Settegast v. Floyd

214 S.W. 686, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 962
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 17, 1919
DocketNo. 463.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 214 S.W. 686 (Settegast v. Floyd) 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
Settegast v. Floyd, 214 S.W. 686, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 962 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

This is a suit in trespass to try title, brought by the appellants against the appellees to recover lots 3 to 8 and 11 to 13 in block 25 of the West Houston addition to the city of Houston. Defendants answered by general denial and plea of not guilty, and by disclaiming lots 11 to 13.

Briefly stated, the facts are as follows: The state brought suit against A. B. Floyd and others, foreclosing a tax lien on the above-described property. This property was sold under this judgment by the sheriff on August 6, 1907, and was bought by Lillian M. Randall. The deed from the sheriff was dated August 6, 1907, and was acknowledged April 29, 1909, and filed for registration on July 6, 1909, and recorded on July 22, 1909. On July 2, 1902, Lillian M. Randall and husband, George A. Randall, executed a power of attorney to B. J. Dodge, empowering him to buy and sell and manage generally property for the Randalls. Acting under this power of attorney, B. J. Dodge, as agent and attorney in fact for Lillian M. Randall and husband, George A. Randall, on July 17; 1909, executed a deed to J. J. Settegast, conveying to him an undivided one-half interest in the above-described property. This deed was not acknowledged until July 16, 1912, and was recorded in July, 1912. Lillian M. Randall and husband, George A. Randall, acting by and through B. J. Dodge as agent and attorney in fact, on the 2d day of May, 1913, executed a deed to Ada J. Dodge, conveying to her all their lands in Harris county, Tex., with an exception not affecting the land involved herein. This deed was acknowledged May 2, 1913, and was filed for record May 15, 1913. B. J. Dodge was agent of his sister, the aforesaid Lillian M. Randall, and her husband, and was also the agent of his mother, the aforesaid Ada J. Dodge, and also acted for J. J. Settegast. The above-described property was bought at tax sale by Dodge for the common benefit of all the parties mentioned and out of their common fund. The parties were at that time buying tax titles and holding them jointly. When the duly acknowledged deed was received from the sheriff as a result of this particular purchase and after it was recorded, Dodge and Settegast fenced the property during August, 1909, placed a tenant on it, and continuously thereafter and up to the date of the suit held it through tenants. During this time Dod^e, for the benefit of all of them, and out of funds supplied by each, paid the taxes on the land for each year. Their claim of title was open and notorious. The deed from Lillian M. Randall and husband to J. J. Settegast at the time it was signed was for the purpose of evidencing an interest in J. J. Settegast, but was not acknowledged *687 ior about three years, in order that the grantors might execute a deed and vest the title out of all of them, without the necessity of the signature of J. J. Settegast. Titles to other properties were held the same way. It was agreed between the parties to the suit that J. H. Webster and Chas. 0. Wolf were the common source of title. Plaintiff de-raigned title no further than the tax proceedings to which neither J. H. Webster nor Chas. O. Wolf was a party. Defendants showed no title from the common source by conveyance, descent, or otherwise, and showed no possession or claim of title in themselves or in any predecessor.

This case was tried before the court without a jury. The defendants offered no testimony. On conclusion of plaintiff’s testimony, the court rendered judgment for the defendants, and from this judgment plaintiffs ,below, appellants here, have brought this case to this court.

Appellants have briefed the case, but the appellees have filed no brief.

The above statement of this case is taken from appellants’ brief, and to this statement we add the following, taking it also from appellants’ brief:

The testimony of J. J. Settegast, one of the plaintiffs, is to the effect that he purchased the said undivided one-half interest in the said lots from Lillian M. Randall and husband, George A. Randall, by the said deed dated July 17, 1909; that about two weeks after the date of this deed of July 17, 1909, he and R. J. Dodge went out to this property and took some darkies with them, and that he put a fence around the property, and that he leased the ■ property to a Mr. White, for the purpose of pasturing. Mr. Settegast further testified that he and Mr. Dodge and the Randalls made it a practice to buy property some, more or less, at that time. “We did buy different pieces. The Randalls and Mr. Dodge and I went into it jointly; that is, we owned it jointly.” He further testified that Mrs. White and an old colored woman were both’his tenants; that they kept up the fences around the premises for the use of it until a part of the property was sold to a man by the name of Houck; -and that he bought a house from the Rice Institute and moved the house onto two lots, which he sold to Mr. Houck. He also testified that he authorized Mr. Dodge to pay the taxes on the property, and that he and Mrs. Ada J. Dodge still claim to own the property.

The testimony of B. J. Dodge shows that Dodge had authority from Ada J. Dodge, who was his mother, to pay her taxes, and that he also had authority from Mr. Sette-gast to pay his taxes; that he and Mr. Sette-gast took two colored fellows and a wagon ■out there and put a fence around these lots within a week or ten days after he recorded the deed which he got from the sheriff in 1909, which deed was the deed to Lillian M. Randall from the sheriff, and recorded July 22, 1909, and that he turned over the property, after it was fenced, to Mrs. White, the very day they built the fence, and that there was an old darkey named Ann Haley, who also used it, and, after he sold these two lots to Mr. Houck, that Mr. Houck continued to use lots 3 to 8 as a pasture, and that he (Mr. Houck) used the land in controversy up until the time when Mr. Houck sold out to Mr. Parriot. Mr. Dodge further testified as follows:

“I have paid the taxes on this property as they became due since the time that I purchased it. I have got the receipts to show that I paid the taxes, and I have got the statement from Mr. De George. I rendered this property for taxation. I rendered it as ‘B. J. Dodge, Special.’ That was the property that was owned by Mr. Settegast and mj' sister or mother, whichever it was. I was authorized to render it.”

Mrs. Lizzie White testified as follows:

“My name is Mrs. Lizzie White. I am acquainted with the property at and adjoining the Reynolds road, that is, the road running to Bel-laire, in which Mr. Parriot now lives and on which Mr. Houck did live. I lived on that road. I lived there in 1909, 1910, 1911, 1912, and 1913. I moved out to Lotus, on the Southern Pacific. I moved out there about May, along about the middle of May, 1913. I moved away from this property. I was acquainted with this property back of which Mr. Houck lives there, that lies behind Mr. Parriot’s place. That was located on block 25, I believe, on the west of the Reynolds avenue road. I do not mean the place I lived on; the place I lived on was the old Buhler on the left-hand side going out. Mr. Settegast’s property was on the left-hand side of the road also, adjoining places.
. “I know something about the fences that Mr. Settegast had around these lands. In 1909 my husband had a lot of yearlings that he did not have any pasture for, no grass to keep them, so we could not keep them at home, and' he got this pasture from Mr. Settegast to keep them in.

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Bluebook (online)
214 S.W. 686, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/settegast-v-floyd-texapp-1919.