Smith v. Alexander Gilmer Lumber Co.

242 S.W. 767, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1060
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 25, 1922
DocketNo. 751. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 242 S.W. 767 (Smith v. Alexander Gilmer Lumber Co.) 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
Smith v. Alexander Gilmer Lumber Co., 242 S.W. 767, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1060 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, C. J.

This was an action of trespass to try title brought by the appel-lee, Alexander Gilmer Lumber Company, against appellant, C. W. Smith, to recover two small tracts of land, same being part of the Stephen Williams 640-acre survey in Newton county, the two tracts being described separately, and aggregating about 8 acres.

Smith answered by a general denial and plea" of not guilty, and, in addition, filed a cross-action, by which he claimed an undivided 160 acres of said Williams survey under the‘statute of 10 years’ limitations.

A jury was taken in the case, but, after the evidence was closed, the court peremptorily instructed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, Alexander Gilmer Lumber Company, the appellee. After his motion for a new trial had been overruled, appellant, Smith, duly prosecuted an appeal to this court, and has challenged the action of the trial court in instructing the verdict against him by two assignments of error. These assignments raise practically the same question, and the several propositions under them raise practically one and the same question.

It was agreed upon the trial below that the appellee was the owner of all the land here in controversy, and entitled to recover same unless defeated by appellant’s plea of limitation of 10 years. By the assignments of error, appellant complains, substantially, that the evidence adduced upon the trial showed, conclusively, that he had-had and held peaceable and adverse possession of the land in controversy for a period of more than 10 years before appellee filed this suit against him, and that therefore he was entitled, as a matter of law, to recover judgment against appellee for 160 acres of land, as claimed by him in his answer, etc. But, if mistaken in this, then he claims that the evidence adduced upon the trial was sufficient to warrant a finding by the jury in his favor that he had had and held peaceable and adverse possession of the land in controversy for a period of more than 10 years before this suit was filed against him, and that the trial court was therefore in error in taking such issue of fact from the jury by the peremptory instruction.

The material facts bearing upon appellant’s claim of limitation are, substantially, as follows:

On June 24, 1901, one D. V. Smith, who had no title, executed a deed to one J. W. Weaver for 160 acres of land, a part of the *768 Stephen Williams survey in Newton county; the deed describing the land by specific metes and bounds. Weaver, knowing that he acquired no title to the land under the deed from Smith, in the fall of 1902 put O. W. Smith, who is the appellant in this cause, in possession of the land described in Weaver’s deed from D. Y- Smith, with the understanding between them that O. W. Smith should be Weaver’s tenant; it being the intention of the parties that Weaver should acquire in this way title to the 160 acres of land described in his deed from D. Y. Smith by limitation. Immediately after taking possession for Weaver of this ICO acres of land, O. W. Smith commenced improving the same by clearing fields thereon and constructing buildings thereon. He built a dwelling house, a barn, and perhaps other outhouses, and cultivated the land that he cleared. The cleared land was not all in one place, or contiguous, and the main clearing or field was near the house where Smith lived and where the other improvements were, but he also cleared up a small patch or field consisting of about 4 acres in another place included within the description of the 100-acre tract in the D. V. Smith deed to Weaver, and also another small tract, consisting of about 2 acres, included within the description of said deed. All these improvements by O. W. Smith, as Weaver’s tenant, were made prior to 1907.

Some time during the year 1907, Jesse H. Jones, who was the owner of the Stephen Williams 640-acre survey, filed suit in the district court of Newton county in trespass to try title against J. W. Weaver, D. V. Smith, George R. Weaver, and several other defendants, including C. W. Smith, appellant in this cause. We infer from the record that Jesse H. Jones died after said suit was filed, and his executor’s were permitted to prosecute the same as plaintiffs in his stead. In the Jones suit, appellant here, who was one of the defendants, although duly cited, filed no answer, and did not appear in any manner in that cause, and judgment in that cause was rendered against him in favor of the plaintiffs for the title and possession of said Stephen Williams 640-acre survey. J. W. Weaver and D. V. Smith and George R. Weaver did appear and answer as defendants in the Jones suit, and each of these defendants was awarded by the judgment in that suit, rendered March 9, 1909, certain portions of the Williams survey. There was awarded by the judgment -to J. W. Weaver a tract of 80 acres described by metes and bounds, and there was awarded to D. V. Smith three separate tracts, one of 30, another of 18, and another of 3 ½ acres, described by metes and bounds, and there was awarded to George R. Weaver a tract of 45 acres described by specific metes and bounds. All of the remainder of the Williams survey of 640 acres was awarded by the judgment in that cause to the plaintiffs in that cause as against all defendants therein.

Immediately or very shortly after the judgment in the Jones suit J. W. Weaver caused the 80-acre tract recovered by him to be surveyed, and as surveyed the patch or little field of 4 acres above mentioned was not included within the S0-acre tract; neither was the 2-acre patch or garden included within the 80-acre tract. The 4-acre patch or field was left by the survey some 53 steps south of the south lin§ of the 80-aere tract, as awarded by the judgment in the Jones case to J. W. Weaver, and the 2-acre patch or garden was some 20 or 30 steps beyond the bounds of the 80-acre tract awarded to Weaver. When O. W. Smith, the appellant here, was notified by Weaver, right after the disposition made of the Jones suit, of these facts, he asked Weaver, according to his testimony on this trial,- what he, Weaver, intended to do with the little 4-acre field above mentioned, and Weaver replied that he did not intend to do anything with it, and, substantially, that Smith might do with it as he pleased. Smith thereupon replied, according to his testimony on this trial, that he would set up a claim to this 4-acre field and would continue to claim it and cultivate it, and try to acquire title to 160 acres more of the Williams survey for himself.

At the time C. W. Smith went into possession of the 160 acres described in the deed from D. V. Smith to J. W. Weaver above mentioned, in the fall of 1902, as the tenant of J. W. Weaver, it was understood between him and Weaver that in the event Weaver should acquire title to the same, or any portion thereof, under his claim of limitation, then Weaver was to convey to O. W. Smith a portion of the land that he should so acquire. In keeping with this agreement and understanding between Weaver and O. W. Smith, Weaver did, in February, 1910, make a deed to G. W. Smith for 35 acres of land, all of which was included within the 80 acres awarded by the judgment in the Jones case to Weaver. This 35 acres was described by metes and bounds in the deed from Weaver to O. W. Smith, and was promptly placed of record in Newton county, and O. W.

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Bluebook (online)
242 S.W. 767, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1060, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-alexander-gilmer-lumber-co-texapp-1922.