Rice v. Taliaferro

156 S.W. 242, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 674
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 27, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 156 S.W. 242 (Rice v. Taliaferro) 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
Rice v. Taliaferro, 156 S.W. 242, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 674 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

REESE, J.

Sinclair Taliaferro and wife and J. M. Blanding and wife instituted this suit in trespass to try title against C. M. Rice and others, defendants, to recover land described as leagues Nos. 2 and 8 of the Jose Dolores Martinez grant in Liberty county. On the trial defendants C. M. Rice, J. A. Rice, W. A. White, L. A. White, L. A. Isaacs, T. A. Booth, and C. N. Smith on their application were granted a severance. They disclaimed as to all of the land sued for, except a tract of 705 acres specifically described by metes and bounds, as to which they pleaded not guilty, and the statute of limitations of three, five, and ten years. By an amended petition plaintiffs also pleaded title by limitation. They also pleaded, in reply to appellants’ plea of limitation, cover-ture and minority on the part of Mrs. Talia-ferro and Mrs. Blanding. Upon the trial, with the assistance of a jury, there was a verdict for plaintiffs. From the judgment, a motion for new trial having been overruled, defendants prosecute this appeal.

The land in controversy, 705 acres, was a part of a tract of 1,000 acres running through the league from the west bank of the Trinity river; thence west 11,215 varas; thence north 562 varas; thence east 10,516 varas to the river; and down the river to the beginning. A lake ran across this tract, leaving the 705 acres in controversy between the lake and the river, and 295 acres west of the lake. The controversy hinges upon the issue of the execution of a deed from E. A. and R. J. Palmer, alleged to have been executed in 1860, to B. Wilson or George Wilson, under both of whom appellants claim. E. A. and R. J. Palmer are the ancestors of Mrs. Taliaferro and Mrs. Bland-ing, under whom they claim title as heirs. It is contended by appellants that this deed Was executed by the Palmers in 1860, and that it was recorded in Liberty county previous to the destruction of the records of the county by fire in 1874. They claim that the original deed was also lost, and they sought to establish its execution by the testimony of S. F. Presswood and other circumstances of claim of title, acquiescence by appellees, etc. Appellees denied the existence of this deed, and also attacked the instrument, if any such ever existed as a forgery. Appellants claim title under a deed from George Wilson to George Rice dated April 27, 1876. This deed described the land conveyed as follows: “One undivided one-half of 1,000 acres of land described as follows, to wit: Beg. at a large sycamore tree in the west bank of the Trinity river opposite the corner of the first league of • land below Fields running. Thence west 11,215 varas. Thence north 562 varas. Thence east 10,516 varas to the river, and thence down the river with its meanders to the beginning —containing 1,000 acres (being a part of 11 leagues conveyed to M. L. Preston by Jose Dolores Martinez by deed dated January 18, 1837).” This deed then sets out the chain of title as follows: “And from M. L. Preston to Robert Dunley, August 10, 1845. From Robert Dunley to George W. Turner, September 27, 1860. From George W. Turner to B. Wilson, January 30, 1860. From B. Wilson to S. F. McCarty, August 24, 1866. And from McCarty to George Wilson, March 20, 1869.” It will be noticed that this chain of title makes no mention of the deed from E. A. and R. J. Palmer to B. or George Wilson alleged to have been executed in 1860. Of the deeds thus set out, the one from George Wilson to Rice was recorded in Liberty county in 1876, and at the same time was recorded the deed from Martinez to Preston. A certified copy of the former deed was introduced in evidence by appellants. The Martinez deed was not offered by them, but was introduced by appellees, over their objection, with evidence tending to show tha,t it was forgery. No evidence was offered by either party as to the other deeds in this chain of title; appellants resting their case on the alleged deed by the Palmers to Wilson, which they undertook to establish by parol.

The court submitted to the jury the sole issue of the execution of the deed from E. A. and R. J. Palmer to Wilson, claimed by appellants to have been executed in 1860, and recorded in Liberty county prior to the destruction of the records by fire in 1874. This deed was not produced upon the trial, but appellants, after laying proper predicate for the introduction of such evidence, sought *244 to Show its execution by secondary evidence. The jury found that no such deed was ever executed by the Palmers, and there is ample evidence to sustain the finding. Without recapitulating the evidence upon this issue, we conclude as matter of fact that the alleged deed from the Palmers to Wilson claimed to be the basis of appellants’ title was never in fact executed by E. A. and R. J. Palmer, and never in fact existed, but that, in so far as the evidence shows claim of title by George Rice, through whom appellants claim title, such claim rested upon a chain of title beginning with a deed-alleged to have been executed by Martinez, the original grantee, to M. L. Preston, January 16, 1837, and then by a consecutive chain of deeds, as shown in the deed from George Wilson to George Rice, down to Wilson: The evidence was well-nigh conclusive that this deed from Martinez to Preston was a forgery. The Palmer title, which appel-lees have, began in a deed from Martinez of subsequent date to the alleged date of deed to Preston. Appellants upon the trial relied solely upon title under the alleged deed from Palmers to Wilson. The undisputed evidence established the title of plaintiff, unless title was divested out of E. A. and R. J. Palmer by the deed from them to Wilson aforesaid.

[1] In laying the predicate for the introduction of secondary evidence of the execution of the alleged deed from E. A. and R. J. Palmer to Wilson, and to show search for and loss or destruction of said deed, appellants offered the testimony of their attorney, J. 0. Baldwin, which showed extensive correspondence with different members of the family of George Rice, and in connection therewith offered in evidence letters written by the witness, and received by him, all going to show a patient, diligent and unsuccessful search for said deed. O. M. Rice testified that he at one time had sent the package of deeds to this land to his father in Missouri by mail. His father died about the time the documents were sent, and it was claimed that the entire package, including the Palmer deed, had been lost or inadvertently destroyed. All of the evidence of Baldwin and the correspondence was addressed to the court, the purpose being to lay the predicate for the admission of secondary evidence of the execution of the Palmer deed. The trial court held, as shown by the bill of exceptions filed, “that the testimony would be admissible only for the purpose of laying the necessary predicate for showing the contents of said deed, and that this was a matter addressed to the sole discretion of the trial judge, and in the circumstances he would hold that this testimony should not be heard by the jury, but that it would be heard by the court, and that each and every part of the testimony of said witness as here related should be excluded from the jury, though admitted and heard by the the court out of the presence and hearing of the jury for the sole purpose of establishing said predicate.”

To this appellants excepted, and this ruling is assigned as error in appellants’ first assignment of error. The court held the evidence sufficient to establish the predicate for the admission of secondary evidence. The evidence served the only legitimate purpose for which it was available.

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Bluebook (online)
156 S.W. 242, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rice-v-taliaferro-texapp-1913.