Morgan v. Tutt

113 S.W. 958, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 301, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 359
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 14, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 113 S.W. 958 (Morgan v. Tutt) 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
Morgan v. Tutt, 113 S.W. 958, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 301, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 359 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

TALBOT, Associate Justice.

— This is a partition suit, instituted in the District Court of Ellis County between the heirs of Mary A. May-field, deceased, in which the principal controversy was and is whether a certain tract of land of 129 acres was the separate property of the said Mary A. Mayfield, or the community property of herself and her second husband, J. 0. Hicks. The case was tried by the court without a jury, and, judgment having been rendered in favor of the plaintiffs, the defendants appealed. The following facts appear:

Mary A. Mayfield was the daughter of one B. B. Tutt, of Busk County, Texas, and was married three times. Plaintiff, M. J. Tutt, was the sole issue of the first marriage. The second marriage was with one J. 0. Hicks, of which there was issue three daughters, appellant, Addie Morgan, Emma, who married B. W. Stevenson and died before her mother, leaving defendants below, Frankie Witherspoon and Edna Workman, her only children, and her husband surviving her, and Jimmie, who died unmarried, childless and intestate, before her mother. There was no issue of the third marriage. In the spring of 1858 J. 0. Hicks and wife, Mary A., were living in Henderson, Busk County, and in April of that year Hicks sold property in Henderson to the value of $1,700, and moved with his family to Ellis County. He first came to Waxahachie, then went up near Midlothian, and in the fall of 1858 moved on to the 129-acre tract of land in controversy, built a house upon it, and lived there with his family until he went to the Civil War in 1862, and died in the army in the fall of that year, his wife and children continuing to live on the land. The widow married Bobert F. Mayfield November 7, 1878, and they continued to reside on the land in question until said Mary A. died, intestate, March 10, 1904.

On September 9, 1858, one William C. Sweat, as attorney in fact for James L. Thornberry, made to the said B. B. Tutt a bond for title to the 129-acre tract of land in controversy, by which, in consideration of $100 cash, and the obligation of said Tutt to pay $550 one day after date, and $650 twelve months after date, he bound himself .to make, or cause to be made, to said Tutt, title to said land upon payment of said credit sums. This bond, by order of the trial court, has been sent to this court for inspection, and it appears to have been written on old-fashioned foolscap paper, and upon its back there was at some time written the following: “1 transfer the within bond to James O. Hicks and Mary Ann Hicks, his wife, and they are authorized to take the deed in their names. Given under my hand and seal this 18th day of October, 1860. (Signed) B. B. Tutt. Test: T. B. Hicks, E. J. Batchler, or Barksdale.”

Over this writing has been pasted paper like that upon which the bond was written in such manner as to completely cover the transfer, so that it is not apparent to ordinary observation, but by holding the paper between one and the light the transfer can be read. The earliest possession of this instrument by anjmae through whom any party to this suit claims, shown by the record, is the testimony of appellant T. A. Morgan that, in 1873, this bond was in the possession of Mrs. Hicks (afterward Mayfield), in the same condition in which it now is, with the paper *304 pasted over the transfer, and it seems since that time to have been mostly in the possession of Morgan or his wife, or at least for about twenty-eight years.

There is evidence to the effect that the land in question had been paid for before the Civil War (by whom is not clear), except $70, and that Tliornberry disappeared about the time the war began and did not return until about 1878, when the balance due was paid him, and on November 6, .1878, he executed and delivered to Mary A. Hicks a deed conveying to her the tract of land in question, which was filed for record February 14, 1879, and was duly recorded in the Ellis County records. It was controverted whether the $70 was paid from proceeds of stock sold for Mrs. Hicks about the time of such payment, or with money advanced by appellant Morgan, the evidence being conflicting. The testimony of B. F. Mayfield and of Mrs. Middleton tends to the former conclusion, while Morgan testified that he advanced Mrs. Hicks the money to finish paying for the land $70, for which she sold him about two acres of the land in question — timber land. This was in 1878. In 1886 B. F. Mayfield and wife sold four acres, more or less, of the land in question to the Ft. Worth & New Orleans Bailway Company, the deed being put upon record the same year, and in February, 1898, they sold another portion of the tract to certain trustees of .a burying ground, this deed being filed for record on the day of its execution.

B. F. Mayfield, who knew Hicks and wife from the time, they came to Ellis County until their respective deaths, testified that it was understood in the country that Mr. Tutt bought this land, and that Mrs. May-field had from the time of her marriage to him continuously claimed this land as a gift from her father, and that there was no other claim made from that time by anybody that he ever heard of. Mrs. Middleton, a near neighbor of Mrs. Mayfield, testified that Mrs. Mayfield frequently talked with her about the matter, and always claimed the property in question as coming to her from her father, who paid for it, except the last payment, and that during Mrs. Mayfield’s life she never heard of any claim by anyone to the contrary, while the defendant, Frankie Witherspoon, who was twenty-five years of age when testifying, and has been a member of her grandmother, Mrs. Mayfield’s, family since she was four years old, testified that Mrs. Mayfield told her a good many times that her father had given her the place in controversy.

Mrs. Hicks took, out letters of administration upon the estate of her deceased husband, J. 0. Hicks, in 1863, and inventoried as part of the estate of J. O. Hicks 129 acres of land, but the administration proceedings were dismissed in 1872. B. B. Tutt was considered wealthy, and J. 0. Hicks and wife were people of moderate means. It was admitted that appellant, Mrs. Workman, would testify that she never had 'any notice that Mary A. Mayfield was claiming the property adversely to her, or as the separate property of Mary A. Mayfield; and Mrs. Addie Morgan testified: “I never heard until after my mother’s death that it was claimed by her or anyone else that the land in controversy was claimed to be her separate property.” Bobert F. Mayfield in person waived all the interest he had in the property, life or otherwise, including homestead right.

Plaintiffs below alleged the property in controversy to have been sepa *305 rate property of Mary A. Mayfield by deed, and also by limitations of three, four, five and ten years, and the operation of the doctrine of stale demand. No plea of disability of any kind was interposed by any of the defendants to plaintiffs’ claim of title in Mrs. Mayfield by limitations, but the Morgans and Workmans claimed the property in controversy to have been community property of J. 0. Hicks and wife. The court trying the case found the property in controversy to have been separate property of Mary A. Mayfield, and that the parties were joint owners as her heirs, and not otherwise, and that any rights of defendants in the land through J. 0. Hicks, if he ever had any interest in such land, were barred by the statutes of limitations and stale demand, as pleaded by the plaintiffs.

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Bluebook (online)
113 S.W. 958, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 301, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-tutt-texapp-1908.