Miller v. Crum

314 S.W.2d 389, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 2061
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 23, 1958
Docket15918
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 314 S.W.2d 389 (Miller v. Crum) 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
Miller v. Crum, 314 S.W.2d 389, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 2061 (Tex. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

MASSEY, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment for the plaintiffs in a trespass to try title case. The primary ground upon which the defendants maintained their defense was upon the five-year and ten-year statutes of limitation, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. arts. 5503, *391 5510. Other limitation statutes were urged, but were obviously without application under the undisputed evidence.

Trial was to a jury and after the plaintiffs put on their evidence in chief the defendants started to put on their evidence. Through the sustaining of objections interposed to deed offered by the defendants, purportedly granting the property in question by one defendant and his wife to the other defendants, the defendants’ hope of establishing any record title was destroyed. Thereafter other evidence of defendants unquestionably established that their defense of limitations was based upon their theory that a beginning date thereof could antedate a deed which on its face transferred the interest of the defendant (under whom the claims of limitation originated) to plaintiffs’ predecessor in title. Deciding that in view of the time element for any applicable statute the defendants could not “tack on” to any limitation period any period prior to said deed to plaintiffs’ predecessors, the trial judge stopped the proceedings and instructed a verdict for the plaintiffs. Defendants were afforded full opportunity to perfect bills of exception, but reference to such as were preserved for purposes of appeal disclose that they had no valid defense to plaintiffs’ action unless such appeared under the undisputed facts.

Judgment of the trial court is affirmed.

For simplification of the discussion to follow, we here insert a rough drawing which should be of benefit to an understanding of the dispute posed between the parties.

Common source of title was proven by plaintiffs. The defendants attack this, but in our opinion the undisputed evidence establishes it. The deed in which common source is to be found is dated September 30, 1929, from J. F. Rogers et al. to C. E. Turner and C. B. Jones, said grantees each receiving a one-half undivided interest in both the property in dispute and in the property lying generally northwest therefrom and southeast therefrom. This title is subject to certain mineral reservations not material to our decision, hence such reservations will not hereinafter be noticed.

*392 As may be noticed from the plaintiffs’ chain of title to the property in dispute, the one-half interest originally in C. E. Turner has now vested in a group of persons, all plaintiffs herein, who may generally be designated as the Turner Heirs. The one-half interest originally in C. B. Jones passed through grant by deeds; first to his wife; then by undivided interests into J. A. Crum (a defendant herein) and P. L. Crum; and finally from them to Ira L. Crum and wife, Hazel Crum, by deed of May 2, 1947. Thereafter Ira L. Crum died and his interest passed to his heirs. The Jones’ one-half is now claimed by a group of persons, all plaintiffs herein,' whom we will hereinafter term Hazel Crum and the Crum Heirs when there is any necessity to distinguish them from the Turner Heirs.

Prior to May 2, 1947 (when J. A. Crum and P. L. Crum made deed to property inclusive of that in issue to Ira L. Crum and his wife), Ira L. Crum owned or claimed some interest in the land lying northwest of the property in dispute. On date of May 2, 1947, apparently pursuant to a general transaction, Ira L. Crum, deeded his interest therein to J. A. Crum. In this transaction one P. L. Crum joined as grantor along with Ira L. Crum. As already noted, P L. Crum also joined as a grantor along with J. A. Crum in the deed covering the property in dispute to Ira L. Crum and wife.

The state of the record of title demonstrated title wholly in the plaintiffs, and this was proven by plaintiffs through deeds, probate records, etc., admitted for the purpose of proving common source of title with defendants, and a chain of title into plaintiffs. The deeds adequately described land which encompassed the particular property in controversy. For the limited purpose of proving that defendants were claiming through common source with Hazel Crum and the Crum Heirs (Texas Rules of Civil Procedure 798; Jones v. Willoughby, Tex.Civ.App. El Paso, 1951, 245 S.W.2d 341, reversed on other grounds 151 Tex. 435, 251 S.W.2d 508, but principle approved), plaintiffs introduced the deed dated October 30, 1952, from defendants J. A. Crum and wife to defendants Tom M. Miller and wife, Vennie B. Miller. As to lands other than that in controversy this deed described same by adequate legal description, but the property in controversy was purportedly covered by language as follows:

“The grantors herein convey any and all rights acquired by them from their predecessors in title, to the land conveyed herein and in addition to the hereinabove described land and premises, the grantors herein sell, transfer, grant, assign and quitclaim unto said Tom M. Miller, his heirs or assigns, all their right, title and interest in and to a certain tract of land comprising approximately 30 acres, being the Southeast corner of land now under fence, and which grantors hold under fence, and being a part of the C. A. New-som Survey, and/or the Isaac White Survey, and which the grantors have fenced and held under claim of limitation, and convey to grantees herein, all their right, title, claim or interest therein. Said tract herein quitclaimed being 30 acres, more or less, and in addition to the above described land. * * *”

It is to be noticed that while the defendants’ limit of interest in and to the property in dispute under record title could not have been in excess of a one-fourth undivided interest (viewed back immediately prior to May 2, 1947, when the deed was made to Ira L. 'Crum and wife), the interest attempted to be asserted under the deed to Tom M. Miller and his wife was a full title under J. A. Crum’s claim of limitation.

The recitation of the J. A. Crum and wife deed to the Millers recited that the “corner” (comprising the area in dispute) was “under fence, and which grantors hold under fence.” The defendants’ pleadings and the evidence in the record, introduced by defendants, was to the effect that the “fence” in question was established *393 in 1946. This was at a time when J. A. Crum owned an undivided one-fourth interest in and to the property, a part of the Jones’ interest. P. L. Crum also owned a one-fourth interest. The Turner Heirs, or their predecessors, owned an undivided one-half interest At that time P. L. Crum and Ira L. Crum owned the land lying northwest of the property in dispute. It is the defendants’ contention that the fence was run along the lines indicated by the diagram due to the irregularity of the ground and to accommodate the same to utility in holding stock, and was agreed upon by all parties to be the boundary line between the properties lying to either side. The effect of this contention amounts to a claim that J. A. Crum yielded up a sizeable amount of acreage belonging to himself (and P. L.

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314 S.W.2d 389, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 2061, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-crum-texapp-1958.