Smith v. Estill

28 S.W. 801, 87 Tex. 264, 1894 Tex. LEXIS 382
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1894
DocketNo. 191.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 28 S.W. 801 (Smith v. Estill) 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
Smith v. Estill, 28 S.W. 801, 87 Tex. 264, 1894 Tex. LEXIS 382 (Tex. 1894).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

This suit was instituted in the District Court of Tarrant County, in 1886, by R. H. Kirby and B. S. Chambers, against J. P. Smith, and others claiming title under him, to recover one-half of a survey of land made by virtue of certificate number 375, granted by the board of land commissioners of Red River County in 1838 to James Riley, for one league and one labor of land. September 30, 1840, James Riley, by transfer indorsed upon the certificate, transferred one-half of it to William K. Revere, under whom plaintiffs claim title as follows: Revere died in 1859, leaving a wife and two daughters, Emily J. and Nancy Revere. It does not appear from the evidence whether Revere was married when he bought the half of this certificate or not, but at his death it was his property. Mrs. Revere married Washington Secrgst in 1871, who died in 1872, there being no children of that marriage. At sometime prior to 1879 (the date not given), Mrs. Secrest, formerly Mrs. Revere, died, leaving the two daughters, Emily J. and Nancy, her only heirs. Emily J. married Joseph H. Whitehead in 1865, and in 1868 Nancy married A. H. Carter; each continued under coverture until February 11, 1875, when they, with their husbands, conveyed to E. S. Chambers all of their right and interest in certificate number 375, issued to James Riley, and their interest in all land theretofore located by virtue of that certificate. February 17, 1885, B. S. Chambers conveyed one-half of his undivided one-half of the certificate and all lands located under it to R. H. Kirby and R. M. Swearengin. On the 3rd day of October, 1885, Swearengin conveyed his interest to Kirby.

Defendants derived title as follows: James Riley died in 1844, leaving surviving him a wife and a number of children, whose names are immaterial, and the wife died in 1865, leaving the children of herself and Riley as her only heirs. Hendricks & Smith, of which firm plaintiff in error was a member, were employed by the heirs of Riley to look up the certificate of their father, and about April 23, 1871, wrote to the Land Office to inquire about it, and received in reply information *268 that one survey in Red River County of 8,839,169 square varas had been located by virtue of the certificate. Another survey had been made at that time, but the field notes were not in the General Land Office. January 23, 1872, the heirs of James Biley made a transfer of their interest in the certificate and lands located under it to William Jernigan. The transfer contained the following recitals, after giving the names of the heirs: “Have granted, bargained, sold, and conveyed, and by these presents bargain, sell, and convey unto William Jernigan, his heirs and assigns, all our right, title, claim, and interest that we have in and to a certain land certificate described as follows: Pile 628, Bed Biver class; James Biley 8,839,169 square varas Bed Biver County; certificate number 375, issued by the board of land commissioners for Bed Biver County to James Biley, for one league and one labor of land, March 1, 1838. One-half of said certificate was transferred by James Biley to William K. Bevere, September 30,1840. We the grantors do sell and convey all of our right, title, and interest to the above and foregoing certificate, and we forever release and renounce all title and claim to the land located by said certificate, or that may be located by the same or any part thereof, to the said William Jernigan, his heirs and assigns forever; and we the grantors do by these presents empower and authorize the Commissioner of the General Land Office of the State of Texas to patent the lands located by said certificate to William Jernigan, as assignee of the heirs of James Biley.”

December 18, 1872, Smith, plaintiff in error, for Jernigan, as he claims, located or rather had the land in controversy surveyed under the certificate. The field notes were returned to the Land Office in ¡November, 1873.

November 25, 1874, Jernigan transferred to J. P. Smith all of his interest in the land certificate, and all land theretofore or thereafter located by virtue thereof. This conveyance recited the transfer by Biley to Bevere.

The patent issued upon this survey to James Biley April 25,1877. On February 12, 1879, J. P. Smith, by deed duly acknowledged, conveyed 160 acres of the land to S. P. Smith, which was recorded the same day. S. P. Smith conveyed the same 160 acres to O. F. Estill on December 2, 1884, by deed which was acknowledged and recorded on the 25th of February, 1885. J. P. Smith conveyed to C. F. Estill 160 adres of the same survey, by deed dated December 2, 1884, acknowledged and recorded February 25, 1885. J. P. Smith conveyed two tracts of this survey to J. W. Burgess, by deeds dated and recorded as follows: One for 298 acres, dated May 21,1884, and acknowledged and recorded June 14, 1884; and the other for 842 acres of this survey and other lands, deed dated October 25, 1884, acknowledged and recorded October 27, 1884.

*269 The court instructed the jury to find for the plaintiffs one-half of' the land in controversy, which they did, and judgment was so entered, from which judgment J. P. Smith appealed to the Court of Civil Appeals, which affirmed the judgment of the District Court in that particular.

Plaintiff in error presents several grounds of objections to the judgments of the District Court and the Court of Civil Appeals, but we need notice only two, which are in substance as follows:

First—That the court erred in instructing the jury to find in favor of the plaintiffs for one-half the land, for these reasons:

1. Because the evidence was sufficient to raise the issue that Smith located the land in controversy for William Jernigan, and that he had the right to so locate it and acquire title to the land for Jernigan alone.

2. That there was evidence which tended to show that Estill and Burgess were innocent purchasers for value, without notice of plaintiffs’ claim.

3. That there was evidence sufficient to go the jury on the question of limitation in favor of the defendants as against the interest derived through Mrs. Secrest, formerly Bevere.

Second—That the court erred in refusing, upon objection of plaintiffs, to permit defendant Smith to introduce in evidence the copy of petition in suit in District Court of Red River County, in the case of E. S. Chambers v. J. P. Smith, for land located in that county under the same certificate.

The first objection is not well taken so far as it is based upon the second and third reasons assigned. The transfer from the heirs of Biley to Jernigan, under which all the defendants claimed, recited that half the certificate had been conveyed by James Biley to W. K. Bevere. Defendants were bound to take notice of this recital in their chain of title. James Biley was dead when the certificate was transferred to Jernigan, and there was no ground to believe that Biley had reacquired the title of Bevere between the transfer to Jernigan, in which the recital was made, and the issuing of the patent.

There was no evidence to show whether or not Bevere was married when he acquired the right to half of the certificate, but the evidence does show that at the time of his death the title was in him, and in the absence of proof to the contrary, the law presumes that it was community property. Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 S.W. 801, 87 Tex. 264, 1894 Tex. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-estill-tex-1894.