L. H. Lauchheimer & Sons v. Saunders

76 S.W. 750, 97 Tex. 137, 1903 Tex. LEXIS 215
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 19, 1903
DocketNo. 1250.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 76 S.W. 750 (L. H. Lauchheimer & Sons v. Saunders) 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
L. H. Lauchheimer & Sons v. Saunders, 76 S.W. 750, 97 Tex. 137, 1903 Tex. LEXIS 215 (Tex. 1903).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

Court of Civil Appeals failed to make a statement of their findings of fact in this case, but the undisputed evidence establishes the following facts:

In 1859 J. R. Saunders bought nine acres of land situated in what is now the corporate limits of the town of Gatesville, but at that time the town was unincorporated. At the time Saunders bought the land he was the head of a family and has continued so to be down to the present time. He moved upon the land, established his home and used the same in such manner as to acquire the right of homestead under the Constitution. In 1868 Saunders bought 100 acres of land lying north and adjoining his nine acres, and from that time used the 100-acre tract in connection with his home place so as to establish a rural homestead upon the nine acres and the 100 acres, if, in fact, the nine acres was not embraced in the limits of the town of Gatesville at that time. In 1854 the town of Gatesville was located and plotted into a public square and ten blocks, which were divided into lots with four streets and alleys; two of the streets running east and west, one called North (now Main) Street and the other South (now Leon) Street. The North Street was actually laid out and opened to the west as far as Leon River, but South.Street was not opened to the river at the time. North Street extended through the town and along the north side of the public square, passing in front and south of the nine-acre tract upon which Saunders resided. The nine-acre tract lay between North Street and Stillhouse Branch. The portion of the town that was laid into blocks and lots was about thirty feet higher than Saunder’s home. A bluff runs around the north and west part of the town and Saunders’ home was below the bluff. The residence of Saunders was built upon the nine acres so as to front south upon North street. From the square to Saunders’ property was about 250 yards. The blocks which were laid out and plotted in 1854 did not reach as far as Saunders’ property, and there was at the time no person living upon or occupying any of the lots between Saunders’ home and the square, except qne house which was to the east of Saunders upon the bluff. There was one settlement opposite to Saunders on the south side of North street and another settlement about 200 yards from him to the southwest of his place, and a third settlement west of him about 400 yards on the Leon River; the remainder of the surrounding lands and lots were unoccupied. At that time the population of the town was about 100. ,

In 1868, Saunders bought 100 acres of land lying on the north side of Stillhouse Branch and adjoining the nine-acre tract, which he had previously owned and upon which he then resided. The population of the town at this time was about six or seven hundred. Some additional settlements had been made around Saunders’ home; one on the east, and two or three on the west and southwest of him. In 1897, at the time *140 plaintiff and intervener claim to have acquired their rights, the population of the town was about 2000, and the settlements had extended westward from the public square so as to occupy all of the lots and land lying between the public square and Saunders’ home place, and all of the lots and parcels of land adjoining Saunders on the west, south and east, except one lot on the west. There was no vacant lot between Main Street and Stillhouse -Branch. There was no house on the north of Saunders; his north line and the north line of the town were identical.

The town was incorporated under the general laws of the State in 1870, and a plot of the town was made and recorded as required by law. This plot embraced the lots, blocks and streets laid out in 1854, and added others, laying out into blocks and lots, streets and alleys, all of the land embraced in- the west part of the corporation, except some in the southwest portion and Saunders’ nine acres. Upon this plot the nine-acre tract, the home of Saunders, was marked as block No. 61, and from that time on Saunders rendered his home for taxation in the city as well as to the State and county as block 61 in the town of Gatesville. Saunders continued to reside upon his home place, voted at elections held for city purposes, and held the office of alderman of the town for several terms. From 1857 Saunders pursued the business of merchant in the town of Gatesville until he became president of a bank, in which last place he continued until 1897, when he failed in business. No streets or alleys were ever opened through Saunders’ nine-acre tract; it'remains the same in shape as when he first purchased it.

Does the undisputed evidence in this case show that, as a matter of law, Saunders’ home place was embraced within the town of Gatesville in the year 1897, when the plaintiffs in error claim to have acquired rights in the land outside of the town? Assuming that Saunders acquired a rural homestead on the nine-acre tract at the time he settled upon it in 1859 and that it continued to be a rural homestead up to the time he bought the 100 acre's in 1868 or 1869, the facts are sufficient to establish Saunders’ right to a homestead in the 109 acres at the latter date, and the law will presume that the facts which established this right continued until the contrary is shown. Wilder v. McConnell, 91 Texas, 604.

Whether the home be urban or rural depends upon the conditions and circumstanfces which surround it at the time the adverse right is asserted. The Constitution exempts homesteads, whether urban or rural, when it is established, but it does not guarantee that the character impressed upon the property at one time shall continue for the future. Wilder v. McConnell, before cited; Bull v. Conroe, 13 Wis., 233; Taylor v. Boulware, 17 Texas, 78; Iken v. Olenick, 42 Texas, 196.

When a rural homestead right exists in lands adjacent to a town or city, the mere fact of the extension of the corporate lines of that city or town so as to embrace the homestead or a part of it will not destroy the character of the rural homestead, nor impair the rights of the owner in the property as such. Wilder v. McConnell, before cited; Posey v. Bass, *141 77 Texas, 512. But should the town actually build and extend, so as to include what was before in the country, it would then become in fact a part of the town, and by virtue of the Constitution the character of the homestead would be changed by the changed conditions from rural to urban without regard to the question of incorporation. Iken v. Olenick, before cited; Boberts v. Cawthon, 26 Texas Civ. App., 477; Watkins v. Abbott, 14 Texas Civ. App., 447; Williams v. Willis, 84 Texas, 298.

The undisputed testimony in this case shows that in the year 1897 the town of Gatesville had extended by actual occupancy of the different lots and parcels of land so that between the public square of that town and the home tract of J. B. Saunders there was not left a single vacant lot, and that all of the land lying between Leon street and Stillhouse Branch on the north was occupied by residences or by business houses. Every parcel of land which touched Saunders’ property on either side except the north and all of the contiguous property surrounding him had become the homes of citizens of that town, and although his property had not been divided into lots nor .had streets been opened up through it, his only outlet towards the town was over a public street that lay along his south line. His home was almost in the heart of a.

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Bluebook (online)
76 S.W. 750, 97 Tex. 137, 1903 Tex. LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-h-lauchheimer-sons-v-saunders-tex-1903.