MacDonnell v. De Los Fuentes

26 S.W. 972, 7 Tex. Civ. App. 136, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 272
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 11, 1894
DocketNo. 237.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 26 S.W. 972 (MacDonnell v. De Los Fuentes) 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
MacDonnell v. De Los Fuentes, 26 S.W. 972, 7 Tex. Civ. App. 136, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 272 (Tex. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

*138 NEILL, Associate Justice.

This suit was instituted by the appellees in the form of an action of trespass to try title to recover from C. M. Macdonnell four leagues of land, known as the “San Casimero” tract, lying in the counties of Encinal and LaSalle.

The appellants, defendants below, pleaded a general denial, not guilty, and the three, five, and ten years’ statutes of limitation. The appellees, plaintiffs below, at the same time filed a supplemental petition alleging coverture of some of plaintiffs in avoidance of the statute of limitation.

On October 20, 1892, the death of the original defendant was suggested, and Allen Macdonnell and Mary Macdonnell, the appellants, were made parties defendant, who, on the 14th of November, 1892, adopted the answer of the original defendant.

The case was tried before a jury and resulted in a judgment for plaintiffs, from which this appeal was taken. This case was on appeal before to our Supreme Court, and is reported in 85 Texas, 132.

Conclusions of Facts.—1. Valentin de los Fuentes died intestate in 1833, vested with an inchoate title to the lands involved in this suit. He left surviving him his wife, Tomasa de la Pena, and six children, whose names are Juliana, Josefa, Refugio, Sabas, San Juana, and Barbora. After his death a natural daughter, who was named Concepcion de Pena, was born unto his wife. Juliana married Juan Flores in 1835, who died in 1855; Josefa married Agapito Martinez in 1840; Refugio married Julian Gonzales in 1852, who died two years after his marriage; San Juana married Guadalupe Vidaurri in 1842, who died prior to his wife, who died in 1865, leaving three sons, Ildefonso, Lucio, and Serapio, who are plaintiffs. Sabas de las Fuentes, a son, died in 1879, leaving a son, Valentin, Jr., who in turn died leaving a son named Jose Refugio; Barbora married Manuel Maria Moveno, both of whom are dead, and a son named Manuel Maria, Jr., survives them and is one of plaintiffs. Concepcion never married. Tomasa de la Pena died in the year 1868.

2. On the 17th day of April, 1871, the State of Texas issued a patent granting the land in controversy to Valentin de las Fuentes, his heirs or assigns.

3. Evidence upon which the third conclusion of fact is based: The appellants claim title to the land in controversy through the wife and heirs of Valentin de los Fuentes, the original grantee. In determining whether this claim is sustained by the record we deem it best, before stating our conclusion on this issue, to recite at some length the testimony upon which we base such conclusion. C. M. Macdonnell, the original plaintiff, testified by depositions, that D. W. Heard was the name Charles Callaghan used in a correspondence he had with Augustine M. Saavedra in regard to the San Casimero tract of land. *139 Ho facts, however, are stated by the witness upon which he bases such conclusion; nor is there anything found in the record to indicate that Callaghan ever used such name. There is a letter, the contents of which will be stated, copied in the record, which purports to have been written by Saavedra and addressed to D. W. Heard, but there is nothing to indicate that it was written to Charles Callaghan. He also deposed, that Alpheus Rackliff died about the time the patent for the land was issued, and that he was known among the Mexicans as Don Rafael Alfrido. He attached to his depositions Exhibits “A,” “B,” and “C,” which are respectively as follows:

[Exhibit “A.”]
“Señor Don Bafael Alfrido: “a Guerrero, 29th August, 1855.
“I take occasion to salute you, and advise you that I have learned that you sold the land which belongs to me and my Sabas. We are very much in need of money, which we owe in Roma. See if you can send us as much as 150 dollars to cover, and from the same pay the expenses which belong to it. Hothing further, etc.
[Signed] “Ma. Tomasa de la Pena.”
[Exhibit “B.”]
“I have delivered to Don Agapito Martinez, of the City of Guerrero, six hundred and thirty-three dollars and three bits and a half, in full payment for the land of San Casimero which belonged to Don Valentin de los Fuentes, as agent of the heirs of Valentin de los Fuentes, deceased. [Signed] “Agapito Martinez.”
“Laredo, Texas, August 12, 1861.
[Exhibit “C.”]
“Señor Don D. W. Heard: Hew Laredo, March 26, 1871.
“My Very Dear Sir—Having been advised by Rafael Alfrido that being about to sell to you the pasture land known as the water hole of San Casimero, which by denouncement belonged to the family of my deceased wife, Dona San Juana Fuentes, you have a fear that hereafter a claim may arise on the part of some heir, and for this reason I should give him a certificate of the legal acquisition of the said right. In accordance with what is just, I ought to say to you that in the year 1861, when I came from Mexico, I was informed by the lady my mother-in-law, Dona Tomasa de la Pena, that with previous consent of her children, all of whom were present except my deceased wife and my sister-in-law, Barbera Fuentes, who lived in Guanajuato, she had sold to Don Alfrido the pasture land of San Casimero, which belonged
*140 by denouncement to my deceased father-in-law, Don Valentin de los Fuentes, and to effect this one thousand dollars had been received in satisfaction, which was paid in goods and advances on accounts.
“As the said Alfrido desired to legalize his purchase, a few days after my arrival from the capital he caused her to execute a document which should verify it, and to this effect it was subscribed by all the children present, I doing it myself likewise for the part of my wife, although I was not satisfied with said sale.
“Therefore, in my judgment Don Rafael Alfrido is the actual possessor and lawful owner of the said land, and has the right and power to do with it what he pleases. This is all the information I can give you now, having taken pleasure in offering you my services.
[Signed] “Agn. M. Saavedra.”
Macdonnell testified, that the first two papers were delivered by Rackliff to Callaghan at the time the latter bought the land, and that he has had all of the papers in his possession ever since Callaghan’s death. The appellants also, after proving they came from the proper custody, introduced in evidence as ancient instruments the following papers, against which appellee had filed affidavits of forgery, viz:

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Bluebook (online)
26 S.W. 972, 7 Tex. Civ. App. 136, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macdonnell-v-de-los-fuentes-texapp-1894.