Seureau v. Frazer

189 S.W. 1003, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 1111
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 16, 1916
DocketNo. 596.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 189 S.W. 1003 (Seureau v. Frazer) 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
Seureau v. Frazer, 189 S.W. 1003, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 1111 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

WALTHALL, J.

This suit was brought by appellant, Mrs. C. 8. L. Seureau, a feme sole, against S. D. Frazer and C. Glen Nichols and wife, in trespass to try title, to recover an undivided interest in a certain tract of land in Harris county, and, in the alternative, for general relief. Frazer answered by general demurrer; not guilty; that he is an innocent purchaser for value without notice or knowledge of any of the facts pleaded by appellant; the statutes of limitations of two, four, and five years. Nichols and wife disclaimed, and at the close of the evidence the court instructed the verdict in favor of Frazer.

The assignments and the propositions thereunder are to the effect that the undisputed evidence offered by the appellant shows that as a result of a mutual mistake upon the part of appellant and Lomax appellant had conveyed to Lomax a portion of the Wm. Hardin league of land, described by metes and bounds, containing 27.35 acres in excess of the quantity believed and stated in the deed thereto to have been contained within said metes and bounds; that appellee held said tract of land under mesne conveyances from Lomax; that in each sale of said land from appellant to Frazer such sales were by the acre, and that each purchaser had paid the agreed price per acre for only 157.3 acres, and that no purchaser had paid anything for said excess; that said mutual mistake as to the quantity of land embraced in the deeds had continued and existed in the instance of each sale from appellant down to and including appellee Frazer; that the mistake was material was not discovered until about one year before the filing of suit, and could not have been discovered sooner; that *1004 the facts were sufficiently shown to require the submission of the case to the jury.

The contentions of appellee Frazer are that, there being no privity of contract between appellant and appellee, and no mutuality of mistake shown in so far as appellee is concerned, appellee could not be affected by any mistake made in the sale between appellant and Frazer’s remote vendor; that appellant had not discharged the duty or burden of showing an excess in the acreage conveyed; that the conveyance of the land from appellant was by metes and bounds, and that the description so given would control any reference in the deed to quantity, or in the number of acres contained therein, and in the absence of actual notice disclosed by the record that it was a per acre sale, ap-pellee would not be affected; that the statute of limitation of four years barred the cause of action.

The evidence offered by appellant consisted of a deed from appellant to Lomax of date October 29, 1907; deed from Lomax to Nichols ; deed from Nichols and wife to appellee Frazer; the plats and field notes made by Pennington and Peppercorn; the agreement as to the testimony of Nichols; and the evidence of Kellett and Peppercorn. Appellant also put in evidence the deed from appellant to Farrell, and the deed from appellant to Huekley; the dates of these last two deeds being the same as appellant’s deed to Lomax. The three deeds (Lomax, Farrell, and Huck-ley) convey defined portions of the Wm. Hardin survey, which, at the date of the deeds, was owned by appellant. The deeds from appellant to Lomax, from Lomax to Nichols, and from Nichols to appellee Frazer, except as to the dates and considerations, are in the same form, and describe the land conveyed as follows:

“All of that certain tract of land in Harris .county, Tex., a part of the Wm. Hardin league, described as follows: Beginning on the S. bank of Buffalo Bayou at the N. E. corner of a 7614-acre tract of land, a part of the Wm. Hardin league conveyed by G-. N. Phelps and O. I>. Phelps to Peter Blike on the 16th day of March, 1888, by deed recorded in volume 25, p. 613, of Deed Records of Harris County, Tex.; thenee S. with the E. line of Blike tract 5,874.5 feet to a stake for corner; thence E. 1,325.6 to iron stake for corner; thence N. 607 to a 12" pine on S. bank of Buffalo Bayou marked X and at the foot of which is set a 2" iron pipe for corner; thence up said Bayou with its meanders [giving the meanders by courses and distances] to the place of beginning — containing 157.8 acres of land.”

The consideration stated in the deed from appellant to Lomax is:

“The sum of $2,949.20 to me paid and secured to be paid by W. J. Lomax, as follows: [Then follows the statement of the cash and time payments.]”

Kellett, appellant’s son-in-law, testified that in 1907 and 1908 he was attending to appellant’s business; that he had placed the property embraced in said deed with Nichols, a real estate agent, who found the purchasers named; that arrangements were made with the purchasers named for a surveyor, Pennington, to survey off 100 acres for I-Iucklcy, 100 acres for Farrell, and the balance to Lomax; that the surveyor, Pennington, was to ascertain the acreage in the tracts; that the surveyor went out to the land for the purpose of dividing it and computing the acreage in the tracts, and, when he had completed his work, furnished witness with a plat thereof; that the field notes to the tract described in the Lomax deed were furnished by the surveyor, Pennington; that deeds were then prepared and read over by the witness, who took them to appellant. Appellant could not read or speak English, but the deeds were translated to her by her daughter. Witness did not have any knowledge with reference to the acreage contained in the tract deeded to Lomax, and appellant had nothing to do with the transaction other than as stated. The trade witness had with Lomax was to sell Lomax the land at $18 per acre, and at the time he dealt with Lomax he dealt with him on the basis of the acreage which Pennington had furnished, as stated in the deed. Later Huekley claimed that he did not have 100 acres in his tract, and witness then emploj'ed Surveyor Peppercorn to survey the land and make another drawing. Until Peppercorn notified witness of the mistake, witness had no reason to believe and did not know that a mistake had been made in the excess acreage deeded to Lomax, and had he known it he would not have had appellant to sign the deed; that he (witness) was unable to figure the acreage of the tract of land meandered by the stream; that at the time appellant executed the release of the vendor’s lien to Lomax, witness had no further knowledge about a mistake, his knowledge of the mistake obtained through Peppercorn having been obtained subsequent to the release.

Peppercorn testified that he was a civil engineer and surveyor, that the blueprint of the work done by Pennington was given to him, and that he figured after that, and identified the blueprint handed him as the one that Pennington had made. Witness computed the acreage of the Lomax tract as described in the Lomax deed and made a plat of the work which he did, and produced the plat, and said:

“This plat of mine shows, according to Mr. Pennington’s figures, that in the Lomax tract there were 184.65 acres of land. This shows the acreage contained within the boundaries of that tract as designated there by Mr. Pennington, and as I say, I found it to contain 184.65 acres. The work which I did was carefully done.”

Witness checked the Huekley tract; found there were 93.85 acres in it. The tract of land is bounded on a stream. It would be difficult for one not skilled in such work to compute the acreage. It was in March, 1912, that he did the work.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 S.W. 1003, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 1111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seureau-v-frazer-texapp-1916.