Mass v. Bromberg

66 S.W. 468, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 145, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 69
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 17, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 66 S.W. 468 (Mass v. Bromberg) 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
Mass v. Bromberg, 66 S.W. 468, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 145, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 69 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Associate Justice.

This is an action of trespass to try title brought by appellee against the appellants to recover a tract of 110 acres of land, a part of the David Childers 310-acre survey in Houston County. The trial in the court below resulted in judgment in favor of appellee for the land sued for, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

Briefly stated, the material facts proven on the trial are as follows: *146 In 1883 Dick Mass, who is now dead, and the appellant, Rose Mass, owned as community property the David Childers 310-acre survey in . Houston County, on which they had established their home. On November 22, 1883, Dick Mass, for a consideration of $100 cash paid to him by appellee, conveyed to appellee 110 acres out of said 310 acres survey, expressly reserving in' said deed a homestead of 200 acres. The description of the land conveyed contained in the deed is as follows: “-One hundred and ten acres of land, it being a, part of my homestead tract of land which contains 310 acres, and the said 110 acres being the balance over and above a 200-acre homestead. Said land is situated in Houston County, Texas, about eighteen miles southeast of the town of Crockett, and is known as the David Childers headright survey, and the same on which I now reside, and for further particulars reference to the patent' will show.” It was agreed between said Dick Mass and appellee at the time the deed was executed or just after its execution that the 110-acres conveyed by the deed should be taken off the south end of the 310-acre tract. This deed was recorded on November 23, 1883, in the deed records of Houston County, and appellee has paid the taxes on said 110 acres regularly ever since his purchase of same. The 110 acres was not surveyed prior to the death of Dick Mass, which occurred in August, 1884. On September 14, 1885, appellant Rose Mass executed the following written agreement:

“The State of Texas, County of Houston.—Know all men by these presents, that I, Rose Mass, the surviving wife of Dick Mass, deed., have this day selected out of 310 acres of land my 200 acres as a homestead, and agree that Mr. M. Bromberg may survey the amount of land his deed calls for so as to respect my improvements as much as possible, respecting house and cleared land. I agree that the surveyor of Houston County, Texas, may at any time proceed to survey same. In making this selection it is expressly understood that I do not grant or transfer or convey any title that myself or any one of my heirs or anyone else may have in the matter of and concerning said land, but only select my homestead in order that same may be divided according • to law and same be settled.
“Witness my hand this the 14th day of September, A. D. 1885.
her
(Signed) “Rose + Mass.
mark
Attest:
“R. L. Warren,
her
“Was + Wortham.”
mark

In pursuance of this agreement and the prior agreement made with Dick Mass, appellee had his 110 acres surveyed off the south end of the 310-acre tract. As so surveyed the 110 acres contains from 15 to 30 *147 acres of land which had been inclosed by Dick Mass, and a1 few acres of which had been cultivated by the appellants and the said Dick Mass prior to the execution .of said deed. The 110 acres would have included more of the inclosed and cultivated land if taken out of any other part of the 310-acre tract. The north line of the 110-acre tract run's within twenty or thirty steps of the house in which appellants lived and have lived ever since Dick Mass purchased the property,: and when this line was run an old stable and crib were found to be south of the'line and on the 110-acre tract, but these improvements were moved by appellants after the survey was made and placed on the 200-acre tract. The appellants Iss and Jack Mass are the children of Dick Mass, deceased, the said Jack Mass being not yet 21 years old. Appellants havé paid taxes on the whole of the 310-acre tract, and have- had possession of a portion •of said 110-acre tract ever since the death of Dick Mass.

The. trial court finds in his conclusions of fact that the possession of the part of the 110-acre tract which has been, held by the appellants since said tract was surveyed has not been adverse to the -title of appellee, and the evidence in the record is sufficient to sustain this finding.

The first, second, third, and fourth assignments of error assail the ruling of the trial court in not sustaining defendants’ exceptions to plaintiffs petition. The petition excepted to contains all the necessary allegations of a petition in action of trespass to try title, and in addition thereto alleges the purchase by plaintiff from Dick Mass of 130 acres of land out of the 310-acre survey, the agreement by said Dick Mass that said 110- acres should be taken off the south end of said'310-acre tract, the death of Dick Mass, the subsequent agreement of Bose Mass .that said 110 acres should be surveyed off the south end of said 310-acre tract in accordance with the prior agreement of her said husband, and the ratification of said partition by all of the defendants, by removing their improvements off said 110-acre tract as so surveyed and designated. The exceptions urged to this petition were: 1. That it fails to show that the 110 acres of land from which plaintiff claims to have been ejected is the same land conveyed to him by Dick Mass. 2. It does -not.show what land was reserved in said deed as a homestead, nor does it show that the homestead of said Dick Mass and these appellants had been designated and set apart by him at the date of said deed for 110 acres, but same appears to have been done subsequent to the execution of ■said deed and is not shown to have been done by legal authority. 3. It is not shown whether the land was the separate property of Dick Mass or the community property of said Dick and Bose Mass, nor is it shown whether said Bose Mass ever administered upon the estate of Dick Mass, ■or qualified as the survivor of the community, or was otherwise legally authorized to make the agreement set up in the petition. 4. It is not ■shown how, where, when, or in what manner said alleged agreement was ratified by the defendants.

We are of opinion that the trial court properly overruled all of these exceptions. The deed from Dick Mass to plaintiff as set out in- the *148 petition conveyed only an undivided interest of 110 acres in the 310-aere tract, and it clearly appears from the petition that the land from which plaintiff was ejected, is the land obtained by him through the deed from Dick Mass and the alleged partition agreements between plaintiff and the said Dick and Rose Mass. The paroi agreement of Dick Mass as to what portion of the 310-acre tract should be held by plaintiff under his deed for 110 acres was a valid agreement for partition of the land, and it was unnecessary for the petition to allege a formal designation of the homestead prior to the death of Dick Mass.

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.W. 468, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 145, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mass-v-bromberg-texapp-1902.