Rayner v. Posey

173 S.W. 246, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1543
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 12, 1914
DocketNo. 653. [fn†]
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 173 S.W. 246 (Rayner v. Posey) 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
Rayner v. Posey, 173 S.W. 246, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1543 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinions

8224 Writ of error pending in Supreme Court. An admission in appellees' motion for rehearing induces this court to change its opinion and its reasons for the disposition of the cause upon this appeal.

This as an action of trespass to try title, instituted in the district court of Lubbock county, Tex., by Alice Rayner against W. S. Posey and George W. Carter, for lot No. 11, in block 133, situated in the town of Lubbock, to which action the defendants pleaded not guilty, innocent purchaser, and the statutes of limitations of three, five, and ten years. The defendants Posey and Carter interpleaded certain warrantors in their chain of title, whose rights would necessarily follow the result of the cause, and further reference to their status in this controversy is unnecessary. This cause was tried to a jury, which, upon a peremptory instruction by the court, returned a verdict against the appellant, the plaintiff in the trial court.

Appellant's title consisted of the following chain of conveyances: Patent to Hiram G. Ferris of section 1, in block O, Lubbock county, Tex.; conveyance from Ferris of said section to F. E. Wheelock and W. E. Rayner; an agreement between Wheelock and Rayner in 1890 to select a town site upon said section of land, with a stipulation for partition, by the terms of which Wheelock was to receive the even numbers of the lots in the different blocks, and Rayner was to receive the odd numbers of said lots, as shown by the plat of the town site; deed from Wheelock to Rayner, dated January 31, 1891, conveying the lot in controversy, in accordance with said agreement for partition; deed from Rayner to Wheelock, dated March 5, 1891, and filed for record March 16, 1891; deed from Wheelock to Rayner, March 6, 1891; deed from W. E. Rayner to W. R. Yates, dated April 23, 1891, recorded same day; deed from Yates and wife to the appellant, Alice Rayner, November 23, 1894, filed for record November 30, 1894.

The appellees, Posey and Carter, claim the same chain of title from the state through the patentee, Ferris, including the deed from W. E. Rayner to F. E. Wheelock, dated March 5, 1891, and recorded March 16, 1891, but thereafter, necessarily departing from appellant's chain of title, and rejecting the deed from Wheelock to Rayner of March 5, 1891, claimed through a deed from Wheelock to J. F. Merritt, dated January 15, 1907, and by conveyances through intermediate *Page 247 grantors and grantees to the appellees, Posey and Carter.

We are not following the chain of title as introduced in evidence, but in accordance with the status of the record as the opposition titles finally appeared as to the rights of each when the case closed.

The submission of the peremptory instruction by the trial court, and the compulsory verdict of the jury based thereon, in favor of appellees, is assigned as error, and we are of the opinion, the same as upon the original hearing, that said assignment should be sustained. Appellees' position is: First, that the burden of proof is upon the appellant, Alice Rayner, and that she must recover on the strength of her own title, and not upon the weakness of the defendants' title; and, second, the claim is that the testimony in the cause is undisputed that the deed from Rayner to Wheelock, dated March 5, 1891, and filed for record March 16, 1891, was delivered subsequent to the deed from Wheelock to Rayner, dated the same day and filed for record March 6, 1891, and hence that the title to the lot, upon the close of that day, was in Wheelock, and the deed from Wheelock to Merritt of January 15, 1907, and the different conveyances through intermediate grantors and grantees to appellees, Carter and Posey, lodged the superior title in the latter.

It is undisputed that Rayner, before either of the two mentioned deeds of March 5, 1891, was executed, was the owner of the land and of the record title to the property on that date. Wheelock on January 31st, in pursuance of the agreement of partition, had conveyed this odd-numbered lot to Rayner. Appellees' testimony by Wheelock and other circumstances in the record disclose that on the 5th day of March, 1891 (the date of the two deeds in controversy here), Wheelock and Rayner passed several deeds between them, conveying different lots in the town of Lubbock, according to the plat of said town, and the explanation of Mr. Wheelock why the title of this particular lot was in him at the close of the day is as follows:

"This is the deed I have in my hand from W. E. Rayner to myself, dated March 5, 1891. There is a memorandum on the back of this deed, that I placed there when I filed it away with other papers, after it was recorded. From this deed I can state what property I exchanged with W. E. Rayner for lot 11, in block 133 [the lot in controversy]."

In the deed from Rayner to Wheelock of said date, two other lots were therein included, and, continuing, Mr. Wheelock further said:

"I gave lots 1, 3, and 5, in block 105, * * * for the three lots (including lot 11 in controversy) in the deed from Rayner to me. Afterthe deed I have was delivered to me, conveying to me lot 11 in block 133,I never conveyed to W. E. Rayner lot 11 in block 133."

Rayner died previously to the time of this trial, and Wheelock was the only witness who testified as to the matter of conveyance or delivery. While he disclosed a consideration — one of exchange — for the deed of Rayner to him for lot 11 in block 133, on March 5, 1891, and while he further says that after this deed was delivered to him he never conveyed to Rayner the same property, there is not the slightest explanation in this record from him as to the actuating consideration of the deed executed by him to Rayner, embracing the same property, dated the same day, and ostensibly, according to the logical sequence of ownership, revesting the title in Rayner, lodging it there at the close of that day. This deed from Wheelock to Rayner, dated on the same day, is one of general warranty. In 1890 he had made an agreement with Rayner to select a town site on the section of land conveyed to them by Ferris, and with a stipulation for partition, in pursuance of which he was to convey this odd numbered lot to Rayner. Thirty-five days previously — January 31, 1891 — in pursuance of the partition agreement, he had conveyed said lot, an odd number, to Rayner.

Why he had executed a general warranty deed, and delivered the same previously to the time that Rayner executed another deed to him of the same lot, and at a time when he (Wheelock) had no title to the property, and within such a short time after he had previously conveyed the same lot to Rayner, is totally unexplained; and we think the mere statement by Wheelock, opinionative in its nature, more than 20 years after the execution of his deed to Rayner, and made the same day as Rayner's deed to him, is insufficient testimony of an undisputed nature for the trial court to take the cause from the jury on the question of the time of the delivery of the deeds; neither do we think that the additional circumstances of the time of recording these two instruments — the Wheelock deed having been recorded first, and the Rayner deed last — in connection with the notary's record, in making his memorandum, or the order shown therein, are of sufficient probative significance, aiding the testimony of Wheelock himself, as that ordinary minds, without any difference of opinion, would say that Wheelock's deed was delivered to Rayner first, and that hence Rayner's deed to the former left the title in him on the close of the day of March 5, 1891.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 S.W. 246, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rayner-v-posey-texapp-1914.