Hitchler v. Scanlan

19 S.W. 259, 83 Tex. 569, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 783
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1892
DocketNo. 2827.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 19 S.W. 259 (Hitchler v. Scanlan) 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
Hitchler v. Scanlan, 19 S.W. 259, 83 Tex. 569, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 783 (Tex. 1892).

Opinion

COLLARD, Judge,

Section A.—This suit—trespass to try title—was brought September 5,1888, by A. H. Hitchler and his wife Mary Hitchler, the appellants, against T. H. Scanlan, R. K. Cage, and Harriet Sellers, for a tract of land, part of the upper half of the Luke Moore league, in Harris County, known as lot Ho. 11, containing 148 acres, a subdivision of the league less 15 acres, sold by S. M. Frost to Parker and Donovan out of the northeast corner of lot Ho. 11.

It seems that lot Ho. 11 was or had been subdivided into lots of two and two and one-half acres at sometime, and of these Mrs. Sellers claimed in her answer lots 19 to 39 inclusive, describing the land by metes and bounds as 54i- acres, and disclaimed all the rest of the survey.

Hovember 7, 1889, M. D. Milsop, joined by her husband and G. T. Yeager, intervened, claiming title to lots 11 to 39 inclusive, describing by numbers of lots only.

Hovember 8, 1889, T. H. Scanlan amended his original answer, filed general denial as to plaintiffs and intervenors, pleaded limitation of five and ten years, and set up claim to 58 acres of lot Ho. 11, describing the same by metes and bounds; and claiming by deed through one R. C. Ingraham, who originally purchased a part of the land from S. M. Frost, and afterward 25 acres from E. A. Palmer, 15 acres from H. H. Cone, and 18 acres from Harriet George.

Scanlan alleges, that the 58 acres bought by him and one Trube from R. C. Ingraham in 1862 included the identical tracts sold by Palmer, Cone, and George to Ingraham. Defendant Cage adopts the answers of Scanlan so far as applicable, pleads limitation, and claims title to 21 acres out of lot 11, sold to him by Ingraham.

The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for defendants, from which plaintiffs and intervenors have appealed.

In order that the questions raised on appeal may be understood, it is necessary to set out the facts as to title.

*571 It was admitted by all the parties-that S. M. Frost owned the 148 acres, or lot 11, as it is called, out of the upper half of the Moore league. The survey is correctly described in the petition, bounded on the north by the league north line, on the east by lot 12 subdivision of the league, on the south by lot 14, and on the west by lot 10.

Plaintiffs deraign title as follows: Frost died testate in 1866; his will was probated in Fort Bend County, Texas, in 1866. His wife Virginia M. and several children, including plaintiff Mrs. Hitchler, were his only heirs and devisees. Under orders of the Probate Court the interest of the estate in lot Ho. 11, estimated at 68 acres (Frost having sold off portions of it), was sold for purposes of partition, and bought in by W. P. Hamblen, July 25, 1875, who conveyed it to Virginia M. Frost, widow of deceased, December 1,1875. H. Mayblem purchased the same at sale under execution against Mrs. Frost, February 1,1876. He died, leaving his wife Sophia his only heir, who conveyed the same land to Mrs. Hitchler, the plaintiff, August 14,1888. Mrs. Virginia M. Frost also conveyed the same to Mrs. Hitchler, Hovember 11, 1889. These conveyances put the title to the survey in Mrs. Hitchler, except such parts as Frost had sold in his lifetime. Plaintiffs read in evidence a deed by Frost to Levi Parker and A. S. Donovan to 15 acres out of the northeast corner of lot Ho. 11, described by metes and bounds.

Defendants Scanlan and Cage read in evidence other conveyances from Frost to B. S. Bedmon, recorded May 29, 1839, to lots 11 to 19, said to contain 18 acres, according to plat of subdivision of lot Ho. 11 made by F. W. Herman,'adjoining land sold by Frost to Boyd & Compton. Bedmon sold tliése lots to J. H. Kerr by deed recorded February 15, 1841, and Kerr sold the same to B. C. Ingraham by deed recorded February 23, 1841. Harriet George also conveyed the same lots to Ingraham, she having derived her title by sale under execution against Bedmon.

Frost also sold lots 3 to 10 inclusive, or 16 acres out of lot 11, according to Herman’s plat, to Jesse Bandell, April 18, 1839; these lots are traced into one Kenedy as the present owner. Frost also conveyed to B. C. Ingraham by deed recorded March 1, 1841, lots 20 to 39 inclusive, each said to contain two acres more or less, out of lot Ho. 11. These are all the sales shown to have been made by Frost, to-wit: 15 acres to Parker and Donovan (it seems this survey is not in controversy); lots 11 to 19, or 18 acres, to Bedmon; lots 3 to 10 inclusive, or 16 acres, to Jesse Bandell; and lots 20 to 39 inclusive, two acres each, to Ingraham; in all about 89 acres. The locality of these lots is not shown by the testimony, nor can they be identified. If there ever was a map or plat of them showing how they were numbered from north to south or otherwise, it can not be found.

Parker sold the east half of the 15 acres conveyed by Frost to. him and Donovan to Ingraham, and Ingraham also acquired title to the *572 lots sold to Redmon, by deed of Redmon to J. H. Kerr, recorded February 15, 1841, and by deed from Kerr to himself, recorded February 23, 1841; and also from Redmon by sale under execution against the latter to B. Canfield, in the administration of whose estate the same were set aside to Harriet George, who conveyed to Ingraham.

It is claimed by Scanlan and Cage thatR. S. Ingraham had acquired title to the land claimed by them by limitation and conveyances.

June 9, 1862, Ingraham conveyed to Scanlan and one Trube 58 acres out of lot 11 by metes and bounds, misdescribing the land intended to be conveyed; but after Trube conveyed his half of it to Scanlan, August 8,1863, Scanlan by suit against the estates of Ingraham and Trube had the field notes corrected and the land described as in his amended answer. So it may be said he has Ingraham’s deed to the 58 acres claimed by him. Cage claims by deed from Ingraham recorded July 11, 1859, 21 acres of lot 11, described as in his answer, save some unimportant inaccuracies.

The evidence of Scanlan and Cage shows, that on the 23d of March, 1844, Ingraham mortgaged lots 19 to 66 inclusive, said to contain 2£ acres each, ‘ ‘ including Ingraham’s improvements where he then lived, ’ ’ out of lot Ho. 11, to one A. B. Worsham to secure the payment of certain notes. The mortgage was duly foreclosed December 8, 1848, order of sale issued April 3, 1849, and the lots 19 to 66 were sold thereunder to Worsham, the lots containing 21 acres each, “including the improvements where Ingraham now lives.” Worsham conveyed to H. H. Cone by deed recorded July 31, 1849, lots 19 to 56 inclusive, each containing 21 acres, and Cone conveyed to Ingraham by deed recorded July 9, 1853, lots 51 to 56. Worsham conveyed to B. A. Palmer lots 56 to 66 inclusive, 21- acres each, by deed recorded July 16, 1849, and these lots Palmer conveyed to Ingraham July 12,1853. The Palmer deed to Ingraham in fact conveys lots 51 to 66 inclusive. The lots conveyed by Frost to Redmon and acquired by Ingraham had not been mortgaged, to-wit, lots 11 to 18 inclusive.

Mrs. Sellers deraigned her title to lots 19 to 39 inclusive from Cone in regular course, leaving other of the lots still in Cone.

The title of Milsop and Yeager, intervenors, is derived as follows: Deed from Ingraham to A. P.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W. 259, 83 Tex. 569, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hitchler-v-scanlan-tex-1892.