O'Connor v. Vineyard

44 S.W. 485, 91 Tex. 488, 1898 Tex. LEXIS 303
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1898
DocketNo. 629.
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 44 S.W. 485 (O'Connor v. Vineyard) 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
O'Connor v. Vineyard, 44 S.W. 485, 91 Tex. 488, 1898 Tex. LEXIS 303 (Tex. 1898).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

S. C. Vineyard and his wife Anna W. Vineyard, as guardians of their minor daughter Lillian Vineyard, brought suit in an action of trespass to try title against D. M. O’Con-nor, to recover certain lands situated in the County of Aransas. O’Connor disclaimed as to a portion of the land sued for, and the controversy was over the title to 4214 acres which consisted of parts of several tracts described in the petition. The case was tried before the court without a jury, and appellees recovered 11/24 of the land in controversy. We make the following statements of the facts necessary to an understanding of the questions presented to us:

J. W. Byrne is the common source of title, and once owned all the land in controversy. He conveyed an undivided one-half interest in it to William G. Hale and Ebenezer Allen, and to others different interests not necessary to mention. April 2, 1858, J. W. Byrne conveyed to Samuel Colt and J. V. Colt an undivided 1/24 part of the land by deed in which he acknowledged the payment of the purchase money.

April 22, 1856, Hale and Allen, by deed, in which the purchase money was acknowledged, conveyed to Samuel and J. V. Colt a one-eighth undivided interest in the land.

January 13, 1858, Hale, Allen and Byrne, by deed acknowledging the payment of the purchase money, conveyed to Samuel Colt an undivided 1/12 part of the land.

April 2, 1861, James W. Byrne conveyed a 3/16 interest to Samuel Colt, acknowledging the payment of the purchase money in the deed.

On the same day Hale and Allen, by deed acknowledging the payment of the purchase money, conveyed to Samuel Colt 3/16 of the land.

James Byrne bought the interest of J. V. Colt at sheriff’s sale, and thereafter Byrne died, leaving a will in which his grand-daughter Anna *494 W. Vineyard, one of the plaintiffs, was sole legatee and devisee. Neither Samuel Colt nor his heirs ever owed anything to Anna W. Vineyard or her husband, but Anna W. and S. C. Vineyard had signed an agreement compromising a claim against the estate of Samuel Colt in favor of the estate of J. W. Byrne.

On August 8, 1870. the heirs of Samuel Colt conveyed all their interest in the land to William G. Hale and Ebenezer Allen each one-fourth and to Anna W. Vineyard one-half, reciting that the deed was made “in consideration of a release to all further demands against the estate and legal representatives and heirs of Samuel C. Colt deceased, duly made and executed by William G. Hale, Sylvina J. Allen, Anna W. Vineyard and her husband--Vineyard, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged.” After describing the land the deed contains this language: “And also including the flats, shoals and islands in front of said peninsula according to the several deeds of conveyance and a mortgage deed made to said Samuel Colt by said William George Hale, Ebenezer Allen and James W. Byrne now deceased, with full release and acquittance of the mortgage debt expressed in the deed thereto.” The deed contained covenants of general warranty. The deed was filed for record in Aransas County June 3, 1876.

J. W. Vineyard, administrator with the will annexed of the estate of J. W. Byrne, deceased, sold certain property of the estate of the said Byrne to Samuel C. Vineyard, and, the sale having been confirmed by the Probate Court, the administrator executed to S. C. Vineyard, on the 28th day of May, 1872, a deed to the property so sold, and in the said deed, after describing the other property, this language is used: “Also three-eighths interest in a claim for property in ‘Lamar property’ sold Samuel Colt, now deceased, and not paid for, which interest amounts to about 2531¿ acres of land, more or less, or the corresponding price to be paid for the same, say $6750, in the hands of William G. Hale for settlement.” This last description, it is claimed, conveyed the land in controversy to S. C. Vineyard.

October 8, 1873, S. C. Vineyard executed an instrument in which he declared that he purchased the property mentioned and described in the last named deed for the use and benefit of Samuel Harvey Vineyard, his son,' and for the heirs of himself and Anna W. Vineyard, and conveyed to Samuel Harvey Vineyard and the said heirs “all my right, title and interest in the estate of James W. Byrne, purchased by me at administrator’s sale in behalf of my son, Samuel Harvey Vineyard, and heirs of S. C. Vineyard and Anna W. Vineyard.” This last deed was duly acknowledged and filed for record on the day of its date.

November 23, 1888, Samuel Harvey Vineyard conveyed to Lillian Vineyard all of his interest in the property described in the foregoing instrument, which last conveyance was recorded June 10, 1892.

August 6, 1896, Anna W. and her husband, S. C. Vineyard, made an instrument declaring the property conveyed to Anna W. Vineyard by the heirs of Samuel Colt to have been conveyed to her in trust for the *495 estate of James Byrne, and in order to carry out that trust she conveyed the said property to her minor daughter, Lillian.

The plaintiff in error relied upon decrees of partition which embrace the land in controversy, made in the years 1876 and 1877, in suits to which Samuel H. Vineyard and the other heirs of Anna W. and S. 0. Vineyard were not parties, and we deem it unnecessary to notice them further.

May 19, 1877, S. C. Vineyard executed power of attorney by which he authorized his wife, Anna W. Vineyard, to sell lands in Refugio and Aransas Counties, and on the 21st day of June, 1877, he executed a second power of attorney authorizing Anna W. Vineyard to sell and convey all of his right, title and interest in and to all property he had in the State of Texas.

Under and by virtue of the powers of attorney before described, Anna W. Vineyard conveyed the land in controversy to John C. Herring for $4214, half cash, half payable in two years from date with ten per cent interest, retaining a vendor’s lien; which deed was signed by her in her own right and as attorney in fact for S. C. Vineyard and was dated June 12, 1877. The deferred payment was paid by John C. Herring. D. M. O’Connor showed a regular chain of title from John C. Herring.

November 25, 1882, the Probate Court appointed S. C. and A. W. Vineyard guardians of the estates of the minors Samuel H., Alexander T. and Lillian Vineyard, and the guardians qualified January 1, 1883, filing an inventory of the property of the estate January 5, 1883, which inventory did not contain the property in controversy in this suit. On the last named date the guardians filed an application in the court, asking the confirmation of the sale made by them to John C. Herring June 12, 1877, and on that date the Probate Court ordered the confirmation and that the guardians make á deed for said land to John C. Herring, which was accordingly done, but no new sale had been made by the guardians nor was any consideration paid except that which was paid in the original purchase from S. C. and Anna W. Vineyard. The decree of confirmation was offered in evidence by the plaintiff in error and was excluded by the court upon objection made by the defendant in error.

The foregoing statement is made from the findings of the Court of Civil Appeals. The judge who tried the case in the District Court filed the following conclusions of law and fact:

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Bluebook (online)
44 S.W. 485, 91 Tex. 488, 1898 Tex. LEXIS 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oconnor-v-vineyard-tex-1898.