Herndon v. Vick

35 S.W. 141, 89 Tex. 469, 1896 Tex. LEXIS 383
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 1896
DocketNo. 406.
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 35 S.W. 141 (Herndon v. Vick) 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
Herndon v. Vick, 35 S.W. 141, 89 Tex. 469, 1896 Tex. LEXIS 383 (Tex. 1896).

Opinion

GAINES, Chief Justice.

The following statement of this ease and of the questions presented for determination is taken from the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals:

“Appellee, the defendant in error here, brought suit against a number of persons, including Jeremiah Cole, and also against the unknown heirs of such persons, to establish his title to and recover a tract of four hundred acres of land, a part of the lower half of a league granted to William Vince by the Mexican government, July 21, 1824. The defendants were cited by publication, and none of them answered except the appellant; A. C. Herndon, the guardian in Texas of the estate of Frederick *472 Cole, alleged to be non compos mentis, answered, alleging that his ward was the only heir of Jeremiah Cole, deceased, and, as such, held title to the lower half of the Vince league. In reply to the plaintiff’s allegation of title to the land, under the statute of limitation, he alleged that the ward, Frederick Cole, had been insane since the year 1840. He also, by cross petition, sought affirmatively to recover the land. After this answer and plea in reconvention was filed, plaintiff filed an amended petition, from which he omitted, as defendants, Jeremiah Cole and his unknown heirs, and the cause proceeded to trial as between plaintiff and the other defendants on this amended petition, and as between plaintiff and appellant in the latter’s plea in reconvention.

“The plaintiff claimed under a deed from the heir of Vince, executed on, the 8th day of September, 1838, and produced a complete chain of title from the grantee therein, consisting of a number of mesne conveyances. He also established through an adverse possession, cultivation and use of the land, which commenced in 1887, and had been since continued under deeds duly registered, accompanied by payment of all taxes, title by limitation against all persons, unless it was defeated as to Frederick Cole by the fact of his insanity.

“Appellant claimed through an authentic act of sale from Vince to Edward Dickinson, executed "on the 24th day of November, 1830, before the alcalde or judge of Austin’s colony, conveying the lower half of the Vince league, less a labor, the original of which was on file in the clerk’s office in Austin County, and a copy of which, certified by the clerk of that county on the 14th day of April, 1838, was recorded in Harris County; and both the original and record were admitted in evidence, both being in the Spanish language. Appellant then, to show a conveyance from Dickinson to Jeremiah Cole, of whom Frederick Cole is the sole heir, offered a certified copy from the records of Harris County of the following paper in the English language:

“ 'Columbia, Brazoria County, May 1, 1838.—I do hereby transfer all my right, title and interest to Jeremiah Cole, for the consideration of twenty-five hundred dollars to me in hand paid, the receipt of which is hereby acknowleged,- before the undersigned witnesses, as witness my hand and seal day and date as above to the within deed. Edward Dickinson (L. S.). Witness: Andrew Orr, R. M. Craven, Thos. Cole. Signed, sealed and delivered in presence of D. J. Holt as acting justice of the peace for and in the aforesaid county. D. S. Holt, Notary Public ex-officio. Republic of Texas, County of Harrisburg, I, Lewis B. Harris, clerk pro tern of the county aforesaid, do hereby certify that the witness Thomas Cole, who signed this instrument, personally appeared before me and being duly sworn said that he saw Edward Dickinson sign this instrument for the purposes in it mentioned and contained, and that he signed the same as a witness, as also did R. M. Craven in his presence. Houston, May 10, 1838. Lewis N. Harris, clerk pro tern. Recorded May 10, at 9 o’clock A. M., 1838.”

“Plaintiff objected to the admission of the- document on the ground *473 that it contained no description of the land in controversy or of any other land; and the appellant then gave in evidence the record book in which both the act of sale from Vince to Dickinson and the above paper were recorded, and from it these facts appeared;

“ ‘The record of the purported transfer to Jeremiah Cole immediately followed the record of the certified copy of the deed from Vince to Dickinson, with about the intervening space between the two usual in the case of other instruments recorded in said book; at the end of the purported transfer to Jeremiah Cole there was a notation showing the date when the same was recorded, and there was no notation showing the date of the record after the record of the transfer to Dickinson, which notation when made it was usual to make at the foot of the record of the instrument, but there were several other instances in said record book where there was only one file notation of the date of the record and immediately following one instrument, and being the only file mark following after the record of several entirely independent instruments, with the usual intervening space left between such instruments; the transfer to Dickinson was recorded in a different handwriting from the record of the purported transfer to Jeremiah Cole; the transfer to Dickinson appeared to have been made in the handwriting of the person who recorded many other of the Spanish instruments in said book B, but where the date was noted of the record of such other Spanish instruments it was in the handwriting of the person making the record of such instruments; the said book B contained mostly but not exclusively Spanish instruments, there being other instruments in the English language 'recorded in said book besides the above purported transfer to Jeremiah Cole. The said cross-plaintiff also proved that the purported transfer to Jeremiah Cole above mentioned was recorded in the handwriting of Lewis B. Harris, then clerk pro tern, of Harris County, Texas, and that the file notation to such latter instrument, showing the date when the same was recorded, was also in his 'handwriting. Thereupon the said cross-plaintiff re-offered in evidence, in connection with said extrinsic proof, the purported transfer to Jeremiah Cole, above mentioned, contending that such purported transfer passed the legal title from Edward Dickinson to Jeremiah Cole, and that he should be permitted to go to the jury on the question of fact as to whether or not such transfer was attached to the certified copy of the Spanish act of sale from Wm. Vince to Edward Dickinson; whereupon the said plaintiff, Andrew J. Vick, by his attorney, objected to the admission in evidence of such purported transfer upon the ground that the same was incapable of being aided by extrinsic testimony, for the reason that it did not in itself, or by any reference, describe or identify its subject matter as the land in controversy, or any land embracing that in controversy, or describe any land whatsoever; and on the further ground that, if capable of being aided by such testimony, the extrinsic proof made was legally insufficient to identify or describe the subject matter of such pur *474 ported transfer as being or comprising the land in controversy, or any land whatsoever. Which objections the court sustained.'

“The conveyance from Vince to Dickinson recited a consideration of $289. The evidence shows that Edward Dickinson made a deed to Thomas Cole, dated June 10, 1839, recorded in Harris County, August 8, 1840, for the land conveyed by Vince to Dickinson, reciting a consideration of $289. Thos.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.W. 141, 89 Tex. 469, 1896 Tex. LEXIS 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herndon-v-vick-tex-1896.