Polk v. Beaumont Pasture Co. of 1887

64 S.W. 58, 26 Tex. Civ. App. 242, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 84
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 21, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 64 S.W. 58 (Polk v. Beaumont Pasture Co. of 1887) 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
Polk v. Beaumont Pasture Co. of 1887, 64 S.W. 58, 26 Tex. Civ. App. 242, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 84 (Tex. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Associate Justice.

This is an action of trespass to try title brought by the appellant, against the appellees to recover the title and possession of a tract of 587% acres of land, a part of the W. W. Carroll league, in Jefferson County. The original petition was filed on April 28, 1897, and alleged an ouster by the defendants on January 1, 1897. By amendment filed June 30, 1899, plaintiff, after repleading all •of the facts set up in his original petition, by a second count alleged that if he should be mistaken in his allegation that he owned all of the land in controversy on the 1st day of January, 1897, that he had title to all of said land on the 30th day of June, 1899, and on said last named date defendants unlawfully entered upon said land and ejected plaintiff therefrom. Defendants answered by general denial, pleas of not guilty, and of the three, five, and ten years statutes of limitation.

The trial of the cause in the court below resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of defendants, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

Appellant holds the superior record title to the land in controversy, and is entitled to recover same unless such right is defeated by the statute of limitation. Succinctly stated, the facts disclosed by the record are as follows: The W. W. Carroll league, of which the land in controversy is *243 a part, was granted to said Carroll on the 15th day of June, 1835. On' July 29, 1835, Carroll conveyed said league to John A. Veatch, and Veatch conveyed the land in controversy to John W. Dougherty on April 20, 1840. This deed was filed for record in Jefferson County on November 9, 1846. Appellant, by regular chain of mesne conveyances, is the holder of the Dougherty title. On January 20, 1846, John A. Veatch conveyed the whole of the W. W. Carroll league to Mahala L. Sharp. This deed recites a consideration of $1000, and was filed for record in Jefferson County on the 17th day of October, 1846. Appellees, by regular chain of mesne conveyances, are the holders of the Sharp title. Tnere is no evidence, other than the recital in the deed, that Mahala Sharp paid any consideration for the land, ■ nor any evidence that the said Sharp did not have notice at the time said deed was executed that Veatch had previously conveyed the land in controversy to Dougherty. The inclosure upon which appellees rely to support their claim of adverse possession of the land was completed in September, 1878, and the fences then constructed have been kept up from that time to the time of the trial in the court below. This inclosure was formed by a fence commencing at the edge of the marsh on the south side of the Neches Biver and running in a southwestern direction about %l/2 miles, and thence south about 6 miles to Bodair Bayou. This fence was the only artificial barrier inclosing the pasture in which the land in controversy was situated. The remaining boundaries of said pasture were as follows: Down Bodair’s Bayou to Taylor’s Bayou; thence southeasterly along Taylor’s Bayou to Sabine Lake; thence northwesterly along the edge of the lake to the mouth of the Neches Biver; thence up the Neches Biver to a point opposite the beginning point of the fence before described; thence across the marsh a distance of iy2 or 2 miles to the beginning. The length of the natural barriers inclosing this pasture was' between 45 and 50 miles, while the artificial barriers, as before stated, were not more than 8% miles in length. These natural barriers were sufficient to prevent the passage of stock into and out of said pasture. The marsh between the end of the fence and the Neches Biver is an impassable bog.

There were inside of the so-called inclosure, in 1878, when first made, about seventeen or eighteen families, nearly all of whom owned tracts of land of their own, independently of the Beaumont Pasture Company, their holdings varying from seventy-five to several hundred acres. Most of them had little herds of cattle, varying in size from fifteen to fifty or sixty head. The company told most of the holders when putting up the fence on the west and nortfiwest, in 1878, that they did not intend to disturb them. Further than this there was no agreement or common purpose. On this subject the defendant McFaddin testified as follows:

“When we (meaning defendants) got ready to build that pasture, we went to everyone in there, and we agreed to leave what stock they had in' there with them. They were to pasture in there with us. They only had small bunches of cattle and horses. We agreed they should keep *244 whatever they had in there,' whether they had land or not. The people that did not live in there we were going to turn their horses and cattle-out, and we wanted to be neighborly with them. We would let them (people living in the pasture) graze their cattle in there, and not pay any pro rata of the fencing, and we were to put in all our cattle to graze in common; we were to graze cattle together.”

Subsequent to the original construction, persons, strangers to the-company, bought land, moved in, and others inside sold out to independent parties, no kind of assurance or agreement being asked or given. These persons moved in without any sort of consent or understanding, and held their land and grazed their stock at will. The stock of the fifteen or twenty independent families grazed at will; these independent holders agreed to no terms or restrictions, and had nothing to do with making or maintaining any inclosures except their own inclosures around their separate tracts inside the large pasture. This inclosure embraced about 50,000 acres of land. At the time the pasture was inclosed, in 1878, the defendants owned about 28,000 acres of the land inclosed, but this holding was increased by purchase by defendants to about 48,000 acres in 1887. The tracts owned by independent occupants within said inclosure were scattered over various portions thereof. There was a community composed of about fifteen families near Grigsby’s Bluff, in said inclosure, where there was a postoffice and schoolhouse. A public road leading from Beaumont to Sabine Pass ran through said inclosure, entering by a gate near the north end of the Carroll survey and passing through and out of the alleged pasture without crossing any barrier on the south except Taylor’s Bayou. The defendants own a pasture of 6000 acres on the north of the inclosure before described. This pasture was built in 1884, and the fence forming the barrier on the northwest side of the large inclosure forms the southern boundary of the 6000-acre pasture. The road from Beaumont before mentioned traverses the-small pasture and it enters the large inclosure from the small one. There was no actual occupation of the land in controversy until May 14, 1896, at which time appellees placed a tenant thereon, and has continuously occupied same by tenant up to June, 1899.

In 1878 the Beaumont Pasture Company constructed a house on the northern end of the W. W. Carroll survey near the southeast corner of the Johnson survey, and kept tenants continuously occupying said house and cultivating a little inclosure of about ten acres on the W. W. Carroll survey near the gate from 1878 up to the time of the sale by the pasture company to the Port Arthur Land Company in 1895. There was also-another small inclosure on the northern portion of the Carroll* survey, but neither inclosure and none of the improvements made by the company reached nearer than 1% miles to the land in suit.

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Bluebook (online)
64 S.W. 58, 26 Tex. Civ. App. 242, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/polk-v-beaumont-pasture-co-of-1887-texapp-1901.