Kennon v. Miller

143 S.W. 986, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 54
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 24, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 143 S.W. 986 (Kennon v. Miller) 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
Kennon v. Miller, 143 S.W. 986, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 54 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

FLY, J.

Appellants, Louisa Kennon and James Raley, instituted this action to try title to 50 acres of land, against Henry Miller and R. Miller, appellees, to which action appellees pleaded not guilty, three, four, five, and ten years limitations. The cause was tried without a jury, and judgment was rendered in favor of appellees.

R. J. Carr and John Dean conveyed the land in controversy to Sam Harris, at that time the husband of Louisa Kennon, on November 19, 1872, the recited consideration being $191 cash and a promissory note executed by Sam Harris for $35. That deed was recorded in April, 1874. Sam Harris died in 1878 or 1879, and on January 16, 1899, Lou Harris, his widow, and Sam Harris and Prince Harris, his only children, conveyed the land, by an instrument in form a deed, to N. Eason and M. Eason, and the latter two on December 19, 1S99, conveyed the land to John Winkfield. The deed to the Easons was recorded on February 9, 1899, and their deed to Winkfield was recorded on January 19, 1900. Sam Harris, Jr., and wife on November 6,' 1901, conveyed the land to John Winkfield, by deed, which was recorded on February 18, 1902. On December 6, 1904, the land was sold under execution issued out of the county court of Fay-ette county in a case styled M. Cockrill v. John Winkfield, rand M. Cockrill was the purchaser, and his deed was recorded on January 12, 1905. Cockrill sold to appellees on February 1, 1906, and the deed was recorded on February 24, 1906. The statement of facts shows that the taxes were paid as they became due by Cockrill and appellees up to August 27, 1910, when this suit was instituted, and that they were in peaceable, adverse, and uninterrupted possession of the land all of that time, using and cultivating the same. John Winkfield had adverse possession of the land from 1900 to 1904, when the land was sold to Cockrill, using and cultivating the same, and he, Cockrill, and ap-pellees had adverse possession of the land for more than 10 years before this suit was instituted. On February 13, 1902, Winkfield gave a deed of trust on the land to secure the payment of two notes, and Louisa Ken-non knew it. As soon as John Winkfield got the deed from the Easons, he conveyed the information to Louisa Kennon that he had bought it. Louisa obtained a deed from *987 Prince Harris for Ms interest in the land, and conveyed one-half of the 50 acres to James Raley.

[1] This cause was tried on November 26, 1010, and at that time appellants excepted and gave notice of appeal. On December 30, 1910, appellants filed a motion for new trial on the ground, among others, that the judgment “was obtained by the defendant Henry Miller testifying before the court that M. Cockrill, his grantor, had paid all the taxes on said land for the five years from the date of Cockrill’s deed to the date of filing this suit, in August, 1910.” It was stated that the testimony was false, and that it was “newly discovered testimony.” To the motion was appended an affidavit of the tax collector of Payette county that taxes had been paid by Cockrill on only 15 acres of the land in 1909, although it had been properly assessed, and the mistake had occurred through the error or negligence of the tax assessor in writing with a pencil on the assessment that 35 acres of the land had been sold to Bludsworth. The only reasons given for a failure to have the testimony before the court during the trial were that appellants live 100 miles from La Grange, and did not examine the tax books, and had no reason to suspect that the taxes of 1909 had not been paid, and that “plaintiffs did not know this fact at the trial, nor within the two days after the trial, and only learned it at a recent date by a letter received from the tax collector, received this 29th day of December, 1910.”

The grounds stated are insufficient to show diligence in procuring the evidence of the tax collector. The cause was tried in the county seat, and doubtless in the same building in which the records of the tax collector are kept, and appellants had been put upon notice by the pleadings that appellees claimed the land by limitation of five years, and that they had paid the taxes on the land. The records were open to them, and, if they did not consult them, it was their fault. There is no pretense that the records were not accessible to them before and during the trial. As said in Vardeman v. Edwards, 21 Tex. 737: “A party cannot be heard to say that evidence is newly discovered, which he was bound to know was a record in a public office, at all times accessible upon proper application, without at least showing some special circumstances and reasons why it could not be found or procured. From the very nature of the evidence, being documentary and matter of record in a public office, it could not be newly discovered.”

[2] The evidence, on account of which the new trial was sought, was admittedly for the purpose of contradicting the evidence of Henry Miller, and for that purpose alone, and a new trial will not be granted to further that purpose. Railway v. Forsyth, 49 Tex. 171.

[3, 4] There was ample testimony to prove a title in appellees by three years limitation, as well as by ten years limitations, as hereinbefore found by us. Appellees had a consecutive chain of title from and under the sovereignty of the soil, and had and held peaceable and adverse possession of the land for more than three years before this action was instituted. The title was by a regular chain of written transfers, and appellees had no notice of any secret equities held by Louisa Kennon, if she. had any, and such secret equities could not affect their title to the land. The fact that one of the transfers was from an officer who sold it under execution did not break the continuity of title, and it has never been so held by the Supreme Court, as contended by appellants. In the case of Blum v. Rogers, 71 Tex. 668, 9 S. W. 595, it was held that a defendant in execution, who would be John Winkfield in this case, could not, by remaining in or taking possession of land subsequent to the sale, claim under the three years statute because the sheriff’s sale, if valid, breaks his chain of title, but not the chain of title of the man who buys at the execution sale. To the same effect is Grigsby v. May, 84 Tex. 240, 19 S. W. 343. If John Winkfield had subsequent to the execution sale attempted to convey title to the land, and appellees claimed through his conveyance, there would he a break in the chain of transfers, and the cases mentioned would apply, but they have no application whatever to the facts of this case. In order to break the line of transfer, one of the links of which was a deed made under execution, it devolved upon appellants to show that the execution sale was invalid, and that was not done. Wilson v. Palmer, 18 Tex. 592.

[5] The title by inheritance from Sam Harris to his wife and children was sufficient to form a link in a title that would sustain the plea of three years limitation. Williamson v. Simpson, 16 Tex. 433; Whitehead v. Foley, 28 Tex. 1. In the last case it was said: “Title acquired by inheritance is as regular and effectual as if by written memorial.”

[6]

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Bluebook (online)
143 S.W. 986, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennon-v-miller-texapp-1912.