Simpson v. Edens

38 S.W. 474, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 235, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 309
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 38 S.W. 474 (Simpson v. Edens) 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
Simpson v. Edens, 38 S.W. 474, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 235, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 309 (Tex. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

FINLEY, Associate Justice.

The statement of the case as made in appellees’ brief is sufficiently full and accurate to present the questions involved, and is here given: In 1890, Emma J. Simpson instituted suit against part of the appellees, to recover an undivided interest of one-tenth in 3000 acres of the Enoch Fryar league, situated in Navarro County. In 1894, the heirs of Martha Theo. Kyle, together with Emma J. Simpson, instituted suit against all of appellees, to recover an undivided interest of two-tenths of 3000 acres of the Enoch Fryar survey in Navarro County. The two suits, upon motion, were consolidated. H. L. Stone intervened in the consolidated case, claiming a one-half interest in the recovery of the plaintiffs, the heirs of Mrs. Hardeman and Mrs. Simpson. The suit was an ordinary one of trespass to try title, the petition not disclosing any particular title. The defenses were presented under the general denial and the statute of limitations of three, five and ten years. On the trial of the case it was admitted that appellees L. Q. White, John Pickett, Texas Loan Agency, John Brit-ton, M. E. Dunn and Jas. Casgrove, were entitled to recover, and it is admitted that defendant Mr. Vance owns 158 acres in controversy.

Appellant’s proved that W. H. Harris, Sr., and his wife owned at one time the 3000 acres involved; that W. II. Harris died leaving his wife surviving, and three children—W. H. Harris, Jr., J. B. Harris and Francis A. Smith. Mrs. Harris married Kyle, and by him had two children, Emma J. Kyle, the plaintiff, who married A. I. Simpson, and Martha Theo Kyle, who married Hardeman, and whose children were plaintiffs below, and are appellants here. The interests of W. H. Harris, Jr., *239 J. B. Harris and Francis A. Smith in the 3000 acres were one-third of one-half each and one-fifth of one-half each. To show that defendants claimed from a common source with plaintiffs, they, plaintiffs, introduced a certified copy of a deed purporting to have been executed by Emma J. Simpson and husband, S. H. Hardeman, and Martfia Theo. Hardeman and J. B. Harris, to W. H. Harris, conveying their interests in the 3000 acres of the Enoch Fryar league of land. This deed, as shown by the certified copy, was defective, in that it failed to show that the officer taking the acknowledgment of the married women explained the instrument to them.

All of the defendants deraigned title from John R. Smith and his wife, Francis A. Smith, the said Francis A. Smith being one of the heirs of W. H. Harris, Sr., and a half sister to the plaintiff; and on the trial of the case under the issue of not guilty, they sought to show that the interest of Mrs. Simpson and Mrs. Hardeman had passed, either directly to W. H. Harris and from him to John R. Smith, or had passed from Mrs. Simpson to John R. Smith prior to their purchase from John R. Smith. Two ¡lowers of attorney were introduced, bearing date 1867; one from Martha Theo. Kyle and J. B. Harris to W. H. Hams, the other from Emma J. Simpson "and husband, A. I. Simpson, to W. H. Harris. These powers authorized W. H. Harris, Jr., to convey and make deeds to the interests of Mrs. Simpson, J. B. Harris and Mrs. Hardeman in the Enoch Fryar survey of land in Navarro County. W. H. Harris, on October 25, 1869, conveyed to Smith 1843 acres. It was shown that Mrs. Hardeman, who was Martha Theo. Kyle, after the execution of the power of attorney by her in 1867, married February, 1868, and the court instructed the jury that the marriage revoked the power of attorney executed by her to W. H. Harris, and that thereafter W. II. Harris could not convey, under such power of attorney, the interest of Mrs. Hardeman.

The plaintiffs sought to show that the power of attorney executed by Mrs. Simpson and her husband, A. I. Simpson, to W. H. Harris, in 1867; was revoked by a deed executed by them to W. H. Harris, which was defectively acknowledged, but sufficient to revoke the power of attorney, and the court upon that issue, instructed the jury that if the power of attorney was revoked by deed defectively executed, then W. H. Harris could not convey the interest of Mrs. Simpson under such power of attorney. The court further instructed the jury that if the power of attorney executed by Mrs. Simpson to W. H. Harris in 1867 was not revoked, and W. H. Harris intended by the deed executed to John R. Smith in October, 1869, to pass the interest of Mrs. Simpson, then such interest would pass to John R. Smith, whether it was so expressed in the deed or not. The evidence as to whether or not the power of attorney executed by Mrs. Simpson to W. H. Harris was revoked prior to the conveyance by Harris to Smith, was conflicting, and the evidence as to whether or not W. H. Harris intended by the deed he executed to John R. Smith, to convey the interest of Mrs. Simpson, *240 was circumstantial. Under the issues thus made by the pleadings and the evidence, the jury found for the defendants below, and the case comes here by appeal.

1. The first assignment of error is directed against the admission of the testimony of J. W. Edens as to statements ,of Mr. and Mrs. Simpson. The testimony objected to, as recited in the bill of exceptions, is as follows: “That directly after the institution of this suit he went to Nacogdoches County and saw A. I. Simpson and Emma J. Simpson; had a talk with them; that A. I. Simpson said that he had no recollection of having made a deed with his wife conveying her interest in the Fryar league to W. H. Harris, but his impression was that they had sold it to John R. Smith; that he showed A. I. Simpson a copy of the record of the deed purporting to have been made by him and his wife, S. H. Hardeman and wife and J. B. Harris to Wm. H. Harris, and A. I. Simpson at once said the deed was a forgery; that Simpson then went out of the house, and Mrs. Simpson said she had sold the land to John R. Smith, and her deed to John R. Smith ought to be of record; witness told her he could find no such deed on record; she then told him that the deed to the Taylor league probably included her interest in the Fryar league; that they, she and her husband, had made a heap of deeds, and that her husband in claiming that the deed to W. H. Harris was a forgery, might be talking too fast; that they might have made a deed to W. H. Harris; that she thought herself she had made no deed to him conveying her interest to him, but that it had been sold and conveyed to John R. Smith.”

This testimony was objected to by the plaintiffs and interven or on the grounds: (1) that it was immaterial; (2) no predicate had been laid for the impeachment of Mr. Simpson’s testimony; (3) no plea of forgery of the deed from the heirs of Harris to Wm. H. Harris, as it appears of record, had been filed; (4) the defective certificate to the deed as recorded cannot be amended or reformed by paroi testimony, nor by proof of circumstances resting in paroi.

The only legal proposition urged in appellants’ brief in opposition to this evidence is, that if it was intended to impeach the testimony of Mrs. Simpson, no predicate had been laid for that purpose.

Mrs. Simpson was a party to the suit; the evidence consisted of statements made by her and her husband bearing directly upon the issues involved, and was admissible as independent evidence in the nature of admissions of a party against interest. Keesy v. Old, 82 Texas, 25.

2. The second assignment complains that defendants were allowed to testify that they did not know of the marriage of Martha Theo. Kyle to S. H.

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Bluebook (online)
38 S.W. 474, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 235, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simpson-v-edens-texapp-1896.