Patterson v. Bryant

191 S.W. 771, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 1310
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 16, 1916
DocketNo. 106.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 191 S.W. 771 (Patterson v. Bryant) 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
Patterson v. Bryant, 191 S.W. 771, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 1310 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

CONLEY, C. J.

This is a suit in trespass to try title, brought by appellants, William W. Patterson and Thomas W¡. Patterson, executors of the estate of John D. Patterson, deceased, against Mrs. G. A. Briggs, Charley Bryant, D. W. Maxwell, Alec Slocum, and Mrs. Effie McPherson, appellees, to recover 344 acres of land, a part of the Daniel Tut-tle, Sr., survey situated in Panola county, Tex. Appellees answered by general demurrer, plea of not guilty, and pleaded the ten-year statute of limitation to the entire tract, claiming under muniment of title, and further pleaded, in the alternative, the statute of limitation of ten years to 160 acres of the land sued for, setting the same out by metes and bounds.

Appellants filed a supplemental petition, alleging that the appellee Mrs. Georgia Ann Briggs resided upon and claimed a tract of about 50 acres in the northeast corner of the original tract; that said 50 acres had been segregated, and the marks and lines of the same designated and determined; that her claim had never , extended to the entire tract, and that her claim of limitation should, on that account, therefore, not extend beyond the metes and bounds of the said 50-acre tract which she had in actual possession, and further set out that the land sued for was no part of the land actually occupied by Mrs. Georgia Ann Briggs.

Upon the trial of the case, the defendants (appellees) were awarded an undivided interest of 110 acres1 of the land sued for, which, added to the 50 acres that she had in actual possession, made a tract of 160 acres. The judgment of the court further decreed that the 110 acres was to be surveyed so as to be contiguous to the said 50-acre tract, and so as to include the improvements placed thereon by the appellees. *772 While the evidence is conflicting upon many of the issues involved in this case, the record sustains the following conclusions:

That Daniel and Mary Tuttle came from the state of New York in February, 1836, and were granted a headlight certificate for a league of land, which was subsequently located in Panola county; that Daniel Tut-tle, joined by Mary Tuttle, transferred said headright certificate to Charles W. Jackson on June 20, 1838; that in the fall of 1838 Daniel Tuttle abandoned his family, and left the country; that Mary Tuttle claimed that she did not voluntarily sign the transfer of said certificate; that thereafter, on November 16, 1850, patent was issued to this land by the state of Texas to Charles' W. Jackson, assignee of Daniel Tuttle; that on August 1, 1838, Charles W. Jackson gave a bond for title to William H. Cowling for 700 acres of land, and the appellants, by mesne conveyances, claim to be the owners of the legal title to the 344 acres of land in controversy, same being a part of said 700-acre tract.

On December 13, 1842, under a proceeding in the district court of Harrison county, commissioners were appointed to partition the estate of Daniel Tuttle, deceased, under which partition proceedings one-half of said league 'of land was set over to Mary Tuttle, the wife .of said Daniel Tuttle, deceased. Georgia Ann Briggs,' one of the appellees herein, married - Coyie, who was a grandson of Mary Tuttle. They moved on the land in controversy in 1876, and, in accordance with the testimony of the appel-lee Georgia Ann Briggs, they were claiming the entire tract of land in controversy and took possession thereof as heirs of Mary Tuttle. The testimony further shows that in 1888 Mary Coyle, the mother of appellee’s husband, gave them some kind of a deed to the entire tract. This witness claims also that, when they moved on the land she had it surveyed; that from that time on she resided upon the land continuously, claiming the same with her husband, until his death, in 1892. After the death of her husband, she married a man by the name of Briggs, and continued to reside on the land for a number of years. On January 12, 1911, under the advice of an attorney, she accepted from a son-in-law, who had no title to said land, a deed to said land, which deed was duly recorded in the deed records of Panola county. The evident object of this deed was to place of record evidence of her claim to the entire tract of land, and to aid her title by perfecting a claim under the five-year statute. With the exception of four or five years, the appellee Mrs. Georgia Ann Briggs has held continuous1 possession of the tract, with about 50 acres under fence, from 1876 up until the date of the filing of this suit, February 26, 1914. The court, after hearing the evidence, awarded the appellees but 160 acres under their plea of ten-year limitation, the 50 acres being conceded by appellants as having been in the actual and adverse possession of appellees, and further awarded them the 110 acres adjoining said 50-acre tract and to be so surveyed as to include the improvements located thereon. The appel-lees do not make any complaint as to this judgment, nor do they cross-assign error for the failure of the court to award them the entire tract.

Appellants attack the judgment of the court under the first assignment of error as being contrary to the law and the evidence, in that appellee’s actual possession and claim was confined to a specific tract, the lines of which were fixed and determined, and that the possession within such lines could not be constructively extended to other lands.

The question ’of the restricted nature of appellee’s possession was a sharply disputed issue before the trial court, but the record shows there is ample evidence to support the judgment of the lower court against this contention. It would serve no good purpose to set out this evidence specifically, further than to say that the appellee Mrs. Coyle-Briggs testified that shortly after going on the land in controversy, in 1876, she had the entire tract surveyed, and has been claiming the same adversely, and exercising dominion thereover from that time up to the filing of this suit. There is also evidence to the effect that this same land was known and referred to in the neighborhood for many years as the “Coyle tract.” This assignment is therefore overruled

The second, third, and fourth assignments 'of error assail the judgment of the court upon the grounds that the uncontradicted evidence show's that defendant was not claiming any part of said- 110-acre tract until after January, 1911, when her son-in-law made a deed to her to said land. These assignments are based upon a misconception of the record.' The evidence on the subject of the claim to the land by appellee Mrs. Coyle-Briggs is positive and emphatic. Appellants’ evidence, of course, controverted her claims1 to the entire tract, but this only raised an issue, which, the trial court having decided against the appellants, we see no reason to disturb. For the reason herein stated, these assignments are overruled.

Appellants1’ fifth assignment 'of error is as follows:

“The court erred in rendering judgment for any of the land sued for herein, because the description as set out by the defendants does not describe, any specific 160 acres of land, but there is contained in the boundaries of said description more than ICO acres of land, and there was no proof that any part of the land described by defendant had ever been segregated from the other land, or any lines run, or corners established to show what land the defendant claimed, and the proof fully showed that no lines around this land had been run and established.”

*773

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Bluebook (online)
191 S.W. 771, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 1310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-bryant-texapp-1916.