Hough v. Hill

47 Tex. 148
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 47 Tex. 148 (Hough v. Hill) 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
Hough v. Hill, 47 Tex. 148 (Tex. 1877).

Opinion

Gould, Associate Justice.

Appellants brought this action of trespass to try title against a number of defendants, the land in controversy being 2,866 acres of the Samuel Frost headright league. In an amended petition, the plaintiffs also pray for partition, if defendants or any of them be found to have title to a part of the land. Two of the defendants, in addition to their answer, filed a plea of intervention, asking judgment for the same land against some of their co-defendants; and one of the errors assigned is, allowing this plea and allowing intervenors to take judgment by default against then co-defendants. These co-defendants have not appealed, and it is not perceived that the appellants were injured or affected by-the intervention or the default, or have any right to complain thereof. The result of the trial was a judgment for defendants, Hammond and Hammon, and from that judgment the plaintiffs, Hough and Connolly, prosecute this appeal. The record shows, that various deeds and instruments, offered in evidence by plaintiffs, were objected to as not properly authenticated, and that these objections were overruled, and the plaintiffs’ various muniments of title admitted in evidence. It is not proposed to inquire whether any error was committed in overruling these objections; for such error, if committed, would constitute no sufficient reason why the judgment should be affirmed, if in other respects it is erroneous.

[150]*150Evidently, if the court had ruled differently, the plaintiffs would have had an opportunity to prove the execution of the deeds and instruments, and thereby secure their admission in evidence; and an erroneous ruling in their favor should not operate to deprive them of this opportunity.

■ Assuming, then, that the evidence of plaintiffs was properly 'admitted, it is found that they introduced evidence of a grant of a league'to Samuel Frost, in 1834; a conveyance, in 1835, by Frost to W. H. Steele, of 2,866 acres of the league, being the land in controversy; .and a conveyance, dated in the town and county of Washington, on June 19,1838, by W. H. Steele, to his brother, James S. Steele, which last ■conveyance also included the Robert Moffit and one half of the Samuel White league, making 9,508 acres.

Plaintiff also ■ introduced a notarial copy of a power of. attorney, dated October 4, 1838, and reciting that James S. Steele appeared before Thomas Harvey, notary public in the county of Matagorda, and, in the form of a public act, executed before said Harvey a power of attorney, attested by witnesses of assistance and instrumental 'witnesses, to Alexander PI. Livermore, described as residing in the city of Hew Orleans, State of Louisiana, empowering him to sell and convey “ all those lands or parcels of land contained in three ■deeds made, executed, and recorded in the county of Washington, in favor of said appearer or his assigns, containing, in 'the whole, nine thousand five hundred (9,500) acres, be the same more or less, English or American measure, which said deeds, the said appearer declared, are in the hands of his said attorney, or would now be more particularly described.” Plaintiffs also introduced another power of attorney, dated on February 25,1839, reciting that Janies S. Steele appeared before the same officer in the town and county of Matagorda, •and by a similar instrument, wherein he is described as a -resident of the town, and one of the mercantile firm of Steele & Lewis of the same, appointed Amos PL Livermore, (it seems to have been first written Alexander, that word being [151]*151.erased, and Amos written over it,) of the city of Hew Orleans, State of Louisiana, his attorney, to dispose of the following-named and described lands lying in the Republic of Texas, the property of him, the said James S. Steele, viz,, one half a league of land on the west fork of the Brazos ■river, in Milam county, originally granted to Samuel Frost by the Government of Mexico, and by the said Frost conveyed to William H. Steele, and by him conveyed to said James S. Steele. One league of land originally granted to Robert MoiSt, lying in Robertson county, on the waters of the Little Brazos, and by him conveyed to William H. Steele, and by him conveyed to said James S. Steele; one league of land •lying on the west bank of the Brazos river, above the mouth of Childress creek, originally granted to James S. Steele. By the recitals of this instrument, it appears that Livermore was to apply the proceeds to the payment of debts contracted by the before-mentioned firm, Steele & Lewis, (composed of James S. Steele, William II. Steele, and Asa M. Lewis,) in the aforesaid city of Hew Orleans.

Plaintiffs also introduced a deed, dated Milam county, June 3,1839, and acknowledged and recorded in that county on the day of its execution, from A. II. Livermore, as attorney in fact for J. S. Steele, which deed on its face professes to be made “by virtue of a power of attorney from James S. Steele, dated Matagorda, October the 4th, 1838,” and conveys to James Bailey 2,8G6 acres of the Samuel Frost league by metes and bounds, giving the samé metes and hounds contained in a deed from Frost to W. H. Steele, in 1835.

The plaintiffs claim under Bailey’s title. The defendants claimed under quit-claim deed, from parties admitted to be the heirs of James S. Steele and wife, conveying “ the lower part of the league of land granted to Samuel Frost * * * and that part thereof which was conveyed by said Frost to William H. Steele, and by him sold to James S. Steele, referring to these conveyances for a more particular descrip[152]*152tion.” In the same deed are also conveyed to defendants the Moffit league and the "White half league.

The only evidence whatever in addition to these instruments was the testimony of a witness, that the defendants, except Hammond and Hammon, resided on the land in controversy at the time the suit was instituted, and that James Taylor, one of the defendants who answered with Hammond and Hammon, told the witness that he had contracted with Hammond and Hammon for his land at $5 per acre, and that all the. places occupied at the time of testifying had been in the possession of some person since before the war.

Under this evidence, the charge of the court, submitting to the jury the question of limitation under the statute of ten years, was certainly uncalled for; but it is not'perceived that this charge could have misled the jury, or have affected plaintiffs injuriously. ,

The court, however, further instructed the jury, that “ if the power of attorney included the land in controversy, and it and the deed are genuine,” the deed from Livermore divested all title to the land out of Steele. And again: “But if the title passed out of James S. Steele by the execution of either the power of attorney of October 4, 1838, (or) and February 25,1839, (and it did pass out of him if either power is genuine,) then the intervenors can recover nothing in this suit.”

It is contended for appellees, that it devolved on the plaintiffs to establish by proof that Amos and Alexander Liver-more were the same person, and that the two powers of attorney referred to the same land; that the plaintiffs failed to produce such evidence, and that, consequently, their case fell to the ground. Certainly these are questions naturally growing out of the instruments in evidence, and in regard to which parol evidence would have been proper.

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Bluebook (online)
47 Tex. 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hough-v-hill-tex-1877.