Kennard v. Maxwell

287 S.W. 60, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1162
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 11, 1926
DocketNo. 8856.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 287 S.W. 60 (Kennard v. Maxwell) 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
Kennard v. Maxwell, 287 S.W. 60, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1162 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

LANE, J.

This suit was brought by Sadie F. Kennard in the year 1925, prior to the 20th day of April of said year, against Will Maxwell to recover, possession of about 12 acres of land forcibly taken from her by Maxwell, for damages, and for a mandatory injunction requiring Maxwell to remove a certain fence from said land which he had placed thereon.

The plaintiff alleged that she was on the 3d day of December, 1924, as she had been since January, 1898, the owner of a certain 100 acres of land, a part- of the Andrew Mo-stee one-third league, described by metes and bounds as follows:

“Beginning at a stake on south boundary line of the said one-third league, 1,042 varas from S. E. corner of said one-third league; thence N. 1 degree W. 592 varas to a stake in prairie; thence S. 89 degrees W. 954 varas to a stake on north bank of a gully from which a red oak 10 in. in diameter standing in south end of a grove marked on east and west sides with 3 hacks, bears N. 89 degrees E. 129 varas distant; thence S. 1 degree E. to a stake on south line of said McStee one-third league stake near Stif-flemier’s north fence; thence 954 varas to the place of beginning.”

That she was in possession of said land, having same under fence, occupying and using the same, and holding the same continuously, adversely to the world from the 20th day of January, 1898, to the 31st day of December, 1917, at which time she conveyed the same to one J. P. Bailey, who took immediate possession thereof and remained in possession of the same until he reconveyed it to her in consideration of the cancellation of 13 promissory notes, executed and delivered to her by Bailey for (he purchase money of said land; the first eight of said notes being for $100 each and the other five for $200 each; that after such reconveyance Bailey remained in possession of said land as her tenant until on or about the 5th day of December, 1924, at which time Will Maxwell forcibly and without right or authority of law entered up'on said land, tore down her fence on the north line thereof, ejected “her from 12 acres of her land, and erected a fence across her land at a point about 219 feet south of her north line; that the land as taken by Maxwell is described as follows:

“Beginning at the N. E. corner of said herein-above described land; thence south along the east line of said land 211 feet to a point; thence west 2,441 feet to a point on the west line of the hereinabove described property; thence north 219 feet to the N. W. corner of the hereinabove described property; thence E. along the N. line of the hereinabove described property to the point of beginning.”

That she is entitled to the possession of said land so taken, but that Maxwell refuses to permit her to take possession thereof.

Plaintiff alleged the rental value of said 12 acres of land for the year 1925, the year same was held by Maxwell, was $100, and that she was damaged in the sum of $100 by *61 reason of tile destruction of her fence. She prayed for an injunction requiring Maxwell to remove tlie fence erected by him and to reconstruct her fence at the point where it was when he removed it and for general relief.

Defendant Maxwell answered and alleged that one Henry Suggett purchased from Ed Ambron and T. S. Reese by deed of date September 27, 1888, a tract of 200 acres of land, a part of the Andrew McStee one-third league, said 200 acres being described in said deed of Ambron and Reese as beginning at a stake in the prairie in the south line of the McStee survey 1,850 varas from its S. W. corner; thence north 1,184 varas to a stake in the prairie; thence west 954 varas to a stake on the east line of Nass 400-acre tract; thence south with Nass east line 1,184 varas to stake in south line of said McStee survey; thence east 954 varas to beginning. That on the first day of January, 1923, he purchased from the Suggetts the north 100 acres of the Suggetts’ 200-acre tract, and that plaintiff’s land and defendant’s land had a common dividing line, the same being 592 varas north from and running parallel with the south line of the McStee survey. He denied that any part of the 12 acres of land sued for was embraced within the metes and bounds as set' out in the deed from Suggetts to N. E. Ken-nard, and averred that said 12 acres was all on the north 100 acres of the Suggett 200-aere tract.

Defendant further alleged that on the'2d day of May, 1908, he purchased from one Joseph Dilger 250 acres of land, a part of the McStee survey lying just north of the 200-aere Suggett tract; that at the time of such purchase it was discovered that, in fencing the Suggett tract, the fence had been placed approximately 75 varas too far north so that it was to that extent on the land he had purchased from Dilger; that at such time, at a meeting between defendant, Mrs. Martha Suggett (widow of Henry Suggett, deceased), and her daughter (the only child of the Suggetts), and her husband, and N. E. Kennard (the deceased husband of the plaintiff), it was agreed by and between such parties that the north line of the fence of Ken-nard had been placed 75 varas too far north and to that extent had inclosed the land 'belonging to the Suggetts, and that it was agreed by all parties at such meeting that:

“The said Mrs. Suggett and her daughter would remove their fence and place it upon the true north line of their one hundred (100) acres of the said Henry Suggett tract of two hundred (200) acres, and, that thereafter, the said line should be recognized as the dividing line between the defendant’s land on the north and the land of the said Mrs. Suggett on the south, amounting to one hundred (100) acres, same being the north one hundred (100) acres of the Henry Suggett tract, and it was further agreed by the parties thereto that the husband of the plaintiff would move his fence approximately seventy-five (75) varas south of its position at that time, and, that thereafter, the said line as agreed to * * * should be the true dividing line between the said Mrs. Martha Suggett and her daughter, Mrs. Danford, and the husband of the plaintiff, who owned the south one. hundred (100) acres of said Suggett two hundred (200) acre tract.”

Asking affirmative relief, defendant alleged that he was the owner of all that pprtion of the Suggett 200-acre tract lying north of the dividing line between the north and south 100 acres thereof, as he contends it is situated ; alleged that the plaintiff had forcibly and unlawfully taken possession thereof; and prayed judgment for title and possession of the same. *

. In reply to defendant’s answer and cross-action, plaintiff denied that the boundary line between that portion of the 200-aere Suggett tract conveyed to Kennard by the Suggetts and that portion thereof retained by the Sug-getts was ever agreed to by N. E. Kennard or plaintiff as being located elsewhere than Where the deed from the Suggetts to' Kennard placed it, and where the north line of Ken-nard’s fence stood at the time of said alleged agreement and at the time the defendant tore it'down. She further alleged that if there was such agreement as to said boundary line, as alleged by defendant, nothing was ever done by any party to such agreement to put the same into effect; that neither party to such alleged agreement by reason thereof gave or took possession of any land not theretofore possessed by them, but,.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
287 S.W. 60, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 1162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennard-v-maxwell-texapp-1926.