Niles v. Houston Oil Co. of Texas

288 S.W. 614
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 9, 1926
DocketNo. 1404. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 614 (Niles v. Houston Oil Co. of Texas) 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
Niles v. Houston Oil Co. of Texas, 288 S.W. 614 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

• WALKER, J.

This is the second appeal in this ease. On the first trial judgment was instructed for the appellees herein. This court, in an opinion by Judge Brooke (Niles v. Houston Oil Company, 191 S. W. 748), reversed the trial court and rendered judgment for appellants. Reviewing Judge Brooke’s opinion, the Commission of Appeals, in an opinion by Judge McLendon (255 S. W. 604), reversed the judgment of this court, and remanded the case for a new trial. In approving Judge McLendon’s opinion, Judge Cure-ton said:

“We approve the holding of the Commission of Appeals on the question discussed in its opinion.”

The opinions of both appellate courts give the evidence in full detail; in fact, giving all the evidence on the issue of ten-year limitation, and detailing the chains of title under which the parties held. All objections urged by each against the other’s title were fully discussed by the Commission of Appeals, with an announcement of the law c'ontrolling the facts upon another trial.

By its opinion, the Commission of Appeals sustained the contention of appellants that they held under a complete chain of title, regular in all respects, from the original grantee to themselves, but in doing so offered the following criticism against appellants’ claim:

“The instant case presents a state of facts which appeal strongly to one’s natural sense of equity and justice. The plaintiffs and those under whom they claim appear to have withheld from the records of the county in which the land was situated the evidences of their title from 1836 to 1891, thus leaving the lands to be dealt with by other parties claiming under subsequent deeds from their original grantor. It would seem that the security of land titles would demand that one dealing with the title should be protected after so long a time from an outstanding title emanating shortly after the original grant was made and withheld from the record for nearly a half a een-tury, the probability of discovery of the existence of which was left entirely to the barest chance or accident.”

Also the Commission of Appeals sustained the regularity of all links in the chain of title under which these appellees hold, except the deed from the original grantee, G. W. Brooks, to E. O. Le Grande, which purported to be junior to the deed from Brooks under which these appellants hold. Quoting from the opinion of the Commission oi,Appeals:

“Deed from George W. Brooks to E. O. Le Grande, dated February 24, 1841. This deed was proved by copy from the records of the judicial county of Menqrd, certified by the county clerk of Tyler county. Plaintiffs filed an affidavit of forgery to' this deed. The original of this deed was not offered in evidence, and no affidavit of loss or inability to produce was filed, and no evidence offered attempting to excuse production of the original; neither was the certified copy filed among the papers of the case three days before the trial. The certified copy was objected to on the ground that no predicate was laid for the introduction of- secondary evidence, and on the further ground that the deed was not acknowledged before an officer authorized to take acknowledgments, so as to bring the record thereof in the unconstitutional judicial county of Menard within the validating act of 1844 hereinafter referred to. The objections were overruled.”

It was held that the trial court erred in receiving the certified copy of the Brooks-Le Grande deed, on the ground that no predicate had been laid for its introduction, but overruled the objection “that the deed was not acknowledged before an officer authorized to take acknowledgments.” As we understand this last holding, it goes only to the extent that a deed acknowledged before a notary public was duly acknowledged under the law as it existed at that time. It was shown on the former trial that the appellees held under one John P. Irvin, and on this holding they base their claim of innocent purchaser. Disposing of this issue, the Commission of Appeals said:

“The testimony was undisputed that Irvin, who was a resident of Chicago, Ill., paid the consideration expressed in his deed, which was the full value of the land at the time, and that he had no knowledge or notice of the outstanding title of plaintiffs; which was not recorded in Hardin county until 1891.”

The Commission of Appeals reviewed fully the facts relied upon by these appellees to sustain their plea of ten-year limitation; in fact, all the evidence on that issue is set out in the opinion of Judge Brooke. Discussing the effect of that evidence, the Commission of Appeals said:

“The evidence of adverse possession, as supporting the plea of limitation under the ten-year statute rests entirely upon the testimony of one S. A. J. Hare, who attorned in 1883 *616 to E. H.- Irvin, defendants’ then predecessor in title. Hare’s testimony is set out in full in the 'opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals, and need only be stated briefly here. Aside from the objections to its sufficiency hereinafter considered, we are clear in the view that it was sufficient to carry the case to the jury; but we do not think it is of such conclusive character as to support a directed verdict for defendants.”

From our analysis of that opinion, we understand that two issues of fact, and only two issues of fact, were raised against ap-pellees’ right to hold the land, and that the case was reversed for these facts to be determined by a jury. Under the last quotation from that opinion, it was necessary for ap-pellees to have a jury finding on their plea of ten-year limitation, and that the Le Grande deed was not a forgery. On this last issue, it was said:

“If the record shows a regular chain of title from the original grantee to the defendants, the trial court’s judgment, therefore, must be sustained on their plea of innocent purchasers.”

Under the trial from which this appeal is prosecuted, appellees again offered the evidence of the witness Hare, whose testimony was as strong in their favor as on the first trial, appellees say stronger, together with other facts which they say corroborated Hare’s testimony. We do not review these additional facts, because the Supreme Court directly held that Hare’s testimony was sufficient to raise the issue of' limitation and sustain a jury’s finding in favor of appellees. That issue was properly submitted to the jury, and was answered in appellees’ favor, and judgment followed granting the land in controversy to appellees.

Against this verdict, appellants advance the following proposition:

“Appellees as a matter of law failed to establish title'by limitation.”

For the reasons stated, we must overrule appellants’ contention. The Supreme Court having instructed the trial court that Hare’s testimony raised that issue in favor of ap-pellees, such instruction became the law of this case. We do not restate Hare’s testimony, as it is fully set out in the opinions on former appeal, to which -we here make reference.

Appellants’ contention that as a matter of law this evidence was insufficient to carry the issue to the jury was made on the former appeal, and overruled, and both they and we are bound by that ruling.

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Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/niles-v-houston-oil-co-of-texas-texapp-1926.