Robinson v. Jones

21 S.W. 15, 2 Tex. Civ. App. 316, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 76
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 23, 1893
DocketNo. 55.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 21 S.W. 15 (Robinson v. Jones) 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
Robinson v. Jones, 21 S.W. 15, 2 Tex. Civ. App. 316, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 76 (Tex. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

GARRETT, Chief Justice.

This suit was brought by Jerry Robinson against John M. Jones, for the recovery of an undivided one-third interest in a number of lots of land on Galveston Island.

*318 The defense is outstanding title and limitation. Plaintiff showed title as follows:

1. Patent by the State of Texas to Edward Hall and Levi Jones.

2. Power of attorney from Edward Hall to William Bryan.

3. Deed from Edward Hall, by William Bryan, attorney in fact, to John M. Jones and Henry Hubbell, dated October 9, 1847.

4. Deed from John M. Jones and Henry Hubbell to Edward Hall for an undivided one-third interest in the land, dated October 13, 1847.

5. Will of Edward Hall, devising the land to his wife, Eliza Ann.

6. Deed from Eliza Ann Hall, widow of Edward Hall, to John McDougal, dated October 1, 1885=

7. Deed from John McDougal to the plaintiff, Jerry Robinson, dated September 18, 1890.

The defendant put in evidence a deed dated October 9, 1867, from Edward Hall to Henry B. Andrews, John M. Jones, and the estate of Lorin Kent, deceased, wherein he conveyed, “in addition to the property conveyed to them by deed bearing date November 20,1866, all legal and equitable rights and privileges and titles to any and all locations made by me on Galveston Island, Texas, either individually or in connection with others.”

He further offered in evidence.

1. The deed of Edward Hall, by Bryan, attorney in fact, to John M. Jones and Henry Hubbell, above recited, which shaw's that it was recorded in the record of deeds for Galveston County, October 19, 1847, and recited a consideration of 8800 and other considerations.

2. Proceedings in cause number 441, M. B. Menard v. John M. Jones, Henry Hubbell, and Edward Hall, to foreclose mortgage for the purchase money notes given by Jones and Hubbell for the land. No service was had on Hall, and the suit was dismissed as to him. There was judgment and foreclosure as to Jones and Hubbell.

3. Execution and return of sale in said cause, showing sale of property to the plaintiff, M. B. Menard, on the first Tuesday in March, 1850.

4. Deed of M. B. Menard to John M. Jones and Henry Hubbell, dated June 13, 1850, recorded October 28, 1851, releasing and quitclaiming the land to Jones and Hubbell.

5. Henry Hubbell died in 1853, and his estate was regularly administered in Galveston Count)'. A half-interest in the property described in the deed from Hall, by Bryan as attorney in fact, to Jones and Hubbell was inventoried among the assets of the estate, and was duly sold by the administrator and purchased by the defendant, John M. Jones, who received a deed therefor, which was recorded in Galveston County in 1855.

The evidence also showed, that the land patented to Edward Hall and Levi Jones had been partitioned between them, and that other persons, viz., John C. Watrous, R. C. Franklin, and William Bryan, were inter *319 ested with Hall in his half-interest in the land, although the legal title was in him. There was a partition of the interest set apart to Hall between him and those interested with him, except as to the several bayous and portions of the land covered with water included within the bounds of the patent to Levi Jones and Edward Hall, and the several sections assigned to Edward Hall which were declared by the decree of partition to be the common property of Hall, Bryan, Watrous, and Franklin. From certain papers attached to the decree of partition, read in evidence, it appeared that Hall, for himself and as attorney for Bryan, had made application to the surveyor of Galveston County for a survey of all the public domain of Galveston Island; and also for the location of certain land scrip on the shoals and reefs in front of and adjoining the city of Galveston.

In submitting the deed from Edward Hall to H. B. Andrews, John M. Jones, and the estate of Lorin Kent, to the jury, the court charged them as follows: “As to the said instrument of writing of date October 9, 1867, and filed for record August, 1872, it is ambiguous as to the word 1 locations;’ the language of the said instrument is, that he ‘ do bargain, sell, and convey to the parties above named, in addition to the property conveyed to them by deed bearing date November 20, 1866, all legal and equitable rights and privileges and titles to any and all locations made by me on Galveston Island, Texas, either individually or in connection with others.’ The ambiguity arises from the word ‘locations,’ used in said instrument. If you believe from the evidence that Hall, by himself, or with others or another, had made locations on Galveston Island not embracing the land in controversy, which land in controversy was then patented, you must determine from the evidence whether the word ‘ locations ’ embraced the patented land in controversy, or only embraced the locations not embraced in the land in controversy; for if you believe from the evidence that the word ‘ locations ’ used in said instrument only embraced the said other locations, then the said instrument would not defeat the regular chain of title in the plaintiff Robinson for one undivided third of the property described in the petition.”

The plaintiff has assigned error upon this instruction, because it was the duty of the court to construe the deed for the jury, since there was nothing ambiguous or doubtful as to the terms of the deed with respect to what was undertaken to be conveyed, and no evidence was offered by the defendant to show that the property in controversy was intended to be conveyed by the deed referred to; and there is no evidence to show that either Jones, Kent’s estate, or Andrews ever claimed title to the land under said deed, but that on the contrary the evidence showed that it was claimed by the defendant Jones under title from Edward Hall, deraigned through regular conveyances from October 9, 1847, down to the date of the trial. The admission of the deed in evidence was also *320 objected to by plaintiff’s counsel, because on its face'it did not pass title to the property in controversy from Edward Hall to Jones, Kent, and Andrews, and the deed was not offered for any other purpose; that it had no power or force to pass title to the patented lands that had passed from its locative relation into patent, and out of patent into title, by deed from Edward Hall to others and back to Edward Hall, of the one-third interest in controversy, and not held by right of location, but by due conveyance from private parties, when he executed the deed.

Has the word ‘ ‘ locations ’ ’ a fixed legal meaning, which must control the court in the construction of the deed in question ? The primary signification of the word “ location,” as applied to land, is the land designated by a person when he files a valid land certificate with the proper surveyor and makes an application for the survey of land subject to location by virtue of the certificate. Such person acquires a vested right in the land, and to have the same appropriated to his certificate, surveyed, and finally patented upon proper return of the field notes and otherwise complying with the law.

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191 S.W. 730 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.W. 15, 2 Tex. Civ. App. 316, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-jones-texapp-1893.