Lewis v. Ames

44 Tex. 319
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 44 Tex. 319 (Lewis v. Ames) 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
Lewis v. Ames, 44 Tex. 319 (Tex. 1875).

Opinion

Roberts, Chief Justice.

The appellants, who were plaintiffs below, were entitled to recover the whole of the land sued for, if it was shown that Robert Potter conveyed it by deed and by will to Mrs. Sophia A. Mayfield, that the will was legally probated, and plaintiffs derived the title to Mrs. Sophia A. Mayfield’s interest through a legal administration of her estate, provided Mrs. Harriet A. Ames was not legally the wife of Robert Potter and her children by him legitimate children, in reference to this land, and she has not acquired a right to the land or a part of it by the statute of limitations.

[327]*327This proposition brings into review the following questions, to wit:

1st. Was there a sufficient conveyance by deed from and will of Robert Potter of the land in controversy to Mrs. Sophia A. Mayfield ?

2d. Was the will of Robert Potter legally probated?

3d. Was there a legal administration of the estate of Sophia A. Mayfield, and did plaintiffs legally purchase said land from the administrator thereof?

4th. Was Mrs, Harriet A. Ames legally the wife of Robert Potter, so as to acquire a community interest in the land sued for, or a homestead interest therein, and as to make his and her children his surviving widow and heirs in reference thereto ?

5th. Did she acquire a right to the land, or any part of it, by the statute of limitations?

1st. Robert Potter, in the city of Austin, on the 8th day of February, 1842, executed a deed of gift to Mrs. Sophia A. Mayfield to a part of his headright then patented, lying and being on Ferry Lake, in the county of Paschal, and being section 12 in range 17, township 20, as known and marked on the map of surveys made by the authority of the United States, which deed was witnessed by C. Van Ness and K. L. Anderson.

It was acknowledged before Joseph Lee, C. J. T. C., and E., notary public, on the 9th day of February, 1842, and recorded in the county of Cass on the 1st day of March, 1854.

On the 11th day of February, 1842, Robert Potter made his will, witnessed by M. C. Hamilton, F. Henderson, and N. B. Taney, in which he devised this same section of land 12, with section 13 and fractional section 24, on which his residence was situated, all being part of his headright, to Mrs. Sophia A. Mayfield.

He gave in said will, to Mrs. Mary Chalmers, three sections of his said headright.

[328]*328He gave to Mrs. Harriet A. Page a portion of his said headlight, being the balance of it there located, (except one hundred acres to her brother, John D. Moore,) together with some slaves, stock, and other personal property.

He gave to John W. Crunk a negro girl; to James S. Mayfield his favorite horse Shakspeare; ’’ to Dr. John G. Chalmers the balance of his property, and appointed Col. Robert W. Smith his executor. This embraced all of his effects. There is no reference in his will to any children or to a wife.

It is argued that section 12, being embraced in the will as well as in the deed, is evidence that the deed was never delivered or considered a valid instrument by the parties to it. To this it may be answered that it was acknowledged for record before the will was made, and that it may have been included in the will to make more sure the gift. But whatever may have been the object or fancy, it is not perceived that including it in the will would he evidence of itself that the deed was not a valid instrument.

The deed and will are in proper form, and stand unimpeached so far as relates to their valid execution.

2d. Was the will of Robert Potter legally probated ?

It is contended that it was not legally probated, not from any objection to the manner or degree of proof of it, but because the County Court of Red River county had no jurisdiction thereof, for the reason that Potter died at his residence on Ferry Lake in March, 1842, which was then a part of the county of Bowie, and not a part of the county of Red River. His residence was north of the lake sometimes called Soda Lake, and near the line between Texas and the United States, which accounts for the section surveys made before the dividing line between the two republics had been run.

Red River was recognized as a municipality by the consultation in 1835, with no defined limits otherwise than by the remote settlements therein. In 1837 its limits were indicated by an act of Congress, and was bounded on the north [329]*329by Red river, on the west by the Bois d’Arc, (creek that runs into Red river,) on the south by the Big Cypress and Soda Lake, and on the east by the line of the United States. (Paschal’s Dig., art. 293.)

Before this petition was filed, (4th July, 1857,) the locality of Potter’s residence had been in Red River county, in Paschal county, (a judicial county,) in the southern division of Red River county, in Bowie county, and (when the suit was filed) Cass county, as shown by the laws of the Congress and the State of Texas.

By an act of Congress approved on the 17th day of December, 1840, the county of Bowie was created, embracing ' the present limits of that county, and also extending it down south of Sulphur Fork of Red river, covering the original territory of Cass county, as it existed in 1857, to the Big Cypress and Soda Lake. (5 Cong., 97.)

During the same session, and before there could have been any organization pursuant to said act, another act of Congress was approved, on the 28th of January, 1841, which set apart all that part of old Red River county south of the Sulphur Fork of Red river, under the name of Paschal, as a county for judicial purposes, but retaining it as a part of Red River county in the election of representatives in Congress. (5 Cong., 57.)

At the January Term, 1842, of the Supreme Court these judicial counties, such as Paschal, of which quite a number had been created, were decided to be unconstitutional, upon the ground that a district of country could not be made a county for any purpose unless it was given a representative in Congress. (Stockton v. Montgomery, Dallam’s Dig., 473.)

By an act of the 5th of February, 1842, the location of the county seat of Paschal county was provided for. (6 Cong., 118.)

By a supplimental act of December, 1842, it was directed that the clerk of the county and probate courts of the county [330]*330of Bed Biver should transmit all the papers of every description belonging to the county of Bowie to that county. (7 Cong., 3.)

At the same session, on the 16th January, 1843, a supplemental act was passed declaring Bowie county to extend to the Big Cypress and Soda or Ferry Lake, and directing that its citizens south of Sulphur Fork should vote with Bowie county, in which it is styled “a new county taken from the county of old Red River, called Bowie county.” (7 Cong., 31.)

This act provided for the running of the line between Red River and Bowie, and for the transmission of all papers and documents from Red River which belong within the territory of Bowie county.”

By an act of the 1st February, 1844, it was provided that all of that portion of the counties of Red River and Bowie should be known and styled the southern division of Red River county, and should vote with Red River, and the courts should be held at two places, Clarksville and Dangerfield.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Tex. 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-ames-tex-1875.