Howth v. Taliaferro

289 S.W. 119
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 29, 1926
DocketNo. 1397. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 289 S.W. 119 (Howth v. Taliaferro) 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
Howth v. Taliaferro, 289 S.W. 119 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

O’QUINN, J.

Appellants were plaintiffs below. They brought this suit against appel-lee, Taliaferro, for partition of the McGuire Chesson 262-acre tract of land in Orange county, Tex. Appellee answered by a general demurrer, general denial, and denied *120 that plaintiffs had any interest in the land, and alleged that he was the owner of the land in fee simple, and by way of cross-action sued plaintiffs in trespass to try title to said land, and also pleads limitation under the five and ten years’ statutes.

The heirs of Jesse Ashworth intervened, making the usual allegations of ownership as in. trespass to try title, and sought to recover the land against both plaintiffs and defendant.

Plaintiffs abandoned their partition suit, and in replication to the cross-action filed answer of general demurrer, general denial, and plea of not guilty.

The land involved is 262 acres, known as the McGuire Chesson survey, in Orange county, Tex. It was located and surveyed for McGuire Chesson on July 28, 1842/ by-virtue of headright certificate No. 24, granted to McGuire Chesson August 2, 1841, for 640 acres of land, and patented to McGuire Chesson February 24, 1803.

McGuire Chesson died on 186.0, and his wife, Eliza Chesson, died in 1866, both intestate, leaving five children, to wit, James, Jeff, Caroline, who married H. L. Gray, Sr., Oelestine, who married Frances Le Blue, and Sarah, who married Joseph Jirou.

In August, 1871, Sarah Jirou, joined by her husband, conveyed her interest in the land to Caroline Gray. Caroline Gray died in October, 1871, leaving only one heir, Hugh E. Gray, who died in 1920. On March 16,1894. Hugh E. Gray conveyed to Clara Landry all the interest in the land in controversy which he inherited from his mother, Caroline Gray. This interest passed by regular chain of title and vested in appellee, W. F. Taliaferro.' Appellee maintains that he acquired the entire interest of the Chesson heirs in the land under the deed from Hugh B. Gray by virtue of the land in controversy having been allotted to Caroline Gray, mother of Hugh E. Gray, in the division and distribution of the McGuire Chesson estate, and in addition to his record title, asserted title by limitation.

In 1S70 Oelestine Le Blue, joined by her husband, conveyed to James Chesson her one-fifth interest in the land in question. Appellants offered in evidence a deed purporting to have been executed on April 1, 1873, by' James Chesson and Jeff Chesson to H. L. Gray, Sr., conveying all their right, title, interest, and claim in and to the 262 acres, naming their said interest as-- being three-fifths thereof. It is contended by appellee that this deed was never delivered.

After the death of his wife, Caroline Gray, 1-1. L. Gray, Sr., in 1879, married again. He died intestate in 1903, leaving three children by his second wife, H. L. Gray, Jr., Nellie Gray Allen, and Sam Gray, who never married and died without issue in 1915. H. L. Gray, Sr.’s second wife died prior to his decease. ‘ H. L. Gray, Jr., acquired whatever interest his sister, Nellie Gray Allen, inherited from her father, and conveyed all such interest as was owned by .him to appellants. It is upon this conveyance that they base their claim to a portion of the land.

The case was tried to a jury upon two special issues. The jury, in answer to said issues, found: (1) That the deed from James and Jeff Chesson to FI. L. Gray, Sr., was never delivered; (2) that appellee, had title under the ten-year statute of limitation. On this verdict, judgment was rendered for ap-pellee. The plaintiffs and interveners both filed motions for a new trial, which were overruled. Both have appealed.

Appellants’ first six propositions relate to the issue of the delivery of the deed from James and Jeff Chesson to H. L. Gray, Sr., and will be considered together. ■ The contention that said issue should not have been submitted to the jury because not raised by the evidence is overruled. The issue was distinctly raised. The further contention that the verdict of the jury that the deed had never been - delivered is not supported by the evidence is also overruled.

Briefly stated, the evidence shows that' the ■ deed bears date April 1, 1873, acknowledged by James Chesson on April 2, 1873, before W. F. Gilbert, clerk of the county and district courts of Jefferson county, Tex. It does not show to have been acknowledged by Jeff Chesson. Some time prior to 1901 (it does not appear when) this deed was in a bundle of miscellaneous papers in an old barrel in the office of the county clerk of Jefferson county, some of which papers had been re-, corded and some had not (this deed not having been recorded), and remained there with said papers until some time about the year 1902 or 1903, when in some manner not shown this bundle of miscellaneous papers was carried to the law office of Captain George W. O’Brien and his son, Judge George C. O’Brien, where it remained until December 28, 1921, when Judge George C. O’Brien told H. L. Gray, Jr., of the existence of the deed and delivered it to him, and he filed same for record. So far as the record discloses, this deed was never in the possession of H. L. Gray, Sr., who died in 1903, nor was the land inventoried as a part of the estate of H. L. Gray, Sr., by H. L. Gray, Jr., administrator of his father’s estate. Nor does it appear that the land was ever rendered for taxes or any taxes paid thereon by H. L. Gray, Sr., during his lifetime or by his administrator, or any one claiming' under the deed in question. James Chesson died in 1881, and Jeff Chesson died in 1897. At the time the deed was delivered to H. L. Gray, Jr., and filed for record, the grantors and the grantee in said deed were all dead, and had been for many years. Judge George C. O’Brien, who delivered the deed to H. L. Gray, Jr., was the attorney for H. L. Gray, *121 Jr., in the administration of the estate of H. L. Gray, Sr.

We have stated only a portion of the evidence hearing on the issue of delivery of the deed, but sufficient to show that issue to have been raised. The deed was not delivered within the lifetime of either the grantors or the grantee. Its existence seems to have been entirely forgotten, although the grantee lived for many years after the date of its execution and died in the vicinity of where all the parties lived. No inquiry for it or claim made under it is shown. The final delivery of the deed to an heir of the grantor was 48 years after the deed was executed, by one who was in no way a party to the deed and not shown to have any authority to deliver same to any party. The deed for many years remained in the office of the county clerk, who had prepared same and had taken the acknowledgment of one of the grantors, and was never filed for record or recorded, when the presumption is if the deed had been left with him for record or delivery he would have performed his official duty and filed and recorded same. Its being among miscellaneous papers for so long a time uncalled for and forgotten. It having been acknowledged by only one of the grantors.

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289 S.W. 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howth-v-taliaferro-texapp-1926.