Houston Oil Co. of Texas v. Miller & Vidor Lumber Co.

178 S.W. 830, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 861
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 22, 1915
DocketNo. 6709.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 178 S.W. 830 (Houston Oil Co. of Texas v. Miller & Vidor 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
Houston Oil Co. of Texas v. Miller & Vidor Lumber Co., 178 S.W. 830, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 861 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This is an action of trespass to try title brought by appellant against the Miller & Vidor Lumber Company, Stephen Cleveland, D. E. Simmons, and P. P. Williamson to recover the John Deven-port 640-acre survey of land in Orange county. Plaintiff also made John H. Broocks a defendant and sought to recover against him, as remote warrantor, the sum of $2 per acre for any portion of land in controversy adjudged to defendants in this suit. Each of the defendants except the defendant Broocks answered by general demurrer, plea of not guilty, and pleas of limitation of three, five, and ten years. The answer of defendant Broocks contains a general demurrer and several special exceptions, the nature of which it is unnecessary to state. He further answered by general denial and special pleas in which it is averred, in substance, that the title to the land was good at the time he warranted said title to plaintiff’s vendor; that, if he is mistaken in this averment, he avers that defendant Cleveland was in adverse possession of the land at the time this defendant sold it and warranted the title to plaintiff’s vendor and has held such adverse possession continuously, since said date, and, if said title was not good, he was liable upon his warranty immediately after the execution of his deed of conveyance, and suit upon said warranty is barred by the statute of limitation. He further pleaded that defendant Cleveland, and other defendants who claim under him, have acquired title to the land against plaintiff since the date of this defendant’s warranty under the statute of limitation of three, five, and ten years, and therefore he is not liable upon said warranty. The trial in the court below without a jury resulted in a judgment in favor .of all defendants that plaintiff take nothing by its suit and awarding defendant Cleveland 600 acres of the land and defendant Simmons 40 acres.

The survey of land in controversy was located under a certificate issued by the board of land commissioners for Orange county to John Devenport on October 19, 1846. The land was patented to John Devenport “and his heirs and assigns” September 21, 1881.

Plaintiff claims under the heirs of John Devenport, who was killed in Uvalde county in 1859. These heirs in May, 1899, executed a power of attorney to Webb & Een-ley, authorizing said firm to take possession of and sell any land owned by said grantors in Orange and Cherokee counties. In September, 1899, Webb & Eenley, acting under this power of attorney, conveyed the survey in controversy by deed with special warranty to R. E. Ashley for a consideration of $400. Ashley conveyed to the Beaumont Lumber Company by general warranty deed on October 21, 1899. On the day this last conveyance was made, defendant John II. *831 Broocks executed an instrument reciting that Ashley held the title to the land in trust for him and the $1,260 consideration recited in the deed from Ashley to the Beaumont Lumber Company had been paid to him, and in consideration of these facts he bound himself to warrant the title of the land to the grantee in said deed. The Beaumont Lumber Company conveyed the land to aiDpellant on June 5, 1902. Mrs. Mary C. Fenley, one of the heirs of John Devenport, under whom appellant claims, testified:

“I was bom in 1849. I reside in Uvalde county, Tex., and have lived there since 1854, excepting one year. My father’s name was John Devenport. He is dead. He was killed by Indians in Uvalde county in 1859. My understanding of the family history is that my father was born in Missouri, February 8, 1827. Father lived in the state of Arkansas before he married my mother. After his marriage to my mother in Kaufman county, Tex., January 11, 1849, he resided in Texas until his death. He moved from Kaufman county, Tex., to Lock-hart, Tex., from Lockhart to Uvalde county, Tex., where he lived one year. 1-Ie moved to Medina county, Tex., where he lived about one year, and from there back to Uvalde county, Tex. He moved from Medina county to this (Uvalde) county about the year 1856. I am not able to state what year he went to Kaufman county, nor exactly the year he moved from there, nor the exact year he lived in Lockhart, Tex. My mother is dead. She died August 15, 1903. I do not know whether my father ever transferred to any one the certificate covering the 640 acres in Orange county. 1 was the oldest child of my father and mother, and was about 10 years old when my father died. I was about five years old when my father first moved to Uvalde county, Tex. He -lived there about one year, moved to Medina county, and moved back to Uvalde county in about a year, so that I was about seven years old when he permanently moved to Uvalde county.”

On cross-examination, Mrs. Fenley testified substantially as follows:

“I was born in Kaufman county, Tex., October 19, 1849. I do not know any of my father’s friends and neighbors in 1846. I do not know where my father resided in September, 1848. I do not know who John Long was, who was living in Texas in 1848. I never heard my father speak of John Long. I was too young for it to make any impression, if he did, as I was only ten years old when he was killed by the Indians. Of my own personal knowledge, I do not know that my father owned land in East Texas, or any land certificates at his death. The reason we did not warrant the title in the deed dated September 18, 1899, executed by us through our attorneys in fact, Webb & Fenley, was because we did not know the condition of the title at that time. I had never heard Father speak of it. I understood that we had land in East Texas somewhere, which we were entitled to as heirs of my father, John Devenport. It was not because we did not think we had no title to it. The reason the heirs sold 640 acres of land, worth approximately $6,000 or $7,000, for $400, was we understood the land was of very little value and accepted that amount because we thought it was the best we could do. It was not because we knew the land did not belong to my father, or his heirs, for we claimed it in good faith. I do not know that my father never lived in Houston county, Tex., at any time. If my father ever resided in Houston county, Tex., I never heard of it. He was not a very talkative man, and besides, I was too young to have recollected it if he had said anything about it. The facts herein referred to as to my father’s places of residence were learned by me from my mother and family history generally.”

'The certificate under which the land was located was No. 347, class 2. Immediately beneath this certificate, and upon the same page of paper, is the following certificate of acknowledgment:

“The State of Texas, County of Houston. John Devenport, personally appeared before me at my office in the town of Crockett and acknowledged that he signed and scaled and delivered the anext deed or transfer for the purpose of sale therein mentioned. Given under my hand and seal of office at the town of Crockett this 20th day of Sept., A. D. 1845. [Seal] John Long, O. J. & Exoficio N. P. H. O.”

The certificate was located by Frank Cleveland, the father of appellee, Stephen Cleveland, and the fees for the patent were paid by him and the original patent delivered to him by the land office, and it was in his possession up to the time of his death, and since that time has been in possession of defendant 'Stephen Cleveland. The land was assessed for taxes in the name of Frank Cleveland and his heirs from 1882 to 1909.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 S.W. 830, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-oil-co-of-texas-v-miller-vidor-lumber-co-texapp-1915.