Port City Co. v. Peck

42 S.W.2d 275
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 24, 1931
DocketNo. 2104.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 42 S.W.2d 275 (Port City Co. v. Peck) 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
Port City Co. v. Peck, 42 S.W.2d 275 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

This was an action in trespass to try title by appellant against appellees. Among other defenses, appellees pleaded ten-year- limitation. This issue was found in their favor by the verdict of the jury, and judgment accordingly entered for the land. The tract of land in issue was within appellees’ inclosure of 125 acres. On this 125 acres was located the home of appellees; that is, the improvements constituting the home. A fence was built around the house in which they lived, but outside of the fence was their well, outhouses, and . barns. The fence around the dwelling house can be properly described as an interi- or fence. All of the 125 acres outside of the interior fence was used by appellees as a pasture, and it was their contention upon the *276 trial of the case that it was continuously so used- from 1917 until the filing of this suit in 1928, and that during all of that time appel-lees asserted openly and notoriously a hostile claim of title and ownership of the land in controversy.

It is the contention of’ appellant that the verdict of the jury is wholly without support in the evidence. The following excerpts from the testimony fully support the verdict:

Appellee G. R. Peck testified:
“That particular tract of land to which Mr. Ward directed my attention is enclosed and has been enclosed since March 10th, 1910. The fence has been constantly there since March 10th, 1910. This land is enclosed by a wire fence. ¡There is about one hundred twenty-five acres within the tract of land that is enclosed.
“No one but me uses that one hundred twenty-five acres for any purpose. I cut hay on it, run cattle on it, and i>asture on it, cattle pasture and hay pasture. I began about the fall of 1910 to use it for the purpose of cutting hay, running cattle and pasturing on it.
“I remember tlie date of the judgment in 1917, it being somewhere along about the 6th of July, I believe; 1917, something like that. Since the date of that judgment I have lived on that land and pastured it continuously. Nobody has taken the place away or anything. I always considered it my own piece of land. I cut hay on it, ran dairy cattle on it; it is part of my front yard. I can turn a cow out at my house and she can go right back on this piece of land. That condition has been continuous from the date of the judgment in 1917, and before, on up to the date this suit was filed. I-have been using this land, constantly, every day, all the time from the date of the judgment up until the time this suit was filed.
“It is enclosed with a wire fence around it. I turn my dairy cows out; milk them in the morning and in the evening. I go out on this piece of land and drive them up to the barn and milk them. I have been cutting hay there. I will tell you what I have got on the one hundred twenty-five acres. In 1910 I fenced, it; I didn’t have anything but a fence. I pastured it and cut hay on it, but I didn’t live there, but in the fall of 1913 I went up there and built a house and lived there. I have lived there continuously since 1913, used it every day since 1910.
“The improvements on the one hundred twenty acres is a seven-room house, two barns, artesian well, chicken house, delco light, house, and garage.
“I just have a little fence around my yard, you see, to keep stock away from the house, and then I have got á big fence that goes around the one hundred twenty-five acres. There is no fence around my barn segregating it from the one hundred twenty-five acres. You can turn a cow out and she can go right on over this piece of land. It is my pasture. This one hundred twenty-five acres is enclosed with a fence around the whole' thing. Turn a cow out and she can go right on this piece of land.
“My one hundred twenty-five acres are right here (indicating on map). It lies in this shape. Here is the land they are suing for right over here, begins at that land. Here is my house. When you turn cattle out they go right back on this piece of land.”
“ * * * There is nothing intervening between my barns here and the twenty-four acres up here that is in controversy.
“My fence lines run around and outside the exteriors that I have marked A, B, O, D, and E.
“Since the date of that judgment in 1917 there has not been any time that my fences were not up around this tract of land; they have been there constantly.
“We will say this about the fence;, the fence will get in bad condition; maybe I will let it run a couple of years and fix it up. I won’t fix it up every year. I will go out and repair it every couple of years. I will let it alone as long as it will stand and then I will rebuild it. That fence has been used continuously during that period of time for keeping my cattle in and keeping other people’s cattle out.
“Erom the time of the judgment up until the time this suit was filed I 'always claimed that land. I never recognized it any other way than as my piece of land. Nobody said anything to me about it, or came around or anything. I kept the fence up on it, I always claimed it as my piece of land. During that time I have not recognized anybody else’s adverse claim to that piece of land. I haven’t paid them any mind. During that time nobody has disputed my claim to the land.
“ * * * I knew that that judgment rendered in 1917 destroyed or took away from me every right and title to that land. I never conceived the idea of claiming that land by limitation after that date. I knew they never took it away from me, in my mind. I always claimed it; they hadn’t moved me off of the land. I was going to wait until they did it. I have always conceived it was mine. They haven’t taken it away from me yet. I always claimed the land. I had it in my possession. I never gave it up. My fence was still there.
“ * * * There was not any time from the date of the judgment in 1917 up until the time this suit was filed that I did not have horses on the land, inside of my enclosure. I always had them there, four or five, and a pair of mules in there continually. I had to have my saddle horse and mules anyway around there. I got as many as I could in there, because they were trying to starve *277 them to death for water, because if X could get them on my place for water they were all right. I got as many as I could in there. They headed me off on some of them and I couldn’t get them in there. I continuously grazed the land in that enclosure, the one hundred twenty-five acres, during that time with my horses and mules. I have always made claim to it from the date of the judgment in 1917 up until the time this suit was filed. I lived on it; it is my home. I got a well on it, my home where I stayed. I had my milk cows running in there.
“From the time of the judgment in 1917 up until the time the suit was filed there never was a time during that time when my wife or I was not on the one hundred twenty-five acre tract of land. We have continually lived there. That is my home. We continuously lived there.”
The witness J. E. Smith testified:

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.W.2d 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/port-city-co-v-peck-texapp-1931.