Smith v. Gillum

15 S.W. 794, 80 Tex. 120, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 964
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1891
DocketNo. 3024.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 15 S.W. 794 (Smith v. Gillum) 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. Gillum, 15 S.W. 794, 80 Tex. 120, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 964 (Tex. 1891).

Opinion

HOBBY, Presiding Judge.

The land involved in this suit was originally granted to Asahel Savery by the government of Coahuila and Texas on April 13, 1835. Mrs. Harriet Smith, the appellant, who was intervenor in the court below, claims the land as devisee under the will of her father, the grantee.

The appellees deraign title from and under an act of sale executed in the State of Louisiana on January 5, 1837, by said Savery to one Albert Emanuel, before Wm. Boswell, a notary public in and for the city and parish of Bew Orleans, and two witnesses—Edward Barnett and Francois Moitan—and through a regular chain of conveyances thereunder. Bo question is raised as to any deed subsequent to the act of *124 sale, consequently there will be no occasion for further reference to any other link in appellees’ title.

The ground mainly relied on for a reversal of the judgment is the alleged erroneous admission by the court in evidence of certain copies of said act of sale over appellant’s objections.

An affidavit was filed by her in this cause assailing in terms the copy of the conveyance or act of sale to Albert Emanuel by Savery, recorded in Jefferson County, September 10, 1851, and denying its execution. The affidavit was doubtless intended to apply to the original act of sale and was so treated on the trial. Two copies of this authentic act were introduced in evidence by appellees. • One was made on February 6, 1837, about one month subsequent to its execution. The other is dated June 14, 1886, and was offered as an authenticated copy of the act of sale and as an examined copy of a record of a public officer of another State. It was shown by the witnesses Alphonse and Maurice Barnett that the first was a copy prepared by notary William Boswell, before whom the original act of sale was executed. They testified that they knew him intimately; that he was a notary public in the city of Few Orleans. They knew all the parties to the instrument except Savery, and they were all dead. They found and examined the book containing the original acts of sale required to be kept by .the law of that State. This copy was correct in all things except that it makes the grantor’s name read “A. Savary” instead of “A. Savery.” The witnesses referred to recognized the signatures of the parties, except Savery’s, to the original act of sale, with which they testified they were familiar. This copy was recorded in Jefferson County, September 10, 1851. The registry or record of authentic acts under the Louisiana law, it was shown, is now in the custody of Martin Voorhis, a notary public of that State. The testimony of these witnesses established the fact that they had carefully examined and compared the copy dated June 14, 1886, certified by said Voorhis, the custodian of the originals, and that it was a correct copy. This copy was introduced in evidence as authenticated under the laws of the United States. The objections urged to the copy first mentioned are: “That the land is titled to Asahel Savery,’ and the recitation in the copy is that it is made by Asal Savery,’ and it is signed A. Savary;’ showing upon its face that it was not executed by the original grantee, and there was no proof of the execution of the original act of sale, by Asahel Savery,’ and therefore it was not admissible as an ancient instrument.”

It may be proper to observe in this connection that we do not understand it to have been offered as an ancient instrument. That the original grant is to Asahel Savery and the signature to the authentic act is “A. Savary” does not necessarily show or imply that the latter was not executed by the grantee. The objection is one going to the identity of the person executing the act of sale with that of the original *125 grantee from the government. Whatever variance or dissimilarity there may be arising upon the face of the instruments mentioned between the name of the grantor “Asal Savery” in the body of the act of sale and his name of “Asahel Savery” as contained in the grant from the government, and his signature of “A. Savary” to the former, it seems to us is sufficiently explained by the evidence in the record before us, and it should remove any reasonable suspicion, if any, which might arise as to the identity of the grantor in said act of sale with the grantee from the government.

The name of the grantor in the body of the authentic act is not written or spelled by him, but it is written by the notary, before whom the parties appeared, under article 2231 of the Civil Code of Louisiana, to pass or execute said sale. The signature is spelled “Savery,” as in his application as a colonist to the commissioner and as in the will in evidence under which appellant claims. Another circumstance from which the jury may have inferred that the act of sale was executed by the grantee from the State is that the former instrument describes by the same metes and bounds the land as contained in the original grant. It also recites “all of which documents are hereunto annexed.” The grant in the Spanish language is shown to have been in the possession of Louis Davis at his death in June, 1876, to whom the land was conveyed by the vendees of Emanuel in 1852, and with accompanying title papers it was delivered to appellee Gillum in 1886, and produced on the trial of this cause.

These facts, in the absence of any proof by appellant controverting' them, were sufficient upon the issue of identity to support a finding in behalf of appellees.

As said in Chamblee v. Tarbox, 27 Texas, 144, “similiarity of name alone is ordinarily sufficient evidence of identity of a purchaser in a chain of conveyance.” Commenting upon this case in Bóbertson v. Du Bose, 76 Texas, 6, it was said that “in the absence of evidence casting doubt upon the identity of a party to a conveyance of land we think it ought, to be held sufficient in every case, and the jury, if instructed upon the subject at all, ought to be told so.”

In the case under consideration there was no proof casting doubt upon the identity of Savery, and the language quoted is peculiarly applicable.

The objection to the copy introduced as authenticated under the Act of Congress of the United States of March, 1804, is that it was “not recorded in Jefferson County until after the death of Asahel Savery, and it does not appear to have been made by the official custodian of the original, but is in the handwriting of one of the plaintiffs in this suit, and it casts suspicion on and changes in a material respect the second original, in that in the former the signature is spelled A. Savary,” etc. There can be no doubt in this case, we think, that the execution of *126 the original act of sale was proved beyond the most rigid requirements of the common law which was in force under the Act of December, 1836, in this State, in its application to evidence. The rule is elementary that where a deed or other written instrument is attested and all of the witnesses are inaccessible, in such ease the evidence of its execution will be sufficient by making proof of the handwriting of the witnesses, as is done where such witnesses are shown to be dead and the handwriting of the party executing it is not necessary to be proved.

Discussing the effect of a similar certified copy of an authentic act introduced in evidence in the case of Watrous v.

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.W. 794, 80 Tex. 120, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 964, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-gillum-tex-1891.