Mars v. Morris

106 S.W. 430, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 216, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 208
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 12, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 106 S.W. 430 (Mars v. Morris) 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
Mars v. Morris, 106 S.W. 430, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 216, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 208 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

WILLS OH, Chief Justice.

Appellant’s suit against appellee was to try the title to 43 32-100 acres of the Joshua B. Hill survey in Hopkins County. His petition, in the form usual in such suits, was filed in the District Court of Hopkins County on January 8, 1906. Appellee answered by a general demurrer, a general denial, a plea of not guilty, a plea setting up the statute of limitations of five years, and a suggestion that he had in good faith made permanent and valuable improvements on the land. By a supplemental petition appellant demurred to appellee’s answer, and averred that the improvements made by appellee on the land, were made within twelve months before his suit was filed and after same was filed, and with a knowl *218 edge at the time on appellee’s part that he had no interest in nor title to the land; and appellant further averred that if appellee in good faith held possession and made the improvements claimed to have been made by him, and was allowed to recover for same, that he should be allowed to recover as against appellee the rental value of the land, which he alleged to be $100 per year. On a trial had February 2, 1907, the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant, and accordingly on that date a judgment was rendered and entered in favor of appellee.

By his deed dated July 23, 1900, and filed for record September 15, 1900, for a consideration of $1670 paid and to be paid to him, one J. H. Mars conveyed to appellee a tract of land described as containing “by estimate” 334 acres, and otherwise described as follows:

“Beginning at the southwest corner of the J. B. Hill survey; thence north to the northwest corner of said survey 1200 vrs. a stake; thence east with the north boundary line of said survey 1570, a stake; thence south to the south Boundary line of said Hill survey 1200 vrs. a stake; thence west to the southwest corner of said survey 1570 vrs. to the place of beginning, containing by estimate, 334 acres of land of the J. B. Hill headright survey.”

By his deed of gift dated' February 15, 1904, said J. H. Mars conveyed to his son T. C. Mars, appellant, a tract of land described as containing “by estimate” 20% acres, and otherwise described as follows:

“Beginning 1570 vrs. east from the. southwest corner of the said J. B. Hill survey at B. C. Morris’ southeast corner in said Hill survey; thence east 100 vrs. to the southwest corner of a tract sold to Alvin Gregg; thence north 1200 vrs. to the north boundary line of Hill survey; thence west 100 vrs. to the northeast corner of B. C. Morris’ tract in said survey; thence south 1200 vrs. to the place of beginning, containing by estimate 20% acres of land.”

It appears from the evidence that the distance from the northwest corner of the tract of land purchased by appellee of J. H. Mars to a bois d’arc stake at the northwest corner of a tract of land in the same survey owned by one Gregg, according to one surveyor who testified is 1774 varas, and according to another surveyor who also testified is 1778 varas. The call in appellee’s deed from his northwest corner is: “Thence east with the north boundary line of said survey 1570, a stake.” The unit of measure is omitted in the call, but the other calls in the deed are for varas, and we think this call must be treated as a call east 1570 varas. Because of representations made to him by J. H. Mars, at the time he purchased the land, appellee contends that his north line extends to the bois d’arc stake at the northwest corner of the Gregg tract, and that his east line extends thence south with Gregg’s west line, and so includes, with the other calls in his deed, the land in controversy. Appellant’s contention is that the appellee’s north line should not be extended farther east than the distance—1570 varas—called for in his deed, and that the strip 208 by 1200 varas. *219 along the west boundary line of the Gregg tract passed to him by his father’s deed. It appears from the evidence that J. H. Mars owned a part of the Hill survey bounded on the north, east and west by inclosed land, and on the south by uninclosed land. The land on the west was owned by one McAnear, and that on the east by one Gregg. Appellee, a stranger in the neighborhood in which the land was situated, and ignorant of its boundaries, with a view of purchasing the tract owned by J. H. Mars in the Hill survey, went over it, along Gregg’s west line as marked by his fence, and at his northwest corner found a bois d’arc stake. Another stake west from this one was pointed out to him by McAnear, who owned the land adjoining on the west, as marking the northwest corner of the Mars tract. After so inspecting the land appellee went to see said J. H. Mars, who lived in another county, and proposed to purchase from him the tract of land. Appellee testified that for the purpose of identifying it he inquired of Mars if the bois d’arc stake at the northwest corner of the Gregg land was the corner of his land; that Mars replied that it was—that the land he owned was against Gregg’s—and at the same time informed appellee that he supposed the stake pointed out to him by McAnear was the northwest corner of the tract he (Mars) owned on the Hill survey; that his (Mars’) proposition was to sell appellee the land he owned on that survey; that he thought the tract contained about 334 acres, and that he wanted $5 per acre for it; that on this basis the sale was consummated—appellee paying to Mars $270 in cash and executing and delivering to him seven notes for $200 each, payable respectively on or before November 1, 1901, 1902, 1903, 1904, 1905, 1906 and 1907, and secured by the vendor’s lien expressly retained in them on the land. Testifying for appellant, Mars denied having made the representations charged to him by appellee. The deed executed by Mars and delivered to appellee in consummating the sale was made July 23, 1900. By November 15 following appellee had inclosed the entire tract between the McAnear land on the west and the Gregg land on the east by a fence; and during October, 1900, built a cow shed and barn on the strip thereof now in controversy. He constructed a dwelling house on the other part of the land which, with a part of the land, he sold to one France in January, 1904. In the fall of that year he built a dwelling house on the land in controversy. Appellee testified that he intended to buy, and believed he had bought, and that his deed conveyed, all of the tract owned by Mars on the survey. When he sold to France in 1904, he ascertained that there was in the tract an excess of, as he thought, about 20 acres over the quantity (334 acres) specified as conveyed by his deed. Neither appellee nor Mars was sure as to the quantity in the tract at the time the contract for the sale and purchase of the land was made. The deed consummating the sale specified the quantity of land thereby conveyed as 334 acres “by estimate.” On February 29, 1904, before several of them were due, appellee paid to Mars the amount of the notes given for the land, and in addition to such amount, representing as the parties testified unearned interest, paid to him the sum *220 of $100 according to Mars, or $140 according to appellee. Before these notes were paid appellee had informed Mars that he thought there was an excess in the tract of about 20 acres over the 334 acres called for in his deed. The deed of gift from J. H. Mars to appellant was dated February 15, 1904. Appellee’s deed was filed for record on September 15, 1900.

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Bluebook (online)
106 S.W. 430, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 216, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mars-v-morris-texapp-1907.