McCollum v. Buckner's Orphans' Home

117 S.W. 886, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 348, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 208
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 9, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 117 S.W. 886 (McCollum v. Buckner's Orphans' Home) 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
McCollum v. Buckner's Orphans' Home, 117 S.W. 886, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 348, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 208 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

McMEANS, Associate Justice.

—This is a suit of trespass to try *350 title for 320 acres of the Malcom McAuley 1280-acre survey in Harris County, brought by the Buckner’s Orphans’ Home against M. McCollum, John Gant, and a number of other defendants not necessary to name in that they were dismissed from the case. Mrs. Margaret Holland and others intervened, but having made no further appearance were dismissed. The defendant John Gant appeared by answer claiming only as tenant of the defendant McCollum. The case went to trial with Buckner’s Orphans’ Home as plaintiff and Mc-Collum as real defendant, though nominally Gant still appeared as defendant. The case was tried before a jury which rendered a verdict for plaintiff, upon which judgment was duly entered, and from this judgment this appeal is prosecuted by defendant McCollum alone.

Appellee established by evidence a prima facie title in itself to the land in controversy. The appellant attempted to defeat appellee’s title by alleging and undertaking to establish an outstanding title, and to this end they sought to prove by circumstantial evidence the execution and delivery of a deed from McAuley, the original grantee, to William Young, of date anterior to the execution by the administrator of said grantee of the deed under which appellee claims.

By his eighth, ninth and tenth assignments appellant complains of the action of the court in admitting in evidence over his objection the deed from H. G. Pannell, administrator of McAuley, to F. B. Lubbock, and the deed from Lubbock to Michael Connelly, and the deed from Connelly to John Neil, the objection to each deed being that the description of the land sought to be conveyed was uncertain, indefinite and ambiguous, and the ambiguity was patent, and that the deeds were void for uncertainty of' description, and irrelevant and incompetent for any purpose. 'The eleventh assignment complains of the admission in evidence over appellant’s objection of a certified copy of a deed from McAuley to H. G. Pannell and George C. Peters, and a certified copy of a deed from McAuley to B. A. Noland and H. G. Pannell, which were offered by appellee in aid of the description of the land conveyed by the deeds mentioned in the eighth, ninth and tenth assignments; the objection being that the ambiguity in the deeds was patent, and that, therefore, extraneous evidence in aid of the description was inadmissible.

The only proposition advanced under the foregoing assignments is that where the ambiguity in a deed is patent it is error to admit other evidence for the purpose of aiding the same. The description in the deed from Pannell, administrator, to Lubbock is as follows: “Lying and being situated in the county of Harris, in the Bepublic of Texas, . . . 320 acres of land, part of a tract of 1,280 acres surveyed on Green’s Bajura for said McAuley, deceased, on his bounty land warrant, bounded on the east by a part of the said 1,280-acre tract sold to Noland, and on the west also by a part of the 1,280-acre tract sold to Pannell.” The deed from Lubbock to Connelly and from Connelly to Neil contained substantially the same description.

We think there can be no question that the description contained in the deeds was sufficient to admit of their introduction in evidence over the objection urged. The evidence also shows that the McAuley survey of 1,280 acres was in shape one mile wide from east to west, *351 and two’ miles long from north to south. The deeds show that the 330 acres referred to was situated in Harris County and were part of the McAuley survey, and was bounded on the east by the part of said survey sold to Noland and on the west by the part of the survey sold to Pannell. The description, it is true, is imperfect and, standing alone without other evidence to aid it, might not be sufficient to identify the land, but, being imperfect, the deed would not for that reason be void; and other proper evidence was admissible to show the boundaries and prove its identity. To do this appellee introduced in evidence certified copies of deeds from McAuley to B. A. Noland and H. G. Pannell and from McAuley to H. G. Pannell and George C. Peters. Bach of these deeds conveyed 330 acres of the McAuley survey, and the description given in each identifies the. land conveyed by it. The former shows that the 330 acres conveyed to Noland and Pannell were out of the extreme eastern part of the survey and was one-fourth mile wide from east to west, and two miles long, running the entire length of the survey; and the latter shows that the 330 acres conveyed to Pannell and Peters were also one-fourth mile wide from east to west, and two miles long, and that its extreme eastern boundary was a line running through the center of the survey from north to south. This left a tract between the two above mentioned of the same shape, and dimensions, and it is clear that it is the tract referred to in the deed from Pannell to Lubbock as “bounded on the east by a part of said 1,380-acre tract sold to Noland, and on the west also by a part of the 1,380-acre tract sold to Pannell.” (Cook v. Oliver, 83 Texas, 561; MacManus v. Orkney, 91 Texas, 33; Bowles v. Beal, 60 Texas, 324; Ragsdale v. Robinson, 48 Texas, 379; Norris v. Hunt, 51 Texas, 614; Coker v. Roberts, 71 Texas, 601.) The assignments are overruled. This disposes, adversely to appellant’s contention, of his thirteenth assignment, which complains of the refusal of the trial court to strike out of the evidence the deeds from Pannell to Lubbock, Lubbock to Connelly, and Connelly to Neil.

Nor was there error in admitting in evidence the testimony of the witness Yarbrough as to the location of the McAuley survey with reference to Green’s Bayou, and admitting evidence of the probate proceedings of McAuley’s estate, all of which were offered in aid of the description in said deeds (Hermann v. Likens, 90 Texas, 449), and the assignments of error raising the point are overruled.

The court charged that “If the jury have indulged the presumption of the execution and delivery of a deed from Malcolm McAuley to Wm. Young during the lifetime of said McAuley, then they will inquire whether they will indulge the presumption of a sale and reconveyance of said property from said Young back to McAuley or his administrator prior to the execution of the deed from McAuley’s administrator to Lubbock, . . . and if the jury believe . . . that the circumstances are consistent with the inference or the presumption of a resale and conveyance of said land from said Young to the said McAuley or his administrator, as claimed by defendants, etc.” Appellant, by his third and fourth assignments of error, contends that inasmuch as the claim referred to in the charge was one made by the plaintiff, the use of the word “defendant” instead of *352 “plaintiff” was a fatal error. We can not agree with this. From its context it was patent that the charge meant “plaintiff” where “defendant” was nsed, and, in the connection in which it was used, a jury capable of understanding and passing upon the issues involved in the case could not have been misled thereby. (Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. Co. v. Porfert, 72 Texas, 351.) This may also be said as to the word “they,” which was used at one place in the charge to designate the plaintiff, Buckner’s Orphans’ Home. The ássignments raising the points are overruled.

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Bluebook (online)
117 S.W. 886, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 348, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccollum-v-buckners-orphans-home-texapp-1909.