Massie v. Hutcheson

258 S.W. 244
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 9, 1924
DocketNo. 2228. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 258 S.W. 244 (Massie v. Hutcheson) 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
Massie v. Hutcheson, 258 S.W. 244 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

HAUL, C. J.

The appellees, as the heirs of Dr. Jos. Jones, filed this suit in trespass to try title against appellant to recover the title and possession of section No. 109, in block 1, in Floyd county,, patented to H. A. and J. L. Cagle. The appellant Massie pleaded not guilty and the statutes of limitations of three, five, and ten years. For the sake of brevity we will not here make an extended statement of the facts, since they are practically the same as are shown in the published reports of this case, to which we refer in (Tex. Civ. App.) 159 S. W. 315; 110 Tex. 558, 222 S. W. 962; (Tex. Civ. App.) 226 S. W. 695, where the judgment was reversed and remanded. It was again tried at the March term, 1923, of the district court of Floyd epunty, and the jury returned a special verdict answering in the affirmative the two issues submitted by the court as follows:

“(1) Did Dr. Jones and wife execute and deliver to O. W. Haxton, on or about the 14th day of January, 1878, a deed to survey No. 109, the land in controversy in this case?
“(2) Did C. W. Haxton voluntarily burn the instrument which he claimed was a deed to land in Texas?”

The court entered a judgment in favor of the appellees, based upon this verdict, and in doing so ignored the first finding as being immaterial. In addition to the findings of the jury, the trial judge filed findings of fact and conclusions of law. It was not necessary for the trial judge to file his findings and conclusions, because the case was tried to a jury; but, since he has filed them, we will consider such of them as may be pertinent while considering the several contentions. Ward v. Etier (Tex. Com. App.) 251 S. W. 1028.

Under the first proposition it is contended that the district court was bound to follow the verdict of the jury in rendering judgment or to set the verdict aside and grant a new trial, and could not disregard such verdict even though it might be against the evidence. It is recited in the judgment that the first special issue was wholly immaterial and was for that reason disregarded by the trial court. The appellant contends that the first special issue is the controlling issue in the case and that the court should not have submitted the second special issue, which was merely evidentiary, and that the judgment should have been based upon the first special issue and judgment rendered for appellant accordingly. The plaintiff sought to recover the land as the heirs of Dr. Jones and wife, and the substance of appellant’s contention under this proposition is that since the jury found that Jones and wife did deed the land to O. W. Haxton, and because the evidence showed that appellant Massie had, since the suit was filed, obtained conveyances from the heirs of Haxton, a judgment for appellant is the only proper decree which the court could have entered. If the finding of the jury in reply to the first special issue is sustained by the evidence and the second finding is immaterial, this contention should be sustained But, in passing upon the facts before us in *246 this record, which are substantially the same upon the former appeal, this court held that the evidence was not sufficient to sustain a judgment for the appellant. We find nothing in. this record to change that opinion. In 226 S. W. on page 699,' Boyce, Justice, said:

“I, however, agree to the reversal of the case on the ground that under the particular facts of the case the appellee, claiming under the alleged deed from Joseph Jones to O. W. Hax-ton, was bound'to furnish clear proof of the existence of such instrument, and its contents, and that the proof falls short of this requirement, particularly in respect to the description of the property conveyed by the deed, to the existence of which the witnesses testified.”

It appears from the evidence that Jones and wife came to Texas from Indiana, and in May, 1877, together with one Garshwilder, Jones acquired the title to section 109, with four other sections of land patented to the same original grantees, in Floyd county, Tex.; that Jones and Garshwilder, by joint deed, conveyed one of the other sections to John Weir, and then by an exchange of deeds divided amongst themselves the remaining four sections. In the partition deed Jones obtained the title to sections 109 and 117. In the same year Jones conveyed section 117 to one Dean. After the death of Jones it appeared from the deed records of Floyd county that Jones had never conveyed section 109. Jones had. never paid any taxes on that section, and it was not listed in the inventory of property belonging to his estate. The appel-lees, having learned that the record title of 109 appeared to be in their father, filed this suit. Soon after Dr. Jones came to Texas, O. W. Haxton, under whom appellant claims, came to Texas, bringing some horses and other personal property belonging to Jones, and lived with Jones, as stable man, for several years, returning to Attica, Ind., where he had previously known Jones. After his return to Indiana and as early as 1882, Haxton stated to several persons that he owned some land in Texas. In 1886 he showed the witness Robinson a paper which he said was a deed to him from Dr. Jones. In 1882 he exhibited an instrument to his half-brother, Jerry Haxton, which he said was a deed to a section of tend in Texas, but which he did not permit his brother to read. Jerry Haxton further testified that his brother, O. W. Hax-ton, got out some papers a few days before his death in 1902, and said he was going to burn them, and when, afterwards, he was asked about the Texas deed, replied, “Ashes .tell no stories.” Layman, the son-in-law of O. W. Haxton, testified that Haxton lived with his family for several years and on several occasions referred to his ownership of some land in Texas, and that in 1879 and again in 1884, exhibited to the witness an instrument which Layman read and described as a deed from Dr. Jones and wife to said Haxton, to a section of land in Floyd county, Tex. The witness could give no further description of the land as contained in the deed. The deed from Jones to Dean, conveying section 117, was executed and acknowledged January 17, 1878. The instrument, whatever it was, referred to in the notarial record of Julius Royer, was executed and acknowledged by Dr. Jones on January 14, 1878, and by his wife on January 28, 1878. The notarial record merely shows the execution and acknowledgment of some instrument, the character of which is not stated by the notary, by Jos. Jones and wife; the land being described only as located in Floyd county, “H. A. and J. L. King, Grantees.” -Neither O. W. Haxton nor any of his heirs, under whom appellant claims, ever paid any taxes on the land or asserted any claim to-the property in any other way until after the institution of this suit in 1911, when they conveyed it to the appellant, W. M. Massie.

This court held upon the former appeal that the case was not governed by the rule announced in cases in which the doctrine is stated that a presumption may be indulged, in favor of the conveyance where there has-been a long-continued claim of title asserted in such manner as to charge the other party with knowledge of the claim and where there has been a corresponding acquiescence by the other party in such claim. The law is settled in this state that a presumption may be indulged of a proper conveyance under such circumstances and that strict proof of the execution and contents of such conveyance is not required. Taylor v. Watkins, 26 Tex. 688; Herndon v. Vick, 89 Tex.

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