was not going to pay any rent. The first time I saw him he admitted that he had signed that application, and agreed to pay five dollars a year rent. When I succeeded Mr. MacTavish he turned over to me all books and-papers in his office — part of them, at any rate. The first knowledge I had of that application was when Mr. MacTavish told me he had it. He told me that in his office in Kennard.”

Ike Henderson expressly denied making the statements testified to by MacTavish and denied making the application for the purchase of the land.

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Bluebook (online)
128 S.W. 671, 61 Tex. Civ. App. 136, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-louisiana-texas-lumber-co-texapp-1910.