Humphreys v. Edwards

36 S.W. 434, 89 Tex. 512, 1896 Tex. LEXIS 484
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1896
DocketNo. 425.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 36 S.W. 434 (Humphreys v. Edwards) 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
Humphreys v. Edwards, 36 S.W. 434, 89 Tex. 512, 1896 Tex. LEXIS 484 (Tex. 1896).

Opinions

The statement of the case by appellants is adopted, as follows: This was an action of trespass to try title instituted by appellees, John S. Humphreys et al., against A.H. Edwards *Page 515 et al., for 320 acres of the Geo. P. Humphreys survey of land. Defendants specially answered and set up by metes and bounds the particular tract owned by each defendant, and respectively plead as to each defendant's particular tract, not guilty, and the three, five and ten years' statutes of limitation, and the suggestion of improvements in good faith. At a former term of the court the case was disposed of as to 120 acres of the land and as to defendants Runyon King and B.F. Keahey. The case as tried was for 200 acres of said survey, and tried only as to defendants W.I. and T.D. Lofland, A.H. Edwards and Ed Klutts. May 16, 1894, judgment was rendered in favor of appellees against defendants W.I. Lofland and T.D. Lofland for an undivided interest of 67 11-14 acres out of 160 acres of land claimed by said Loflands, part of said two hundred-acre survey, and against defendant A.H. Edwards for an undivided interest of 8 5-14 acres out of a certain twenty-acre tract claimed by said Edwards in said Humphreys survey, and against defendant Ed Klutts for an undivided interest of 3 11-14 acres out of the said twenty acres in said survey claimed by said Klutts. From this judgment defendants have appealed.

The first point which we deem it material to consider is presented by appellants under their eighth and ninth assignments of error, which are as follows:

8. "The court erred in that part of its charge which is as follows: 'You are charged that defendants' claim of an outstanding title, through their alleged purchase of the Geo. P. Humphreys land certificate at an administrator's sale in Upshur County, Texas, is a stale demand, and defendants cannot recover under their said title,' and in refusing to give defendants' special charge No. 1."

9. "The court erred in refusing to give defendants' special charge No. 2"

The special charge No. 1, as requested by the appellants, was as follows: "The jury are charged that, if you believe from the facts and circumstances introduced in evidence in this case that there was an administration on the estate of Geo. P. Humphreys, deceased, in Upshur County; and that the administrator applied to the Upshur County Probate Court and obtained an order of sale to sell the Geo. P. Humphreys land certificate, and said sale was made and reported to and approved by said court; and that at said sale David Stinson became the purchaser of said certificate; and that said Stinson sold and conveyed the certificate to Thomas Heath; and if the jury believe that Thomas Heath had said certificate located on the land in suit, and had the survey made, and caused the field notes to be sent to the General Land Office; then the jury are charged that Thomas Heath had such a title to the land that stale demand would not apply; and are further instructed that such title would be a superior outstanding title to any title acquired by the heirs of Geo. P. Humphreys, deceased, under the patent; and if the defendants have purchased the Heath title then they are entitled to recover, and the jury should find for the defendants against all of the plaintiffs." This charge was refused. *Page 516

Charge No. 2, as requested by appellants, was as follows: "If you believe from the evidence that after the death of Geo. P. Humphreys his estate was regularly administered in the Probate Court of Upshur County, Texas, and that in the course of said administration an order of sale was applied for and granted the administrator to sell the land certificate, by virtue of which the land in dispute was located; and that a sale thereof was regularly made by said administrator under said order of sale; and that at said sale David Stinson became and was the purchaser of said land certificate; and that he paid a valuable consideration therefor; and that said sale was duly confirmed by said Probate Court, and said certificate was thereupon delivered to said David Stinson; and that he or his vendees procured the same to be located on the land in controversy, and secured the patent to said land in the name of the heirs of Geo. P. Humphreys, — you are charged that the right of said David Stinson and those holding under him to the land patented by virtue of said certificate was a legal right, and that stale demand would not run against same, and their legal right thereto could only be barred by a peaceable and adverse possession of the land on the part of the Humphreys heirs, or some one for them, for such a length of time and under such circumstances as would be required by the statute of limitation to bar a legal title, as the same may be defined in the general charge of the court. You are further charged that a sale of the certificate by the administrator of Geo. P. Humphreys' estate, and the orders of the Probate Court directing and confirming such sale, may be established by circumstantial evidence, if you believe the records of said Probate Court pertaining to said sale had been lost or destroyed."

The above charges were refused, and the court in lieu thereof gave the charge as set out, in substance, in the eighth assignment of error above. There was some testimony in the record tending to show that the land certificate was sold at administrator's sale in Upshur County under the administration of the Geo. P. Humphreys estate in June, 1851. It was for the jury to determine from said testimony, when submitted to them under a fair charge of the court, whether there was a valid sale and confirmation of sale, so as to transfer to the purchaser a valid title to the land certificate. If there was, and then such certificate was located by the purchaser upon the land in controversy, even though the patent should subsequently be issued in the name of Geo. P. Humphreys, the original grantee, or his heirs, the superior title would enure to the benefit of the purchasers of such certificate, and their vendees.

We cannot undertake now to pass upon the sufficiency of these facts to establish such sale, location and subsequent ownership. That question is one for the jury to pass upon. But the above charge of the court as given was clearly erroneous. Special charges Nos. 1 and 2 requested by appellants' counsel, while they announce correct principles of law, and while they were sufficient to call the attention of the court to the propositions therein contended for, should be more carefully guarded, so as not to charge upon the weight of the evidence. Satterwhite v. Rosser, *Page 517 61 Tex. 172; Adams v. House, 61 Tex. 641 [61 Tex. 641]; Capp v. Terry; 75 Tex. 403; Goode v. Lowery, 70 Tex. 156; Peterson v. Ward, 5 Texas Civ. App. 208[5 Tex. Civ. App. 208]; Duren v. Railway,86 Tex. 291.

In the case of Adams v. House, above, our Supreme Court, in considering the effect of a valid transfer and location of the land certificate, as against the rights of the original grantor or his heirs under a patent subsequently issued, said: "The patents which issued to DeCordova in February, 1857, had the effect, by reason of the fact of his previously conveying the land described in them to Considerant, to invest Considerant, eo instanti, at the moment of their issuance, with the legal title to the locus in quo."

In the case of Satterwhite v.

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Bluebook (online)
36 S.W. 434, 89 Tex. 512, 1896 Tex. LEXIS 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humphreys-v-edwards-tex-1896.