McDonald v. Stanfield

197 S.W. 892, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 858
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 7, 1917
DocketNo. 255.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 197 S.W. 892 (McDonald v. Stanfield) 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
McDonald v. Stanfield, 197 S.W. 892, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 858 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

BROOKE, J.

This suit was an intervention filed by appellees against appellants, in an action of trespass to try title, and severed from the main suit and ordered docketed as a separate suit, with appellees as plaintiffs and appellants as defendants. Upon a trial before a jury upon special issues, judgment was rendered in favor of appellees for the land sued for.

Appellees’ case is based entirely upon the *893 statutes of limitation. Two separate tracts of land, known as the 160-acre tract and the 104-acre tract, are in controversy, both of which are parts of a large grant to J. F. De Romayor, and are parts of a large tract out of said grant, of which the record title was conveyed to R. McDonald, on December 27, 1006, and passed under his will to appellee, Mary E. McDonald, in whom the same is still vested. Concerning the 160-acre tract, it was agreed that appellees do not claim any possession prior to July 1, 1898.

It seems at some time prior to July 1, 1898, S. K. Stanfield, the father of appellees, moved on the land and built a house, and inclosed about 80 acres, which housé and inclosure have ever since remained as originally located, and S. K. Stanfield continued to reside there until his death, on August 13, 1912. The record contains no field notes or description of the land occupied by the house and inclosure. On June 5, 1902, he took a deed to the 160-acre tract from W. S. Coleman, but the inelosure remained as originally located. On January 2, 1907, R. McDonald, the owner of a tract of 9,008 acres of the Romayor grant, including the land in controversy, conveyed all of the timber on same and other lands to the Miller & Vidor Sawmill Company and T. B. Allen & Co., and also conveyed to them the exclusive right of possession to said lands.

On January 2, 1907, the Miller & Vidor Sawmill Company was located on said 9,008-acre tract and had built a commissary and was putting in a log pond, and was also building some tenant houses. First and last, they built a couple of hundred tenant houses on the tract of land, put up a hotel, built a big mill claimed to cut 100,000 feet of lumber per day, and continued to occupy that property with their mill and those houses, and to cut timber and saw it up, until about 1912 or 1913. They built about 16 miles of tramroad and spurs on the Ro-mayor tract. T. B. Allen & Co. began their operation on the same land in '190S. They built a hardwood mill and stave mill, and continued to cut hardwood timber from all parts of the Romayor tract that they could get to, up until about 1913 or 1914.

R. McDonald died on January 21, 1910, and all of his estate passed, under his will, to appellee, Mary E. McDonald. There is no evidence as to when administration proceedings under his will were begun. S. K. Stan-field died on August 13, 1912, and there was no administration upon his estate. Appellants claim only as his heirs. This suit was filed June 14, 1913.

The jury was asked:

“Did S. K. Stanfield have and hold actual, peaceable, and adverse possession of the 160-acre tract of land described in the intervener’s petition or any part thereof, cultivating, using, or enjoying the same for a period of 10 years?”

—which question the jury answered in the affirmative, and in answer to question No. 5 they found that the portion of said land inclosed by S. IÍ. Stanfield, during the period beginning at the time the Miller & Vidor Sawmill Company or T. B. Allen & Co. took possession of a part of the Romayor grant, contained 30 acres.

The court entered judgment in favor of appellees for the entire 160 acres. No issue was submitted to the jury as to the five-year statute of limitations concerning the 160-acre tract, because the deed to S. K. Stanfield was neither acknowledged nor proven for record, and hence was not duly registered.

With reference to the 104-aere tract, it appears that on May 23, 1906, S. K. Stanfield took a deed to it from J. P. Crow, and, according to the testimony of appellees, he fenced it in April, 1907, there being no fence on it prior to that time, and kept cattle in the inclosure until the time of his death. Attached to the deed from Crow to S. K. Stanfield are two certificates of acknowledgment. As shown by the original deed, which has been sent up with the record, the first certificate bears no seal. The second certificate bears a seal but does not purport to be a certificate of the acknowledgment of the grantor in the deed.

The following issues were submitted to the jury:

“Question No. 3. Did S. K. .Stanfield have and hold actual, peaceable, and adverse possession of the 104-aere tract of land described in intervener’s petition, cultivating, using, or enjoying the same for a period of five years prior to the 13th day of August, 1912, claiming the same under a deed duly registered, and paying taxes thereon as same accrued?
“Question No. 4. Did S. It Stanfield, or in-terveners herein, have and hold actual, peaceable, and adverse possession of the 104-acre tract of land described in interveners’ petition, cultivating, using or enjoying the same for a period of five years prior to the 14th day of June, 1913, claiming the same under a deed duly registered, and paying taxes thereon as same accrued ?”

The jury answered both of these questions in the affirmative, and the court rendered judgment in favor of appellees for the tract of land.

The first assignment of error complains that the court erred to the prejudice of defendants in admitting in evidence the deed from J. P. Orow to S. K. Stanfield over the objections of defendants, as shown by their bill of exceptions No. 1. The proposition is:

“A certificate of acknowledgment to a deed which does not bear the seal of the notary is insufficient to admit the deed to record, and such a deed is not admissible in evidence in support of the five years statute of limitations over the objection that it is irrelevant and immaterial, and cannot form the basis of the five years statute of limitations.”

We are inclined to believe that the appellants are correct in their contention.

It was held in the case of Daugherty v. Yates, 13 Tex. Civ. App. 651, 35 S. W. 939, as follows:

“The acknowledgment of the deed from Bailey Daugherty to J. S. Gilkey is herein copied. It shows it to have been made before J. B. New- *894 berry, ‘J. P., nrecinct No. 2, in and for Kaufman county,’ on the 3d day of June, 1870. The letters ‘J. P.,’ used in the connection they are, both in the body of the certificate of acknowledgment, and after Newberry’s signature, evidently mean that he was the justice of the peace of precinct No. 2 of Kaufman county when the acknowledgment was made; for it is by these letters, used in this way, that such officers indicate their official character in their signature to documents requiring them.

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Bluebook (online)
197 S.W. 892, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-stanfield-texapp-1917.