Morgan v. MacE
This text of 259 S.W. 1095 (Morgan v. MacE) 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.
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The theory upon which defendants in error think the judgment was warranted seems to be that there was testimony authorizing findings that Goldoni intended to sell and Sanders to buy only that part of lot 6 inclosed as stated above, and that Sanders intended to sell and plaintiff in error to buy only that part. It is true that testimony tending to show Goldoni's intention to have been as claimed was before the court, but we think it was erroneously admitted, and that the court should not have considered it in determining the rights of the parties. In the deeds from Goldoni to Sanders and from Sanders to plaintiff in error the property conveyed was described as "lot (quoting) 6, in block 2, Ghio's addition to the city of Texarkana." No doubt as to the identity of the property intended to be conveyed arose from that description, and no doubt as to its identity arose when the description was applied to the ground. It was lot 6 — all of it. Therefore testimony aliunde the deeds to show the intention to have been to convey less than all of the lot was inadmissible. Davis v. George,
"When the question is, What land did the deed convey? its legal effect between the parties is the very test invoked, and it must, therefore, answer the inquiry by its own terms, since no land was conveyed except by it and it conveys no land except that which by its terms it undertook to convey, Parol evidence, whether brought by parties or strangers, cannot make it convey land which it does not purport to convey nor prevent it from conveying that which it does clearly purport to convey."
We think, therefore, it must be said that it conclusively appeared from the testimony the trial court had a right to consider that plaintiff in error owned all of lot 6; and we think it also conclusively appeared that the strip of land in controversy was a part of that lot. It follows, of course, that we think the court erred when he refused plaintiff in error relief she prayed for and awarded defendants in error a recovery of said strip.
We have examined Bell v. Wright,
"The doubt as to the location of the property conveyed by it arises in the attempt to apply the descriptive particulars to the ground. When it is sought to locate the land conveyed, it is found that the lines of the lots and streets, as indicated by fences, etc., upon the ground, differ from those imaginary ones fixed when the lots and streets were first laid out. The deed simply names the numbers of the lots and the streets, without mentioning either the fences and other objects on the ground, or the original survey, to determine their location; and the question at once arises, Did the parties refer to the lots and streets as indicated by the former or the latter? The ambiguity thus disclosed is of that kind `which extraneous evidence develops, and which extraneous evidence must therefore solve.' Linney v. Wood,
The judgment will be reversed; and judgment would be rendered here in plaintiff in error's favor but for the fact that we think defendants in error are entitled to have the court below determine the issue made by their claim that they had in good faith made improvements on the part of lot 6 in controversy, for which they were entitled to be paid. Therefore the cause will, instead, be remanded to said court with instructions to award plaintiff in error a recovery of the strip of land in dispute in the judgment he renders after determining the rights of the *Page 1097 parties with reference to said claim for improvements.
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259 S.W. 1095, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-mace-texapp-1924.