Simpson v. Chapman

45 Tex. 560
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 45 Tex. 560 (Simpson v. Chapman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simpson v. Chapman, 45 Tex. 560 (Tex. 1876).

Opinion

Moore, Associate Justice.

This is an action of trespass to try title to twelve hundred and eighty acres of land, located and surveyed December 2,1851, by virtue of a certificate issued October 5,1847, by the County Court of Guadalupe county, to French Smith.

[562]*562Appellant Simpson, who was the plaintiff in the court below, claimed title by deed from the sheriff -of Hood county, as purchaser, at a sale by said sheriff under an execution issued on a judgment in favor of the county of Gonzales against said Smith and others. This judgment, which was for the sum of two thousand dollars, was rendered in the District Court of Gonzales county oh the 16th of April, 1867, execution having been first issued to Gonzales county. “Ho property found,” an alias execution was issued to the county of Hood, which, on the 3d of August, 1870, was levied upon the land in controversy, which, however, was returned without a sale, “because,” as the return of the sheriff states, “no legal newspaper was appointed in the thirteenth judicial district in which to advertise said land.” On the 25th of Hovember, 1870, execution again issued, which was returned by the sheriff on the day he received it; that it “ came, to hand too late for sale.” February 21,1871, another execution issued; and under this last, execution the land was regularly advertised, and sold, April 4, 1871, to appellant for the sum of three hundred and five dollars. Immediately after his purchase, appellant placed the deed executed to him by the sheriff on record, and on the 24th of April, 1871, he procured from the General Land Office the patent for the land, which, however, was issued to “French Smith, his heirs and assigns,” by virtue of said location and survey in 1851, as aforesaid.

Appellee Chapman, in support of his claim to the land, relied upon a deed executed to him by said Smith on the 12th day of June, 1871, in pursuance of a contract or agreement made in January, 1853, of which the following is a copy:

“"Whereas I have had located, through the agency of E. H. "Wynn or "William Mitchell, a certificate, No. 117, for one third of a league of land, which certificate was granted to Freeman H. K. Day, deceased; and also my headlight certificate for twelve hundred and eighty acres — the two mak[563]*563ing two thousand seven hundred and fifty-six acres. Now, I do hereby agree and bind myself to have said certificates patented to Augustus A. Chapman, of the county of Monroe, State of Virginia, for his, the said Chapman’s, own proper use; or, if I do not have said certificate patented to said Chapman in his own name, I do hereby agree and bind myself to have conveyed to said Chapman, in fee simple, the land patented upon said certificates, and, at least, I am to have the title to said land aforesaid fully and completely vested in said Chapman without any expense or charge upon Mm, said Chapman, wMeh is for and in consideration of the judgment which was obtained by John S. Watson, of Virginia, in the Circuit Court of Giles county, Virginia, against French C. Smith & Co., and which judgment was paid by the said Augustus A. Chapman; and the conveyance of the land aforesaid to said Chapman is to be in full discharge of the sum paid by him in discharge of said judgment.

“ Given under my hand and seal this 22d day of January, 1853. French Smith, [l. s.]

“Witness:

“Michael Erskine.
“ John P. Erskine.
“I do hereby agree to release all claims to said Smith for said sums by me paid in discharge of said judgment aforesaid, when the said Smith shall have complied with the above agreement. Ausustus A. Chapman.
“ The above obligation, when complied with, will also be in full consideration of a bond executed to me some years since for two thousand acres of land lying on York creek, in the county of Guadalupe. A. A. Chapman.”

This agreement was not recorded until the 12th of June, 1871, when it, together with the deed from Smith to Chapman, mentioned above, was acknowledged by Smith before the clerk of the District Court of Hood county, and filed [564]*564with him for record, which, as has been seen, was after the purchase of the land by appellant at the sheriff’s sale. There was, however, testimony tending to prove, that a tenant of Chapman was in possession of a part of the land at the date of the sale, and also of other facts and circumstances, from which it is insisted the jury may have inferred that appellant had notice of Chapman’s title when he bought. The jury, therefore, under the instructions of the court, were warranted in finding that he was not an innocent purchaser. But, as there is no pretense that Chapman had possession of the land, or that the creditor had any notice, either actual or constructive, of his claim to it when the execution was levied and his lien secured, if the land was subject to such levy, the fact of notice, either actual or constructive, by appellant of Chapman’s claim is immaterial. (Grace v. Wade & Mains, infra.) For, as was said in that case, reiterating, indeed, merely what had been previously decided by the court, in Blankenship v. Douglas, 26 Tex., 225, unless Chapman’s title was of a character which was required to be placed upon record before the lien of the creditor was acquired, neither the creditor nor purchaser, at a sale for his benefit, can complain. _

The instrument executed by Smith to appellee, is certainly a written contract or agreement relating to land, which must be recorded before it could take effect and be valid as to subsequent purchasers for valuable consideration -without notice and as to creditors, (Paschal’s Dig., arts. 4988, 4989, 4994,) unless the necessity of recording it until six months from the issuing of the patent 'is obviated by section 7 of the act of 29th of January, 1840, to detect fraudulent certificates and provide for issuing patents, which reads as follows, to wit: “Any person claiming land by virtue of an assignment made previous to the issuing of the patent by the Government on the said claim, shall have six months from the issuing of said patent to have the assignment proved up and recorded in the county where the land is situated; and any assignment [565]*565proved up and recorded, as required by law, within the said six months, shall be as valid and binding in law as if it had been proved up and recorded at the time said transfer was made.”

Unquestionably, it would require no very strained construction to hold the contract of January 26, 1853, to be in effect an assignment of the French Smith certificate previous to the issuing of the patent, under which Chapman equitably claims the land upon which the certificate was located on the issuance of the patent. And, if it, had been made previous to the location of the certificate, we see no reason to deny that the claimant under it would be protected in his title, both against creditors and purchasers, if proved and recorded within six months from the issuing of the patent to Smith. But to give this enactment its proper construction, and to determine the character of claims to land to which it is applicable, it is necessary for us to consider the object and purpose of the statute, of which it is a part, and also the character or class of property, whether real or personal, to which the certificate assigned, properly pertains or belongs.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Tex. 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simpson-v-chapman-tex-1876.