Page v. Pan American Petroleum Corporation

381 S.W.2d 949, 1964 Tex. App. LEXIS 2781
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 27, 1964
Docket71
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 381 S.W.2d 949 (Page v. Pan American Petroleum Corporation) 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
Page v. Pan American Petroleum Corporation, 381 S.W.2d 949, 1964 Tex. App. LEXIS 2781 (Tex. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

GREEN, Chief Justice.

Summary judgment was granted the defendants in a trespass to try title suit. We affirm.

The parties will be referred to as in the trial court.

Defendants attached to their motion and supplemental motion for summary judg *950 ment, or made a part thereof by appropriate reference, a number of affidavits and copies of a great many documents of public record, with a stipulation of counsel giving to such copies the same effect as originals duly proved in court would have. Many of the exhibits, entirely uncontroverted, consisted of summary matter showing the lands in issue in their historic context and facts concerning their use for over one hundred years.

Plaintiffs, in their answer to defendants’ motion, also by proper reference placed in the record a number of affidavits, particularly applicable to the issue of limitation as to the particular acreage sued for, and several depositions. All statements herein of facts concerning Elizabeth Page Chase, Joseph William Page, Samuel Harrison Page, the history of the title to the property involved, and other matters concerning these lands are taken from the undisputed facts evidenced by the above mentioned documents, depositions, affidavits and exhibits.

The basis of the trial court’s action is shown by the findings set forth in the decree, as follows:

“The Court considered the' pleadings, said motion and supplement thereto and the answers to said motion and said supplement, and all motions, affidavits, exhibits and depositions on file in this cause, and concluding that from the undisputed facts a conveyance divesting Plaintiffs’ predecessors in title of all right, title and claim in and to the lands comprising the upper one-eighth (Ys) of the Imla Keep League, Abstract 79, Brazoria County, Texas, including the lands title to which is in issue in this cause, is presumed and is proved as a matter of law, the Court sustaining Grounds ‘IIP and ‘IV’ of said motion, thereby rendering unnecessary a determination of whether fact issue or issues are made with respect to Grounds T and ‘IP, it is accordingly
“ORDERED, ADJUDGED and DEI CREED that the defendants’ motion be and the same is hereby sustained, and that plaintiffs take nothing herein with respect to the land described as follows:”

It is established by the record without dispute that Elizabeth Page Chase acquired title to the upper one-eighth of the Imla Keep League in Brazoria County, Texas, in 1829, and that she died intestate in the middle of 1833. She left as her sole heirs her two sons, Joseph William Page, born in 1812, and Samuel Harrison Page, born in 1821. Joseph was appointed administrator of her estate and guardian of his minor brother Samuel. On December 22, 1833, the administrator filed an inventory of Elizabeth Chase’s estate, listing as part thereof “one-eighth of a league of land situated lying on San Bernard.”

In a deed undated but recorded in the Deed Records of Brazoria County, Volume C, on the same page as is another deed dated December 24, 1839, and filed for record January 2, 1840, Joseph William Page conveyed all of his right, title, interest and claim in the upper eighth of the Keep League to John Sweeny, a resident of Bra-zoria County, “to have and to hold the same in fee simple forever. He, the said Joseph W. Page, relinquishing for himself and his heirs, the whole of said land in favor of the said John Sweeny.” There is no record of any conveyance out of Samuel Harrison Page of the one-half interest in the upper one-eighth of the Keep League plaintiffs claim he inherited from his mother.

Plaintiffs in the trial court and on this appeal claim:

(1) That Samuel Harrison Page inherited one-half of the upper eighth of the Keep League from his mother;

(2) That plaintiffs are descendants of Samuel Harrison Page and are inheritors from him of the title they claim he inherited ; and

*951 (3) That defendants and those under and with whom they claim are, as owners of the other one-half of said property, co-tenants with plaintiffs and debarred by law from denying plaintiffs’ claims of title.

Plaintiffs’ claim is, indivisibly, claim to one-half of the upper one-eighth of the Imla Keep League; their suit here is an assertion of that claim as applied to the particular 39.87 acres of said land described in plaintiffs’ final petition.

Defendants hold under a record chain of title commencing with the deed of 1839 from Joseph William Page to John Sweeny, a chain shown to be continuously active with every aspect of ownership for over one hundred years. It is their contention, and this is the proposition which was sustained by the trial court in granting the summary judgment, that as a matter of law long and notorious claim of title, dominion, payment by the defendants and their predecessors in title of taxes, the long acquiescence of plaintiffs and those under whom they claim in that dominion and claim of the defendants and their predecessors in title, the extreme notoriety to all concerned of these matters, and the opportunities of Samuel H. Page and hi's descendants to know the facts, establish as a matter of law that in some manner the title now attempted to be asserted by plaintiffs passed from their ancestors and is not now a title owned by them, but is a title owned by defendants.

After the death of their mother, Joseph and Samuel Page lived together, practically on the boundary line of Matagorda and Brazoria Counties, in close proximity to the land in question until Samuel’married in 1850. They continued to live in that vicinity until Joseph died in 1854 in Matagorda County. He was a bachelor, and Samuel as his only heir inherited over 4000 acres of land from him. Samuel and his family moved from Matagorda County to Padre Island in 1855, afterwards moving to Nueces County, where he continued to reside until his death in 1893. The record shows that Samuel was keenly aware of his inheritances and during his long life engaged in numerous business transactions involving the property inherited from Joseph, as well as other property otherwise acquired. Though Samuel lived until he was 34 years of age in the immediate vicinity of the upper part of the Keep League, which for the last 15 of those years was well known as the Sweeny Plantation, and continued thereafter to live forty active years within less than two hundred miles, he never at any time made any claim that he had inherited any property in the Keep League from his mother and, in fact, never asserted any claim to the property here involved.

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Bluebook (online)
381 S.W.2d 949, 1964 Tex. App. LEXIS 2781, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/page-v-pan-american-petroleum-corporation-texapp-1964.