Hurley v. Lockett

12 S.W. 212, 72 Tex. 262, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 1278
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1888
DocketNo. 6135
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 12 S.W. 212 (Hurley v. Lockett) 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
Hurley v. Lockett, 12 S.W. 212, 72 Tex. 262, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 1278 (Tex. 1888).

Opinion

Hobby, Judge.

This suit was brought to recover about two acres of land situated along and contiguous to the eastern boundary line of the R. Campbell survey and the western boundary line of the I. B. Sessions survey, these lines being coincident, the latter survey being junior to and calling for the former. The land in controversy is the lower or southern portion of a narrow strip of land situated as above described.

The suit was instituted on the 21st day of June, 1883, by Mrs. M. S. Lockett, joined by her husband Solomon Lockett, against W. J. Hurley. The petition alleges ownership in Mrs. Lockett in fee simple on and prior to June 4, 1883, and sets forth specially that plaintiffs and those under whom they claim have had ten years prior to said date continuous adverse, etc., possession, cultivating, using, and enjoying the same up to the western boundary line of the Sessions survey, which is alleged to be marked on the ground for a distance of about 800 varas by a bois d’arc hedge and fence.

As the case was developed on the trial the issues between the appellant and appellees were whether the hedge and fence as claimed by appellees constituted the eastern boundary line of the Campbell survey, or was it as contended by appellant located upon the ground east of said hedge and fence. If said hedge and fence marked the true east line of the Campbell survey then was appellees’ specially asserted title of ten years adverse possession established.

Upon the issues thus made the court instructed the jury:

“If under the evidence and instructions given you find that the east boundary line of the Campbell survey as originally located on the ground is east of the line upon which the bois d’arc-hedge and fence is shown by the evidence to have stood, then you will find for the defendant and by your verdict say, ‘ We the jury find that the east line of the R. E. Campbell survey as originally established on the ground is —— varas (naming the number of varas if any) east of the line marked by the bois d’arc hedge and fence, and therefore find for the defendant,’ unless you find for plaintiffs under the plea of the statute of limitation and under the plea of acquiescence, as hereafter instructed. But if you find that the [265]*265east boundary line of the Campbell survey is on a line where the hedge and fence are shown by the evidence to be or Avest of said hedge and fence as the same stand upon the ground, yon Avill find for plaintiff and say by your verdict, ‘"We the jury find that the east boundary line of the R. E., Campbell survey as originally established on the ground is on the line—or west of the line—as marked by the bois d’arc hedge and fence, and therefore find for plaintiffs.’ ”

The form of verdict was given the jury in the event it was found that defendant had acquiesced in the hedge and fence line. If plaintiffs were entitled to recover under the plea of ten years limitation the form of the verdict was also given to the jury. The response of the jury to the foregoing instructions was, “ We the jury find for the plaintiffs under the statute of ten years limitation, with twelve dollars as rental value of the land.”

There was abundant evidence we think to justify the implication contained in the verdict as to the location of the east boundary line of the Campbell survey originally east of the hedge and fence line. And it remains then to determine only whether on the trial of this cause as it is presented to us by the assignments of error the plaintiffs established 'their right to the land by adverse possession, in accordance with the familiar principles governing the assertion of title under that plea as settled in well adjudged cases.

The assignments of error relate to the action of the court in excluding testimony and to instructions given and refused. In support of appellees’ plea of title by ten years limitation the plaintiff Solomon Lockett testified that “from the year 1876 up to 1883 plaintiff M. S. Lockett was by agents and tenants in actual adverse possession of all the land in dispute, claiming the same as her own, and cultivated, used, and enjoyed the same, to the exclusion of defendant and every one else, and her right to do so was never questioned or disputed until about June 4, 1883.”

The defendant, for the purpose of showing that the plaintiffs had not held adverse, hostile, and continuous possession of the land in controversy for a period of ten years prior to the said fourth day of June, 1883, and that the east boundary line of the Campbell survey was where defendant claimed the same to be, offered to prove on the trial by the witnesses H. T. Wilkinson and W. J. Hurley that during the year 1878 Reuben and Chas. Lockett resided on and cultivated said Helson place, and that they claimed that at that time they were the Owners of said place; that they did not hold same as tenants of plaintiffs, but in their own right; that during said year the said Chas, and Reuben Lockett claimed that the western boundary line of the said Helson tract was about twenty varas east of the old hedge—that is, that they claimed that the line claimed by defendant was the true division line between the Campbell and Sessions surveys—and that they did not during said year hold [266]*266the strip of land in controversy adversely to defendant; all of which testimony was objected to by plaintiffs because the same was irrelevant and plaintiffs could not be bound by the statements of said Reuben and Chas. Lockett; which objections of plaintiffs the court sustained and all of the above testimony was rejected and neither of said witnesses were permitted to testify to any of the above facts, to which action and ruling of the court appellant excepted and assigns the same as error.

The evidence was excluded, it appears from the record, upon the ground that “title to realty could not be established by verbal declarations of one not a party to the.suit.” And the further explanation is made that “the undisputed evidence was that the parties were tenants of M. S. Lockett.”

We find no evidence in the record that these parties whose declarations were sought to be used by defendant were the tenants of M. S. Lockett. The general statement we have quoted from the testimony of plaintiff Solomon Lockett to the effect that M. S. Lockett had been in adverse possession by “agents and tenants” since 1876 is the only evidence upon this subject. There was no lease, contract, or agreement of any character showing or tending to show the relation of landlord and tenant between plaintiffs and Chas. and Reuben Lockett. They were not shown to have been in possession in 1878, or at any time, under even a verbal rental contract with plaintiffs.

There being no evidence in the record that Charles and Reuben Lockett occupied the land as tenants of Mrs. Lockett, we think their declarations made while in possession of the land were admissible. If, however, it should appear that they were tenants of Mrs. Lockett at that time, their declarations should be excluded.

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Bluebook (online)
12 S.W. 212, 72 Tex. 262, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 1278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurley-v-lockett-tex-1888.