Paschall v. Brown

147 S.W. 561, 105 Tex. 247, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 144
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 29, 1912
DocketNo. 2237.
StatusPublished

This text of 147 S.W. 561 (Paschall v. Brown) 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
Paschall v. Brown, 147 S.W. 561, 105 Tex. 247, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 144 (Tex. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dibrell

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought on January 8, 1908, in the District Court *248 of Colorado County, by Walter F. Brown against D. A. Paschall, Maud Paschall, S. H. Paschall and Ethel Paschall to recover' a certain tract of land, a part of the Elija J. Hagan survey, contained within named metes and bounds, but not disclosing the number of acres sued for.

On September 23, 1909, the plaintiff filed his second amended original petition in which Gonboldin A. Paschall and Dallas 0. Paschall, minors, were made .parties in lieu of D. A. Paschall, who had departed this life pending the suit. The defendants, S. H. and Ethel Paschall, having disposed of their interest in the land sued for pending the suit, made no answer as far as the record discloses. The defendants, Maud Paschall and her minor children, pleaded in defense to plaintiff’s cause of action the general denial or not guilty, and the homestead claim. Other defensive pleas were. interposed, which we will not mention, as they have no bearing on the case as we shall treat it.

Upon the trial of the cause with a jury, at the request of plaintiff, the court gave a peremptory instruction as follows: “You are charged to find a verdict for the plaintiff for all of the land described in plaintiff’s second amended original petition, which lies east of a line described as follows: Beginning at a point on the south line of the Elija J. Hagan survey in Colorado County, Texas, 328 yards from the southwest corner of said survey, said point being at the southernmost end of the fence which runs northerly and southerly between the residence now occupied by Mrs. Maud Paschall and that formerly occupied by S. H. Paschall as a homestead; and running thence north along the line of the said fence to the northernmost end thereof; thence running in a straight line to the north line of the said Hagan survey at such an angle as will divide the said Hagan survey into two equal portions; and you will find for the defendant, Mrs. Maud Paschall, for the remainder of the land described in plaintiff’s said petition.”

In compliance with the court’s charge as requested by plaintiff’s counsel, the jury rendered their verdict. Upon appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals the cause was on the 8th day of December, 1910, affirmed (133 S. W., 509), and is in this court on writ of error granted February 2, 1911.

In granting the writ of error this court entered on its docket the following notation. “We incline to think courts below were not authorized to assume that the partition between D. A. and S. H. Paschall was conclusively established, as plaintiff contended it was.”

Our disposition of the case will be based upon the assignment which raises the issue as to the authority of the trial court to assume that the evidence conclusively established the parol partition between D. A. and S. H. Paschall in the manner set forth in the instruction directing a verdict, and thereby to withdraw the issue from the jury. If the evidence was not sufficient to raise any issue as to the existence and exact location of the partition or division line between D. A. and S. H. Paschall, then the action of the court was correct, unless there were other issues made by the pleadings and evidence that called for a finding by the jury, which we do not undertake to *249 determine. On the other hand, if there was any evidence of sufficient substance to warrant a finding by the jury that such partition or division line as that contended for by plaintiff and embodied in the court’s instruction, was not established, or that the division line was agreed upon by the parties materially different from that sought to be established by the plaintiff, then the instruction directing the jury to find a given line as the one agreed upon and to award the land lying east of such line to plaintiff and that lying west of such line to defendant, was clearly erroneous.

That a clear understanding may be had of the question involved we will make a brief statement of the case. On the 9th day of October, 1897, D. A. Paschall, the husband of the defendant Maud Paschall and father of the minor defendants, purchased 860 acres of land, and on September 26, 1899, said D. A. and Maud Paschall conveyed an undivided half-interest in said tract of land to their son, S. H. Paschall, reserving therein a life interest. On June 21,' 1907, D. A. Paschall, his wife, Maud Paschall; S. H. Paschall and his wife, Ethel Paschall, conveyed to D. H. Kemper 430 acres of the 860 acre tract, taken from the northern portion of said tract, leaving the southern portion of said tract, consisting of a like number of acres. Of this tract D. A. Paschall and his family occupied the western portion and S. H. Paschall and his family the eastern portion.

Plaintiff’s claim to the land sued for, which seems to have been all of the original tract of 860 acres less the 430 acres sold to Kemper, was based at the beginning of the suit on certain attachment proceedings in the justice’s court, the recovery of a moneyed judgment against D. A. and S. H. Paschall in said court and sale of the entire interest of both D. A. and S. H. Paschall in said 860 acre tract of land, less the 430 acres sold to B. H. Kemper; and before the final trial reliance was had upon the purchase of the interest of the defendants, S. H. and Ethel Paschall.

The plaintiffs recognized the homestead claim of the defendant, Mrs. Maud Paschall and her children, but contended for a partition or division line of the 430 acres left after the sale to Kemper, which as matter of fact left the defendant only 125 acres. In explanation of this contention it was claimed that in 1901 D. A. Paschall and S. H. Paschall, the joint owners of said 860 acres, made a parol partition of same, by the terms of which D. A. Paschall took the western half and S. H. Paschall the eastern half. This division line was claimed to be on a fence which ran between D. A. Paschall’s house and a house which was erected by Sam Paschall on the eastern portion of the tract, as far as such fence extended north and from the north end of this fence the line ran to the north line of Elija J. Hagan survey at such an angle as would divide Elija J. Hagan’s survey into two equal portions, so that half of the survey would be on the east of this line and the fence and the other part on the west of such line and fence. The land west of said line was the property of D. A. Paschall and that on the east was the property of S. H. Paschall.

It was contended that when D. A. and S. H. Paschall, joined by their wives, conveyed the northern half of said 860 acre tract to Kemper more of D. A. Paschall’s land was embraced in' such deed *250 than of S. H. Pasehall, and hence that of the lower half according to the former parol agreement D. A. Pasehall had left less area than his son, S. H. Pasehall. The following plat will better illustrate the contention:

To authorize the instruction given the jury by the court at the request of plaintiff’s attorneys it was essential that there should be no controverting evidence as to the parol partition and the location of the division line, and that the evidence by which such uncontroverted facts were established should be of such character as to be *251 conclusive.

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Related

Paschall v. Brown
133 S.W. 509 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1910)

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Bluebook (online)
147 S.W. 561, 105 Tex. 247, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paschall-v-brown-tex-1912.