Raley v. D. Sullivan Co.

159 S.W. 99, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1358
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 28, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 159 S.W. 99 (Raley v. D. Sullivan Co.) 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
Raley v. D. Sullivan Co., 159 S.W. 99, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1358 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinions

8224 Writ of error granted by Supreme Court. *Page 100 Sullivan Co. sued Carrie Coleman for debt and to foreclose a vendor's lien on block No. 1 in Mission Ridge addition, Bexar county, Tex., and D. M. Poor instituted suit against James Raley, Helen Raley, and M. H. Poor to recover said block No. 1. The two causes were consolidated, and D. Sullivan Co. filed an amended petition alleging that R. W. Coleman executed and delivered to M. H. Poor a promissory note for $650, secured by a vendor's lien on the land described, that M. H. Poor indorsed and delivered the note to D. M. Poor, who indorsed and delivered it to petitioners; that R. W. Coleman, maker of the note, died after Sullivan Co. purchased the note, leaving no heir to his community estate except his surviving wife, Carrie Coleman; that she left the state of Texas in 1893 and has been absent since; that she inherited and is the owner of the land described in the note, subject to the vendor's lien; that Miss Helen Raley, D. M. Poor, and M. H. Poor are asserting some pretended claim to the property and that Carrie Coleman is now Carrie Burr. Helen Raley pleaded not guilty, and pleaded three, four, and five years' limitations and valuable improvements in good faith. D. M. Poor answered by general and special exceptions and pleaded payment of the note and four and ten years' limitation, and also set up his discharge in bankruptcy. Carrie Burr filed a plea of intervention alleging that R. W. Coleman bought the land from M. H. Poor, paying $600 in cash and giving a note for a balance of $650, that he died in 1893, that on or about April 28, 1893, she executed to D. M. Poor a deed to the land, which was done merely to secure payment of the $650 note, and she expressed a willingness to pay off and discharge the note and take the property. James Raley disclaimed any interest in the property. The cause was submitted to the court, without a jury, and judgment rendered that D. M. Poor recover the property, and that the vendor's lien of D. Sullivan Co. be foreclosed thereon. This appeal was perfected by D. M. Poor, Helen Raley, and Carrie Burr.

The statement of facts is one made up by the attorney for Helen Raley, and, in the absence of an agreement by counsel for the other parties, approved by the trial judge as corrected by him. The statement is in writing and in parts of it is so marred and disfigured by erasures, interlineations, and pasters as to be deciphered with great difficulty, and no such statement of facts should be considered by an appellate court. In this day of stenography and typewriting it is almost inexcusable to impose such a task upon a court as that of attempting to decipher a statement of facts made up as this one is. Even if unable to meet the expense of typewriting, an intelligible statement of facts might be prepared in neat chirographic form. Not only is the statement of facts patched and scratched, and interlined, but, to add to the difficulty of understanding, many questions and answers have been inserted.

It appears that on May 25, 1892, M. H. Poor executed and delivered to R. W. Coleman a deed to the land in controversy, for a cash consideration of $600 and $650 evidenced by a promissory note secured by a vendor's lien on the land, which was to become due two years after date, the lien being reserved in the deed. On February 2, 1894, M. H. Poor executed a deed to the same land to D. M. Poor reserving a vendor's lien. In October, 1892, R. W. Coleman died, and on April 28, 1893, Carrie Coleman, his widow, his survivor and only heir, conveyed the *Page 101 land to D. M. Poor, a vendor's lien being reserved in the deed to secure the payment of the $650 note executed by R. W. Coleman. There was a recitation in the deed that D. M. Poor assumed payment of the $650 note. The deed was filed for record on January 24, 1912. On November 24, 1906, M. H. Poor by quitclaim deed conveyed the land to Helen Raley and the same was filed for record on day of execution. That was the third deed made by M. H. Poor to the same parcel of land. The taxes on the land were paid by Helen Raley up to and including those of 1911. The suit of D. Sullivan Co. against Carrie Coleman was filed on May 24, 1898, and was pending when Helen Raley obtained the quitclaim deed from M. H. Poor. Before the expiration of five years James Raley wrote letters to D. M. Poor offering to buy the land. He made an offer of $400 for the land on December 23, 1911, although at that time he claimed to have title to the land by three years' limitation and estoppel. He nor Helen Raley had any house on the land and no one lived on it. A few slight improvements were made on it and a narrow strip plowed. The fence was in bad repair and would not hold cattle.

The evidence was totally insufficient to show title by limitation in Helen Raley. According to the testimony of James Raley the use and enjoyment of the block was confined to the planting of some figs and berry vines, an occasional use of the land for pasturage purposes, cutting mistletoe off the trees, and planting two strips of sorghum perhaps once or twice. Frank Dawson, a witness for Helen Raley, swore that he lived two or three blocks from the block in controversy, that it was covered with brush, except some open spaces like a road, that Raley planted a little cane in the open space, which was very small, at one end, 10 or 12 feet wide and at the widest part 35 feet, and perhaps 100 to 200 feet long. The block contained about 2 1/2 acres. The only use Dawson made of the block was to turn his cattle in, and when they ate the cane they walked out. That was in 1910 and 1911. Dawson said he never saw any fig trees or blackberry vines on the land. He had lived near the land 10 or 12 years and saw nothing planted on the land except the two plantings of cane. It required continuous use and possession to acquire title by limitation. There was no pretense of this by Helen Raley or her agent. Pendleton v. Snyder, 5 Tex. Civ. App. 427, 24 S.W. 363; Buster v. Warren, 35 Tex. Civ. App. 644, 80 S.W. 1063; Hutcheson v. Chandler,47 Tex. Civ. App. 128, 104 S.W. 435. In the last case cited it was said: "The property was inclosed, it is true, and appellees may be said to have been in possession by reason of this inclosure, but the acts of use or enjoyment seem to have been confined to the planting of a few trees and rose bushes and to an occasional use of the property by certain persons, with the permission of appellees, for the purpose of pasturing therein two or three cows `to keep the grass down.' This use was not shown to have been continuous." Peaceable and adverse possession means a possession that is "actual, continuous, visible, notorious, distinct, hostile, fair and open." Hunter v. Malone, 49 Tex. Civ. App. 116,108 S.W. 709. The first assignment of error of Helen Raley is overruled.

The second assignment is to the effect that a deed given by a vendor to another party before default on the part of his first vendee is void. At the time that M. H. Poor executed the deed to D. M. Poor he still owned the superior title to the land, and while he could not convey the equitable title owned by R. W. Coleman he could convey his legal title to another. Such sale did not amount to a rescission of his sale to Coleman, but the evidence purpose was to put D. M. Poor in the position occupied by M. H. Poor, which appeared from a transfer of the $650 note to D. M. Poor. The evidence showed that D. M.

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Bluebook (online)
159 S.W. 99, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 1358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raley-v-d-sullivan-co-texapp-1913.