Kellogg v. Chapman

201 S.W. 1096, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 227
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 1, 1918
DocketNo. 268.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 201 S.W. 1096 (Kellogg v. Chapman) 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
Kellogg v. Chapman, 201 S.W. 1096, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 227 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

BROOKE, J.

On the 15th day of August, 1915, appellants instituted suit of trespass to try title against appellee, the land involved being the A. G. Kellogg 1107-acre survey in San Augustine county. The defendant answered by a plea of general denial and not guilty. The case was submitted to the jury upon three special issues, as follows:

Question No. 1: “Did or did not A. G. Kellogg execute and deliver to William Coote, as a conveyance, the instrument purporting to be from Kellogg to Coote, and was it accepted by William Coote as a conveyance to him of the title to the land in controversy? If you find the affirmative of the issue, you will answer ‘Yes.’ If you find the negative of this issue, you will answer ‘No.’ ”
To this question the jury answered “Yes.”
Question No. 2: “Was or not the purported transfer from William Coote to Terry H. Cabal, purporting to convey to Terry H. Cahal all the right, title, and interest of Coote to the land in controversy, a genuine instrument of conveyance from William Coote mentioned in the Kellogg deed? If you answer this in the affirmative, the form of your answer may be ‘Yes.’ If you answer in the negative, the form of your answer may be ‘No.’ ”
To this question the jury answered “Yes.”
Question No. 3: “Did or did not, William Coote, prior to the 28th of February, 1838, rescind the deed from Kellogg to himself or retransfer to Kellogg, or his estate, the land in controversy? If you determine this in the affirmative, let your answer be ‘Yes.’ If you determine this in the negative, let your answer be ‘No.’ ”
To this question the jury answered “No.”

Judgment was rendered on January 3, 1917, against the plaintiffs in favor of defendant Chapman for the land in controversy. Motion for new trial was filed and overruled, and notice of appeal given, and appeal duly perfected.

It appears from the record that Kellogg, the original grantee, was a single man, and was killed by the Indians in the year 1839; that Kellogg was an immigrant to Texas, and at his death his estate was administered on in Texas by his brother, Ebenezer Kellogg. Ebenezer died in 1810, and K. L. Anderson became his administrator. It further appears that A. G. Kellogg had been a merchant in 'San Augustine from the year 1835 down to his death, and dealt extensively in lands as well as merchandise. After the death of A. G. Kellogg, one A. Horton, custom collector of the republic of Texas, obtained h judgment against K. E. Anderson, administrator of the estate of A. G. Kellogg, Matthew Cartwright, and L. E. Griffith, rendered at the March term of the court in 1840. On the 2d day of November, 1841, there was issued an original execution on the judgment, and the writ on this shows that A. G. Kellogg’s headright was pointed out as his property, and levied upon to satisfy the judgment. A deed was made by William Kim-brough, sheriff, to M. Cartwright, dated July, 1842. M'atthew Cartwright conveyed 100 acres of this headlight on the 19th of December, 1858,. to Josiah Parker. Matthew Cartwright died about the year 1870. On the 30th of May, 1871, a partition of his lands among his children was had, and the land in controversy was set aside to his son, Leonidas Cartwright. Leonidas Cartwright conveyed 100 acres of land to H. L. Lucas in 1899, 100 acres to D. C. Odom in 1899, and on the 2d day of October, 1905, he conveyed the remainder of the tract to H. T. Weir for a consideration of $2,000, and H. P. Weir, on October 16, 1905, executed a deed thereto to Marrs McLean to secure a note due by Weir to W. D. Gordon for $2,000, due'12 months after date. On the 18th of October, 1906, Weir executed a deed to Gordon transferring the said land, reciting that it was in full settlement of the indebtedness of said Weir recited in the deed of trust. On the 5th day of January, 1907, Gordon and Weir executed a deed to Wm. L. Pearson conveying the said land, except the 300-acre tract as above set out. This record also reflects the fact that, from 1846 down to Leonidas Cartwright’s sale of the land to Weir in 1905, the land was assessed for taxes to M. Cartwright in his lifetime, and after his death to his son, Leonidas Cartwright, and parties claiming under them. It is further shown by the record that Kellogg and Coote were partners in the mercantile business in 1835; that from 1836 to 1838 Kellogg was running the business alone, and Coote does not appear to have had any interest in the same. It is also shown that in 1835 Coote had a wife and two boys, as shown by the application he made for a grant in Texas on January 24, 1835.

On the part of defendant, Chapman, there was offered in evidence the county clerk of San Augustine county, and he testified that there is in his 'custody an original deed among papers commonly designated as the archives, dated January 3, 1836, purporting to be executed by A. G. Kellogg before John G. Love, and witnessed by David Brown and Samuel Stivers. This original instrument was then read in evidence, and purported to be a conveyance of the Kellogg headright by Kellogg to Wm. C'oote for a considei’ation o£ $200. There was also offered in evidence a certified copy of the same instrument.

Objections were made as follows by the plaintiffs: That there was no proof adduced that the grantee in that instrument ever accepted the deed or claimed that land, because it does not appear to come from the custody of the grantee, nor was it a filed paper, whereby constructive delivery of the paper might be inferred; objection was further made to the introduction of said in- *1098 ¡átrument until there was evidence tending to show that the grantee in that instrument so accepted under it by receiving it or by claiming the property under it, because the instrument does not come from the proper custody, in that it was a private deed left or found among the papers in the county clerk’s office without ever having been filed for record with the county clerk, and without ever having been recorded.

■ Objection was made to the certified copy of the instrument: (1) Because, as a certified copy, it is not authenticated so as to make ■it admissible in evidence under the registration laws of this state, in that the instrument purports to be authenticated by a man named Lakey, who is not a witness to the deed, before .Charles Epps as county clerk of said county, and the certificate of authentication is not in form of law as required by the statute; (2) because under what is known as the Townsend Curative Act, which provides that where an instrument has been actually recorded for a period of 10 years it •should be admissible in evidence, whether ■properly acknowledged or not, it is provided that that can only be where there has been no adverse claim asserted to that instrument during that period of 10 years next after it was registered, and there is no proof adduced here that would fulfill the condition which made a condition precedent to the introduction of such an instrument under that act; (3) because there is an affidavit of forgery filed to this instrument, which requires the proof of this instrument as at common law, and there has been no proof tending to establish the genuineness and existence of this instrument other than the certified copy now offered; (4) no predicate has been laid for the introduction of secondary evidence of the claimed deed.

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63 S.W.2d 393 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1933)
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252 S.W. 151 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
201 S.W. 1096, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kellogg-v-chapman-texapp-1918.