Miller v. Gist

43 S.W. 263, 91 Tex. 335, 1897 Tex. LEXIS 429
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1897
Docket610
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 43 S.W. 263 (Miller v. Gist) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Gist, 43 S.W. 263, 91 Tex. 335, 1897 Tex. LEXIS 429 (Tex. 1897).

Opinion

GAINES, Chief Justice.

On February 4, 1895, Emma A. Miller, joined by her husband W. B. Miller, brought an action of trespass to try title against E. H. East, F. E. Dycus, M. M. Miller, Jr., and others, to recover the west half of a survey of six hundred and forty acres of land lying in Archer County and patented to Madison M. Miller as assignee of George W. Barnett. On the 28th of October of the same year Mrs. M. E. Gist and her husband and others brought suit against the defendants in the first suit, whose names have been given, and John Baxter,, to recover an undivided interest of eighty-five acres in the same land. The two suits were consolidated and tried as one, and resulted in a judgment in favor of Emma A. Miller, the plaintiff in the first suit, for an undivided one-sixth interest in the land, and that the plaintiffs in the second suit take nothing. The defendants who had an interest in the litigation appealed, as did also the plaintiffs in the second suit. In the Court of Civil Appeals the judgment was reversed, and judgment was rendered, that the plaintiff in the second suit recover 78 if acres, undivided, of the land in controversy, and that the recovery of Emma A. Miller be restricted to a life estate in an undivided one-sixth interest of what should remain. The defendants Dycus and M. M. Miller, Jr. have sued out this writ of error.

The certificate by virtue of which the land in controversy was located and patented was issued to G. W. Barnett under an act “to open and establish the Central National Road” approved February 5, 1844, and was transferred by the grantee to Madison M. Miller, October 25, 1855. The certificate was located by the assignee upon two surveys in Ellis County, one of one hundred and seventy acres approximately, and the other of four hundred and sixty-three acres. On the first day of February, 1859, Miller conveyed so much of the certificate as covered the smaller survey, by an instrument of the body of which the following is a copy:

“Be it known that I, M. M. Miller, of the State of Texas and County of Dallas, for and in consideration of one dollar per acre, have this day bargained and sold, and do hereby convey unto John F. Thomas, of the State aforesaid and County of Ellis, so much of Certificate No. 2, issued to Geo. W. Barnett on the 6th day of January, .1845, by Geo. W. Still, Sup. C. N. Road, and approved the same date by the Commissioners of said Road, for 640 acres, as may cover a tract of vacant or unsurveyed land, situated in the North part of Ellis County, bounded on the North by the A. M. Lavender 640 acre survey; on the *338 East by James Conway survey; on the South by a small survey for W. H. Morris, and on the West by a survey for M. B. Runnells, supposed to be about 170 acres. To have and to hold unto him the said John F. Thomas, his heirs and assigns forever, the title to so much of said certificate, and also to the above described land when .patented by virtue of said certificate. I do hereby guarantee unto him the said Thomas, that said certificate is valid and genuine, and that my right to convey-it to him. is in every way unincumbered, and hereby authorize the Commr. of the Gen’l Land Office to issue a patent to him for the above described land, when survey and application is made in due course of law. I do hereby acknowledge the receipt of $170 from said John F. Thomas. Should the said quantity of land contained in the above recited boundaries be less than 170 acres, I hereby promise to pay back to said Thomas, for the deficiency at the rate of $1 per acre. He, the •said Thomas, binding himself to pay to me the rates of one dollar per acre for the excess that may be above 170 acres, this the 1st day of Febry., 1859.”

It seems that, by reason of the fact that the certificate was filed upon two separate tracts of land, a question arose as to the validity of the locations. It was accordingly withdrawn and located in Archer County ■upon the land in controversy.

Madison M. Miller was thrice married. The certificate was acquired during his second marriage. He died after the third marriage, leaving his third wife surviving him. She was the plaintiff in the first suit. There was no issue of the third marriage. Miller left three children,—one daughter by his first wife, and two—a son and a daughter— by the second. M. M. Miller, Jr., one of the defendants, was the son. The defendants at the time of the institution of the suits were the owners of whatever interest those two daughters inherited from their ■father.

John F. Thomas died in the year 1866 and at the time of the bringing of the suits there were living five of his daughters and one son. Those were the real plaintiffs in the second suit. All his other children had then died without issue,—but one, a daughter, left a husband surviving, who was still living at the bringing of this suit. The Court of Civil Appeals held that his interest had at the time of the trial been acquired by the defendants by virtue of the statute of limitations.

One W. H. Coombs bought the land in controversy at a sale made ■under an order of the County Court of Dallas County by the administrator of the estate of one George W. Guess, and it was conveyed to to him. Coombs sold and conveyed the land to defendant East and one Milton in 1883, and this deed was in that year duly registered. East and the heirs of Milton brought suit for the land against one Dugan, and in the year 1886, upon the trial of the case, the land was adjudged to Dugan. The judgment was affirmed in the Supreme Court in 1891. Thereafter, in the same year, M. M. Miller, Jr., and the other children of the patentee conveyed their interest in the property to defendant *339 Dycus, who then conveyed to defendant Miller an undivided one-half interest in the property, and then to East 1068- acres. Thereafter defendant Miller reconveyed to defendant Dycus a one-sixth interest. East, Dycus and Miller brought suit against Dugan, and in September, 1891, recovered a judgment for the land against him.

Defendant East and Milton took possession of the land in 1883 and held it until the death of Milton. He and Milton’s heirs continued to hold it until they sold their interest. The date of the latter transaction does not clearly appear, but East continued in ¡possession and paid the taxes until 1891. All the defendants pleaded the statute of limitations of five and ten years against all the plaintiffs in both suits. All the plaintiffs, save a son of John F. Thomas, in reply to the plea of limitations pleaded coverture.

Emma Miller, the plaintiff in the first suit, did not appeal, nor has she complained in this court of the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals as to her. Nor have the plaintiffs in error complained of the judgment of that court in her favor; but as against the heirs of Thomas they have assigned numerous errors.

They first complain, that the transfer from Miller to Thomas conveyed only so much of the certificate as was located upon the smaller survey in Dallas County, and that it was incumbent upon the heirs of Thomas to prove how many acres that survey contained. The transfer however describes the quantity as “about 170 acres,” and we think this prima facie evidence of the fact that that was the true quantity. The heirs of Thomas only claimed upon the basis of a conveyance of 170 acres of the certificate. Besides, the field-notes of the survey were introduced in evidence and showed that they embraced 177 acres.

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Bluebook (online)
43 S.W. 263, 91 Tex. 335, 1897 Tex. LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-gist-tex-1897.