Ludtke v. MacKey

251 S.W. 606, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 198
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 24, 1923
DocketNo. 8298. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 251 S.W. 606 (Ludtke v. MacKey) 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
Ludtke v. MacKey, 251 S.W. 606, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 198 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

PHEASANTS, O. J.

This is an action of trespass to try title brought by appellees against the appellant, to recover title and possession of a lot or parcel of land known and described as lot or block 6, in the Royal addition to the city of Houston. The defendant answered by general demurrer, general denial, and pleas of limitation of 3, 5, and 10 years. Upon the trial in the court below, after all the evidence was in, the court withdrew the case from the jury, and rendered a judgment in favor of plaintiffs.

This appeal is predicated upon the following propositions presented in appellant’s brief:

“First Proposition under the ' Second and Fourth Assignments. — The burden rests on the party claiming through a deed offered in evidence, to identify the land described in the deed as the land sued for, or that it includes the land sued for; and, if, from an inspection of the deed, it cannot be determined definitely what land is embraced in the description, parol evidence is admissible to show that it includes the land involved in the suit; but if no extrinsic evidence is offered to identify the land, and to prove that the land sued for is included in the description contained in the deed, the deed should not be admitted in evidence, over objection.
“Second Proposition under the Second and Fourth Assignments. — The deed from T. T. *607 Halley to T. J. Hailey describes a tract of land out of the Harris & Wilson two-league grant; but it will require some other evidence, besides the deed itself, to establish what tract of land it conveyed. Hence, as appellees, plaintiffs below, insist that it conveys the land in this suit, the deed itself not showing that fact, the burden was then on them to introduce evidence to identify the land described in said deed and to connect themselves in title with the. land described in that deed. No such evidence being introduced, the deed should have been excluded, on appellant’s objection, and stricken from the record on his motion.
“Third Proposition. — The appellees having failed to connect themselves in title by any valid description with the land shown to be held by the common source of title, they were not entitled to recover, for the reason that the appellees’ chain of title fails to show any deed identifying the land in controversy, and fails to show that the purported plat pf the Royal addition is a part of the land embraced in the common source of title.
“Fourth Proposition. — The appellees are not entitled to recover against the appellant, for the reason that they must recover upon the strength of their own title, and, having failed to show that they had title to the Royal addition under the common source of title, by any evidence whatever identifying the said purported Royal addition as a part of the common source of title, hence this pause should be reversed and rendered for the appellant.”

These propositions, each of which is sound as an abstract proposition of law, present but one question for our determination, and that is whether the evidence was sufficient •to authorize the admission in evidence of the deed from T. T. Hailey to T. J. Hailey over defendant’s objection that it did not convey the land in controversy.

The record disclosed that on June 15, 1854, D. W. 0. Harris, who was then the owner of lot 8 in the subdivision of the Harris and Wilson two-league grant on Buffalo bayou, in Harris county, made by D. Gregg, and containing -297% acres o'f land, conveyed said tract to. T. T. Hailey. On September 14, 1857, T. T. Hailey conveyed to T. J. Hailey a tract of land described as follows:

“A certain piece or parcel of land situated on the N. side of Buffalo bayou, being a part of a league of land donated to William P. Harris and Robert Wilson for building a steam mill at Harrisburg, commencing at the beg. cor. about 2 miles from the courthouse of Harris, called the city of Houston, and beginning on a pine tree mkd. thus, H, 22 in. dia.; thence W. 443% vs. to another pine 20 in. in dia. mkd. thus, HX; thence N. 2628% vs. to a pin oak 15 in. in dia. mkd. thus, HX; thence E. 443% vs. to a pine tree 24 in. in dia. mkd. thus, HXX; thence S. 2628% vs. to the place of beginning;. the said boundaries contain 230 acres, more or less, Spanish measure.”

On July 15, 1862, Thomas J. Hailey conveyed to Joseph Royal “twenty-five acres of land, situated north of Buffalo bayou, being the south end of lot eight of the two-league grant to Harris and Wilson.” In addition to describing this land as the south end of lot 8 it is also described by metes and bounds.

There is nothing in the field notes in this deed which identifies the 25 acres thereby conveyed as a part of the land described in the deed from T. T. to T. J. Hailey. Joseph Royal subdivided this 25 acres into lots and blocks, designating said subdivision as the Royal addition to the city of Houston. The plat of this addition, which was made by D. Gregg, the surveyor who made the original subdivision of the Harris and Wilson grant, was recorded in the deed records of Harris county on the 28th day of August, 1862. Lot 6 in this addition, which is the land in controversy,, was conveyed by Joseph Royal to E. G. Carroll on August 27, 1862, and appellees hold the title acquired by Carr,oll.

The only land shown to' have been owned by T. T. Hailey on the Harris and Wilson grant was lot 8 in the subdivision of said grant which was conveyed to him by D. W. C. Harris, as before shown. No claim to any part of lot 8 is shown to have been asserted by T. T. Hailey after he conveyed the 230 acres to T. J. Hailey, and no claim was asserted by any of his heirs until a quitclaim deed was executed by his son in December, 1912, conveying lot 8 to appellant for a nominal consideration.

[1,2] It goes without saying that a deed which does not convey the land in controversy. is not admissible as evidence of title in a suit involving the title to the land. It is- also true that the absolute final identity of any particular tract of land as the land described in a particular deed can only be shown by evidence extrinsic of the deed. In other words, the application of the description given in a deed to a particular tract of land, so as to identify such tract as the land described in the deed, must always be shown by extrinsic parol evidence. When a plaintiff brings a suit to recover a particular tract of land, if .the deeds in his chain of title introduced in evidence describe the land thereby conveyed as he describes it in his petition, they show that he has title to the land claimed by him, and, if the defendant’s answer does not deny that he is in possession, and is claiming the land described in the petition, the identity of the land in controversy with that described in the deeds is established. When, however, the description in a deed offered in evidence by a plaintiff fails to show that the land described in the petition is conveyed by the deed, such deed is not evidence of title unless extrinsic evidence is introduced which is sufficient to show that the description in the deed does include the land described in the petition. Kingston v. Pickins, 46 Tex. 101; Cook v. Oliver, 83 Tex. 559, 19 S. W. 161; Frost v. Erath Cattle Co., 81 Tex. 505, 17 S. W. 52, 26 Am. St. Rep. 831.

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Related

Massie v. Hutcheson
296 S.W. 939 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1927)
Ludtke v. Mackey
261 S.W. 140 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
251 S.W. 606, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ludtke-v-mackey-texapp-1923.