Sheppard v. Avery

69 S.W. 82, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 479, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 167
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 5, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 69 S.W. 82 (Sheppard v. Avery) 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
Sheppard v. Avery, 69 S.W. 82, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 479, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 167 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

*480 COLLARD," Associate Justice.

A statement of the nature and result of this case is properly made in brief of plaintiffs in error, as follows:

“The suit was originally brought, in form of trespass to try title, by W. B. Sheppard and West and MeGown, against Henry Avery, John Avery, Martin Avery, Hugh Avery, Haney Avery, Albert Avery, Mary E. Avery, and V. R. C. Avery to recover the east half of the William C. Hays 1280-acre survey in Williamson County, described in a petition filed August 26, 1891. Another suit was filed September 8, 1891, by Charles Tinsley against Henry Avery, Mrs. Sarah Ann Avery, Mrs. Hora Mayhall and her husband Albert Mayhall, Thomas Avery, Melinda-Avery, James Avery, John Avery, Martin Avery, Hugh Avery, Haney Avery, Albert Avery, and Mary E. Avery, and against V. R. C. Avery as guardian df the estate of the said John, James, Martin, Hugh, Haney, Albert, and Mary E. Avery.
“This suit.was also in form of trespass to try title for a specific 195 acres of the east half of the said Hays survey. - The suits were consolidated. Defendants answered by pleas of not guilty, three, five, and ten years limitation, and claim for valuable improvements. The court peremptorily charged the jury to find for the defendants on the ground that under the evidence and admission of counsel for plaintiffs, defendants’ plea of the statutes of limitation of three years should prevail. Judgment was rendered on July 16, 1901, accordingly, for the defendants, from which plaintiffs have sued out this writ of error. This case has been before this court heretofore (32 Southwestern Reporter, 791) and also before the Supreme Court (89 Texas, 301) but upon different questions.”

Error is assigned, to the trial court’s charge peremptorily directing a verdict for defendants.

Plaintiffs claimed the land in suit "by virtue of location and survey of a valid bounty land warrant for 1280 acres of land, dated December 11, 1846, issued to the heirs of W. C. Hays, the field notes of the location duly filed in the State Land Office the 16th day of February, 1849. The land claimed by defendants is a portion of the Willis Avery grant which lays outside of Austin’s Little' Colony, in Robertson’s Colony. Defendants are the heirs of Willis Avery, and claim under grant to him as a colonist in Austin’s Little Colony dated Hovember, 1832, a translated copy of which was filed for record in Williamson County May 19, 1852, and duly recorded, and also duly recorded in deed records of Travis County, August 24, 1840. The grant to Avery covered land in and outside of Austin’s Little Colony, that outside being the land in controversy. A patent was issued to the heirs of Hays, October 14, 1865, by virtue of the location and survey of his bounty warrant. Plaintiffs admitted possession of defendants was sufficient under the three years. statute of ..limitations which had. been set up as a bar to plaintiffs’ suit, and the court, holding that the Avery grant of the land in controversy outside of Austin’s Little Colony, having been validated *481 by act of the Legislature in 1854, was sufficient title under the statute of three years’ limitation, directed a verdict for defendants. Plaintiffs denied that the Avery grant of the land outside of the Little Colony covered by their location and survey could support limitation of three years.

Opinion.—The court’s charge directing a verdict for defendant under the admission of three years possession is the question involved in this appeal, plaintiffs claiming that the Act of 1854 confirming the grant to Avery did not have the effect of confirming that grant as to the land then located by virtue of the Hays certificate, that the grant to Avery of land outside of Austin’s Little Colony was void and is still void as to plaintiffs location, and therefore can not support the statute of limitations of three years.

The act of the Legislature in question was passed February 2, 1854. It is an act confirming certain headrights of land lying on the boundary line of Eobertson’s 'Colony and Austin’s Little Colony, and reads as follows:

“Sec. 1. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Texas, that the headrights of land granted to colonists before the 13th day of November, 1835, and lying and being intersected or crossed by the boundary line of Eobertson’s Colony and Austin’s Little Colony, and being part in one of said colonies and part in the other, are hereby declared to be as valid as if such headrights were lying and being wholly within the colony where such headright grants were issued; provided that nothing herein shall be so construed as to affect the rights of third parties.” The Avery grant was ■ a grant to him as a colonist in Austin’s Little Colony. At the time the act was passed the Hays bounty warrant was located and the survey duly returned to the General Land Office, thus appropriating the land in dispute.

The land covered by the Hays location comes clearly within the proviso of the act of validation and was not affected by the act. It is distinctly excepted from the operation of the act by the proviso. The grant to Avery outside the limits of Austin’s Little Colony was void in the beginning and is still void as to the Hays title, and not such title or color of title as will support the statute of limitations of three years. Land and Mortgage Co. v. State, 1 Texas Civ. App., 620; Smith v. Power, 23 Texas, 33; Hamilton v. Avery, 20 Texas, 630, et seq.; Howard v. Perry, 8 Texas, 262; Griffith v. Sauls, 77 Texas, 635; Suth. on Stat. Con., sec. 222.

As to location of a certificate on land and what severs the land from the public domain, see 49 Texas, 488; 26 Texas, 706; 51 Texas, 381-383; 82 Texas, 416.

We do not understand that the five years statute of limitation can apply, as defendants were not claiming under a deed, but a grant from the government. The three years statute does not apply as has been *482 shown, nor does the five years statute. There was error in the court’s peremptory charge on limitation of three years, for which the judgment of the lower court is reversed and the cause remanded as prayed for by appellants.

Defendants in error insist, by cross-assignment of error which the parties have agreed may be filed in this court, that the court erred in permitting to be read in evidence the depositions of W. B. Sheppard, one of the plaintiffs, wherein he stated that he bought the land in controversy from the heirs of William C. Hays, and that said Hays was a soldier in the war of the Texas revolution, and that he died in Texas, and that his widow was named Elizabeth, and afterward married one Davisy and that Mary E. Smith and Hester A. Hays were his only children and heirs, and that he learned these facts from the Hays family at the time he bought the land in controversy; to all which defendant objected, because (1) the same was hearsay; (2) the same could not be given as family history, the witness not being a member of the family and not qualifying himself to detail family history; (3) if said answers showed that said Elizabeth Davis and Mary E. Smith and Hester A. Hays, were the surviving wife and children of W. C.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.W. 82, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 479, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheppard-v-avery-texapp-1902.