Peveto v. Herring

198 S.W.2d 921, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 620
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 19, 1946
DocketNo. 4373.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 198 S.W.2d 921 (Peveto v. Herring) 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
Peveto v. Herring, 198 S.W.2d 921, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 620 (Tex. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

WALKER, Justice.

H. P. Herring brought this actipn in trespass to try title on May 10, 1945, against Charles and Edmond Peveto, and against Vernon W. Peveto, their brother, to recover title to and possession of a tract of land in the William Clark survey, in Orange County. Plaintiff -alleged that this tract contained 145.37 acres, more or less.

Vernon W. Peveto filed a disclaimer by way of answer. Charles and Edmond Pe-veto, among other matters, pleaded not guilty and the ten year statute of limitations as matter in bar of plaintiff’s suit, and further, that under the ten year statute they had title to 160 acres of land, either out of a larger tract of which the land in suit was a part, or out of the very land for which plaintiff sued if said land covered more than 160 acres, and that this 160 acres should be set aside to them so as to include various improvements, to-wit, wells, outbuildings and fences.

The cause was tried to a jury. The jury were unable to agree upon a verdict, and the trial court discharged them; and subsequently, upon plaintiff’s motion, without having declared a mistrial, rendered judgment in plaintiff’s favor against the various defendants for the land as prayed for by him, excepting, however, various townsite lots, several hundred in number, conveyed out of this tract to other persons by plaintiff’s predecessor in title, the Gratis Town-site Land & Development Company.

Charles and Edmond Peveto have appealed, and under Point 1 assign error to the trial court’s judgment on the ground tha,t it was an issue for the jury on this record whether they had title to the land under the 10 year statute of limitations, and that the trial court accordingly had no authority to render judgment on the merits after the jury were discharged.

It may be assumed that the trial court had power to render the judgment which was rendered here if the evidence would support an instructed verdict in plaintiff’s behalf. Slay v. Burnett Trust, 143 Tex. 621, 187 S.W.2d 377, at page 384. And see: Clark v. Jones, Tex.Civ.App., 164 S.W.2d 62; First Nat. Bank v. Corbin, Tex.Civ.App., 153 S.W.2d 979; Fitts v. Carpenter, Tex.Civ.App., 124 S.W.2d 420. However, plaintiff’s right to an instructed verdict was a prerequisite to such a judgment, and we are of the opinion that Charles and Eámond Peveto raised the issue for the jury that they had limitation title under the 10 year statute to that part of the land within their fence lines, or to some parts of the land, (which need not be identified) even under Article 5511. There was evidence of the following matters.

The land for which plaintiff sued and to which he proved a title was a part of a 454 acre tract in the southwestern portion of the William Clark survey, which Samuel C. Linebarger and his sons, C. C., F. W., and C. W. Linebarger, conveyed on October 4, 1909, to the Gratis Townsite Land & Development Company. The conveyance vested the grantee with title to said land. We *923 note that a small fraction of the land for which plaintiff sued fell outside of this tract. The Townsite Company was apparently a partnership composed of Samuel C. Linebarger and his sons, C. C. and F. W. Linebarger; they subdivided the 454 acre tract into the townsite of Gratis, consisting of 227 blocks divided by streets and avenues 40 feet wide, a 20 acre “oil reserve”, and a 1-acre “club house reserve.” A “full block” contained 18 lots and a “full lot” measured 30 feet in width by 120 feet in length, and most of the lots and blocks in this subdivision were of this description. Plats delineating the townsite were recorded in the deed records of Orange county, the last, apparently on January 1, 1910, and copies of these plats are before us. A railroad running on a course approximately northwest and southeast passed diagonally through the townsite, leaving perhaps one-third thereof on the east; the land in suit lies east of and abuts upon this railroad right-of-way.

Evidently great numbers of these town-site lots were conveyed by the Townsite Company to persons who resided beyond the limits of Orange county. Defendants proved conveyances of several hundred townsite lots out of the land in suit, (although only the date of one conveyance appears in the evidence) leaving unsold numerous distinct and segregated fragments of the original townsite which vested in the plaintiff under the conveyance now to be mentioned.

On February 24, 1911, S. C. Linebarger conveyed to his associates, C. C. and F. W. Linebarger his interest in the property owned by the Gratis Townsite Land & Development Company; and on March 24, 1945, C. C. and F. W. Linebarger, joined by their wives, conveyed to plaintiff by a quitclaim deed whatever interest they had in the townsite of Gratis.

The foregoing constitutes plaintiff’s proof of title to the land for which he sued. As stated, the trial court excepted from the judgment various townsite lots conveyed before the date of plaintiff’s deed, and, also as stated, some of the land for which plaintiff sued fell outside of the townsite, to which his base record title was limited. A few scattered families now reside on the Gratis townsite but apparently no town has ever existed there.

The land in suit forms an irregularly shaped tract which need not be accurately described. A small part lies outside of the townsite of Gratis on the north and a somewhat larger part lies outside the town-site on the south. According to the map attached to appellants’ supplemental brief, which will do well enough here, the western boundary of the land for which plaintiff sued is approximately 1880 feet long and runs along the eastern line of the railroad right-of-way. From this the south line runs in an easterly direction some 3300 feet. The first course in the north boundary from the railroad is north 86)4 degrees east 984 feet; the boundary then turns in a northerly direction along a series of irregular courses for some 700 feet, and then runs off toward the east along irregular courses for perhaps 1500 feet until it intersects the eastern boundary, which comes up from the south along northwesterly courses. The eastern boundary extends perhaps 2500 feet.

Appellants’ old fence lines coincide substantially with the western boundary and the westernmost 984 feet of the north boundary, but lie somewhat to the south of the balance of the north line and a short distance to the west of the eastern ■boundary. The variance, however, is not material under our judgment; there is evidence locating appellants’ lines. A fence now runs along the south which coincides substantially with the southern boundary of the land, but this fence was erected a year or perhaps a year and a half before this suit was filed. Before this southern fence was erected, appellants’ enclosure extended still farther to the south, apparently down to the southern boundary of the William Clark league; and the location of this old fence has not been proved. However, this is also immaterial; there is evidence that appellants’ actual possession and claim covered the land in suit. The western 32 acres of the land has been segregated for many years by a cross fence.

*924 One Asa Noguess farmed the land, or a part of it, in 1925 as a tenant of plaintiff’s predecessors in title.

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Bluebook (online)
198 S.W.2d 921, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peveto-v-herring-texapp-1946.