Johnson v. Lyford

29 S.W. 57, 9 Tex. Civ. App. 85, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 477
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 13, 1894
DocketNo. 747.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 29 S.W. 57 (Johnson v. Lyford) 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
Johnson v. Lyford, 29 S.W. 57, 9 Tex. Civ. App. 85, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 477 (Tex. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Associate Justice.

— Appellee sued to recover the Jordan West league of land, situated in Liberty County. He deraigned title from the grantee himself, showing a continuous chain of written conveyances, with one missing link — from the State to himself — the missing link being conveyance from the grantee to James Morgan; and this link the plaintiff undertook to establish by circumstantial evidence. The appellants, with two exceptions, deraigned title from a portion of the heirs of the grantee, and pleaded not guilty, and also averred, that they were purchasers for value without notice of plaintiff’s claim of title through sale from the grantee. Two of the appellants intervened, claiming an undivided interest in the laud by inheritance from the grantee. Upon trial of the case by the judge of the court, without the *88 intervention of a jury, judgment was rendered for the plaintiff; and from that judgment both the defendants and the interven ors have appealed to this court.

The appellants in the preparation of their brief have not observed Rule 31 of this court. A reference to the transcript merely is not a compliance with that rule. The rule requires both a statement and a reference to the proper page of the transcript for verification of the statement, which, under the rule, must follow every proposition, should the statement be questioned by the appellee. The brief of appellants in this case contains twelve assignments, with as many propositions, and but two statements from the record in explanation and in support of the propositions submitted. When counsel fail to observe this rule, they must excuse us if we fail to consider or discuss the proposition they submit unsupported by appropriate statements from the proceedings in the cause. We can not undertake to search the record for the purpose of supplying defects in the brief; and we shall in this opinion not notice the various propositions submitted under the twelve assignments of error, further than may be necessary to answer what we consider to be the principal objections urged by appellants to the judgment, and to make an intelligible disposition of the appeal.

The fifth assignment of error is as follows: “The court erred in failing, refusing, and neglecting to make out and sign and file among the papers in this cause, after himself and counsel had failed to agree, such a bill of exceptions as would have, in his opinion, presented the ruling of the court in that behalf as it actually occurred.”

This assignment of error arraigns the trial judge for an alleged violation of duty imposed upon him by article 1366 of the Revised Statutes, and in support of this assignment, which we suppose is submitted as a proposition, counsel cites Lanier v. Perryman. Upon the trial of the cause, the. appellants presented four bills of exceptions to the judge of the court for his approval. The first was approved without qualification, the second was approved with qualification by the judge written above his signature, and the third and fourth bills were returned by the judge to the counsel who presented them, without approval of the judge, with his reasons for not approving them indorsed on each bill; and these bills, with the qualification and reasons given by the judge on them, constitute parts of the record of the case. While the action of the judge may not be a literal compliance with the terms of the statutes, we think it was a substantial compliance therewith, and gives no ground of complaint in this court. If the appellants desired a bill to be prepared by the court, they should have made demands for one, and if the demand was refused, appellants should have excepted. The contention that the appellants were, by the failure of the judge to make out bills of exception, deprived of the privilege of controverting, under the provisions of article 1367, the question whether or not the bills prepared by them and rejected and qualified by the judge did correctly embody the exceptions made by the defendants to *89 the admission of the evidence objected to, is not, we think, well founded. The qualification attached to one of the bills, and the reasons for rejecting the other two, and written upon the bills, show clearly the matters upon which the court, and the counsel differed. The objections which appellants urge to the judgment may be condensed under three heads: 1. The court admitted, and considered in determining the issues between the litigants, hearsay and other illegal evidence. 2. That the evidence does not sustain the conclusion of the judge, that a deed of Conveyance for the Jordan West league of land was executed by the grantee to James Morgan. 3. That the evidence showed the defendants to be innocent purchasers.

Under the first of these heads, it is objected, that there was error in admitting the affidavit of the plaintiff of the loss of the deed from Jordan West to James Morgan, because (1) the affiant does not state that he ever saw such deed, or had actual knowledge of its existence, and because there was no direct evidence from any one that such deed ever existed; and (2) the affiant does not aver that search had been made in every place where the deed might have been. Whether the case is one in which such an affidavit is required or permitted need not be determined, but there was no error in disallowing these objections to its admission. If an affiant, who proposes to establish by circumstantial evidence the execution of a lost instrument, must first swear that he or some one else had seen the deed, or had actual knowledge of its existence, such requirement would limit and restrict the rule of evidence, now well established, that the execution and delivery of a deed may be shown by a train of circumstances, to cases in which a deed purporting to be such an one as that which it is proposed to establish, is first shown by direct or positive evidence to have once existed. We do not understand the rule to be restricted to such cases. Under this head it is further objected, that the court erred in admitting the certificate of George Ricks, clerk of the District Court of Liberty County, bearing date January 5,1871, to the effect, that there was on record in his office a deed from West to Morgan for the. land in controversy, because the certificate is as to what the records of the District Court clerk’s office contain, and not what the records of the County Court contain. The answer to this objection is, that in 1871 the clerk of the District Court was ex-officio the custodian of the county records. The evidence showed, that the county records of Liberty County were destroyed by fire in 1874; there was no error in admitting the certificate. Bounds v. Little, 75 Texas, 316; Allen v. Read, 66 Texas, 19.

The appellants urge under the head of illegal evidence, that the court erred in admitting in evidence, and considering, entries in the land book of James Morgan. This book was prepared in the life-time of James Morgan, under his supervision, and was shown to the witness Gillett by Morgan, and was told that it contained an inventory of all the lands owned by Morgan. Gillett was an executor of the will of Morgan, and this book, after the death of Morgan, came into Gillett’s *90 hands, and among the land inventories was the Jordan West league.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.W. 57, 9 Tex. Civ. App. 85, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-lyford-texapp-1894.