Jones v. Huff

36 Tex. 678
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 36 Tex. 678 (Jones v. Huff) 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
Jones v. Huff, 36 Tex. 678 (Tex. 1872).

Opinion

Ogden, J.

There is no question raised in the record, as to the contract, or obligation sued on. The note was executed in consideration for an obligation or bond for title to a certain tract of land. Suit was brought upon the note, and a tender of title made, which was claimed to be in full compliance with the bond. The defense set up to the suit on the note is, that the deed tendered was not such a deed as the plaintiff was bound to make; that the plaintiff had no title to the land pretended to be conveyed, and could make no valid title. The only question therefore which requires an immediate examination is, as to the validity of that deed.

And as a preliminary step to that examination, it is to be understood that the obligors to that bond were, upon the payment of all the purchase money, to make, execute, and deliver to the obligee, his heirs or assigns, “ a good and sufficient, full and general warranty deed in fee simple for the land thereinafter mentioned.” This obligation would appear to bind the parties to execute something more than a bare legal title, since a legal title may exist without any interest, and may be greatly modified or limited by surrounding equities, and it is said that an equitable title will often override a legal one. (Hunt v. Turner, 9 Texas, 389.) We are therefore led to the conclusion, that it is wholly immaterial, so far as a just determination of this cause is concerned, whether the obligors in the [680]*680bond for title held a purely legal title, or whether their imperfect legal title had been perfected by surrounding equities, provided their deed would now convey a good and sufficient title in fee simple. There was, as has been said, no objection to the form of the deed tendered, but there was objection to the deed on the ground of the want of power in the grantor to make the deed tendered. And in this objection, it is believed all the merits of this case rest which need be noticed in this opinion.

The appellant in this cause, and one of the obligors in the title bond, claims title to the land in question by a regular chain of title from Mathews and McKean, whose title or,claim of title originated in a bond for a deed to one half of a league of land granted to Spencer Morris by the Mexican government in 1831. This bond was given by Spencer Morris, the grantee, to Mathews and McKean and others, in consideration of certain advances made by them in money and provisions, and was executed in 1831. This bond, when executed, was in conflict with the laws of Mexico then in force, and consequently was invalid, and this court has repeatedly decided that, unless there were strong equities attendant upon the execution of the bond, or which have arisen since the repeal of the prohibitory law, such as a subsequent ratification or renewal of the obligation, possession and cultivation, or the like, such bonds must still be held as invalid.

Are there, then, any of these equities connected with the contract between Mathews and McKean and Spencer Morris, which would require a relaxation of the rule referred to ? In 1830 Spencer Morris was a poor man in Tennessee, with a large family, and was anxious to come to Texas, but was without the means to pay the expense of his removal. Mathews and McKean brought him and his family to this country, paying all their expenses, and after their arrival supplied the family of Morris with money and provisions, until they were enabled to provide for themselves. They procured a grant from the Mexican government to Spencer Morris, for the league of [681]*681cated and surveyed, and paid all the government dues. And for this, Morris agreed to give them one-half of the league; and though this agreement was at the time prohibited by the Mexican laws, yet in 1834 those prohibitory laws were repealed, and still, according to the testimony, of McKean, Spencer Morris continued to recognize the validity of his contract, and the rights of Mathews and McKean to the land. Spencer Morris lived two years after the repeal of the prohibitory laws. After Spencer Morris’s death, in 1836, Mathews and McKean applied for a deed to the land, which was executed by the administrator, and nine years after, Mathews and McKean and the heirs of Spencer Morris entered into an agreement for the partition of the land. From this agreement it would appear that the heirs of Spencer Morris, ten years after the death of their ancestor, recognized and in effect confirmed the contract made with him in 1831. It is in proof that Mathews and Mc-Kean have paid the taxes on the half league since 1838, and it is also well established that the holder of the Mathews and McKean title have been in actual possession, cultivating and improving the same, since 1855.

It would seem from these facts that no stronger equities could be found ?n any case reported in the books, and it is believed that these facts are sufficient to raise a strong presumption of the recognition and ratification, if not a renewal, of the contract of 1831, after a repeal of the prohibitory laws in 1834; and under these circumstances, any ratification or renewal of that contract, subsequent to March, 1834, by Spencer Morris during his lifetime, or his heirs after his death, would render the same valid and binding on him and his heirs. (Means v. Robinson, 7 Texas, 510; Hunt v. Turner, 9 Texas, 386; Mills v. Alexander, 21 Texas, 160; Wills v. Abbey, 27 Texas, 203; and Clay v. Clay, 35 Texas, 509, decided at this term of the court.)

In the case of Hunt’s heirs v. Bobinson, Chief Justice Hemp-hill said, The plaintiffs may have had rights founded on the “ strongest equities, and if they have, such rights would be pro- “ tected if fairly presented to the court.” In the case at bar, [682]*682there are strong equities which have been accumulating for nearly forty years, and have been recognized by all parties in interest, until the institution of this suit, and we think they were properly presented, to call forth the protection of the court. In the case of Williams v. Chandler, which is greatly relied on by counsel for appellee, the court says: The plaintiff is not shown ever to have been in possession of the land, or ever to “ have exercised acts of ownership respecting it; there was no acquiescence in his right, of a character to affect his vendor, for that implies adverse possession, or acts of ownership, to “ which it must have reference.” And we are of the opinion that case could not rightly form the basis of a rule for the government of this, but we are rather inclined, in this -case, to follow the doctrine enunciated in the ease of Wills v. Abbey, as having been established in former decisions, that a contract originally made in contravention of law would not necessarily be set aside, where, after the removal of the legal inhibition, there had been such acquiescence in the contract, and acknowl- “ edgment or ratification of it, as to give rise to overpowering “ equities in favor of the party claiming under it.” We are therefore of the opinion that the appellant has established in herself such an overpowering equitable title, as to override any mere legal title in the heirs of Spencer Horris or their assigns.

But we are not quite sure that the appellant has not the legal as well as equitable title.

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Related

Houston v. Killough
16 S.W. 56 (Texas Supreme Court, 1891)

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Bluebook (online)
36 Tex. 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-huff-tex-1872.