Moore v. Wooten

265 S.W. 210, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 994
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 9, 1924
DocketNo. 1066.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 265 S.W. 210 (Moore v. Wooten) 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
Moore v. Wooten, 265 S.W. 210, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 994 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

O’QUINN, J.

Suit in trespass to try title by appellees against appellants, involving some 1,500 acres of the Melina Whittington league in Liberty county, Tex., and for damages for cutting timber. Appellants answered by general denial, plea of not guilty, and the' three, five, and ten year statutes of limitation. By way of cross-action appellants pleaded against appellees for the recovery of all of the land sued for except 207 acres in the southeast corner of the tract, with the usual trespass to try title allegations, and also asserted title affirmatively under the three, five, and ten year statutes of limitation. Appellees by supplemental petition denied generally the allegations in appellants’ answer, and pleaded minority and coverture in defense against the title of limitation asserted by appellants.

Uppn a trial before the court judgment was rendered in favor of appellees for an undivided one-fourth interest in the land and for the sum of $2,000 as damages for timber that appellants had cut and removed from the land, and also judgment was rendered against appellants upon their cross-action. Their motion for new trial having been overruled, appellants appealed.

The Whittington league of land was patented to Melina Whittington. She after-wards married Cyrus Thompson. After her marriage to Thompson, she and her husband conveyed “1,574 acres more or less” out of said league to Richard W. Gayle June 15, 1848. Gayle conveyed to George W. Southwick August 10, 1854. Southwick conveyed to Franklin D. Thornton October 11, 1855. Thornton conveyed 1,500 acres to W. R. Wooten November 17, 1860.

W. R. Wooten' was married twice. I-Ie was divorced from his first wife in 1855, and married one Rosa McGee in 1856, who after her marriage was known as Mrs. E. R. Wooten. * W. R. Wooten died in May, 1870, and left surviving him his widow, Mrs. E. R. Wooten, and one son, W. J. Wooten, by his first wife. He had no children by his second wife. W. J. Wooten died in August, 1880 or 1881. He was married, and Mrs. F. E. Wooten, his widow, and Mrs. Mae Royder, Mrs. Emma Becker, Mrs. Ella Batte, and R. L. Wooten, his children, are the ap-pellees.

On March 29, 1871, Mrs. E. R. Wooten was appointed administratrix of the estate of her deceased husband, W. R. Wooten, by the probate court of Walker county, Tex. She duly qualified as such administratrix by filing the required bond and oath. Under oath, she filed an inventory of the property belonging to the estate of W. R. Wooten, in which was listed “a half interest in a tract of land lying in Liberty county, containing 1,500 acres of land.” On July 21, 1875, Mrs. E. R. Wooten, administratrix, made application to and procured an order from the probate court of Walker county, ordering her *212 to sell an undivided one-half interest in and to said 1,500-acre tract in Liberty county. She sold the land as directed, and made report of the sale to the probate court, which sale was approved by the court, and'she executed a deed to the purchaser, L. A. Aber-crombie, for an undivided onehalf of the 1,500 acre tract “belonging to the estate of W. R. Wooten, deceased,” situated in Liberty county, Tex., and being a portion of the Melina Whittington league survey, signing said deed, “E. R. Wooten Adm. Est. W. R. Wooten.”

After Mrs. E. R.' Wooten, as administra-trix of the estate of W. R. Wooten, deceased, executed the above-mentioned deed to Ab-ercrombie, she and her son by a former marriage, D. O. McGee, on October 26, 1881, executed a deed conveying to L. A. Abercrom-bie an undivided one-fourth of the 1,500-acre tract of land in controversy, describing same as follows:

“A one-half undivided interest in and to our one-half undivided interest in a certain tract containing fifteen hundred (1,500) acres more or less, situated in Liberty county, Tex., and a part of the Melina Whittington survey, the said Abercrombie being already the owner of one-half of said 1,500-acre tract, and this deed is intended to convey to him one-half of the remaining half of said 1,500-acre tract, thereby investing him with the title to three-fourths of said 1,500-acre tract. Said 1,500-acre tract is meted and bounded as follows, etc.”

April 21, 1883, Mrs. E. R. Wooten and her son, D. O. McGee, executed a deed to D. D. Alston, conveying a one-fourth undivided interest in said 1,500 acres, the description being:

“All our right, title and interest in the same, being a one-fourth undivided interest in a certain tract containing fifteen hundred acres more or less, situated in Liberty county, Tex., and a part of the Melina Whittington survey, L. A. Abercrombie being the owner of the other three-fourths interest therein, said fifteen hundred-acre tract is meted and bounded as follows, etc.”

Alston conveyed his one-fourth to L. A. Abercrombie by deed of July 20, 1883. Ab-ercrombie conveyed the entire 1,500 acres to S. Liken by deed of date September 3, 18S4. The title to the entire 1,500-acre tract, which Liken acquired by deed from Abercrombie, was regularly acquired by appellant E. F. Moore, who conveyed the timber thereon to the appellant Robertson-McDonald Lumber Company. Appellant E. F. Moore also holds title to the land under a judgment rendered in his favor by the district court of Liberty county, Tex., against the unknown heirs of Melina Whittington, deceased, the original grantee of the league of which the land in controversy is a part.

Appellants’ first assignment is overruled. The certified copy of the deed offered, in evidence was admissible.

Appellants’ second proposition is:

“Proposition No. 2. When Mrs. E. R. Wooten executed to L. A. Abercrombie the deed of April 6, 1876, she was acting only in her capacity as administratrix of the estate of W. R. Wooten, deceased, and was dealing, not with any individual interest she had in the tract of land described in that deed, but alone with the one-half undivided interest in said tract of land which W. R. Wooten owned in his lifetime, and which became the property of his estate upon his death, and it was that one-half only (and not any part of the undivided one-half of the land which she owned individually) which Mrs. E. R. Wooten, as administra-trix, intended to sell, and which she in fact did sell, to L. A. Abercrombie by said deed of date April 6, 1876, and therefore such deed did not affect the undivided one-half of said tract of land which she herself owned individually, but it passed title to only the entire undivided one-half of the land which W. R. Wooten had owned before his death, and which was the property of his estate of which Mrs. E. R. Wooten was administratrix; as above stated, not only was she acting simply in her capacity as administratrix of said estate in executing said deed of date April 6, 1876, but the probate court, which directed and empowered her to so act, had under its jurisdiction and was only dealing with the undivided one-half of said tract of land which belonged to or vested in W. R. Wooten before his death and which one-half alone was listed upon the inventory filed by the administratrix in his estate after his death, and therefore it necessarily follows that the administratrix of his estate, by the deed of date April 6, 1876, conveyed to L. A. Abercrombie all the interest in the tract of land in question which belonged to said estate, such interest being only an undivided one-half thereof, and no part of the other undivided one-half which was the individual property of Mrs. E.

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Bluebook (online)
265 S.W. 210, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 994, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-wooten-texapp-1924.