Smith v. Temple Lumber Co.

323 S.W.2d 172, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2329
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 19, 1959
Docket6194
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 323 S.W.2d 172 (Smith v. Temple 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. Temple Lumber Co., 323 S.W.2d 172, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2329 (Tex. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

McNEILL, Justice.

Appellee Temple Lumber Company, now merged into Southern Pine Lumber Company, as plaintiff in the trial court, filed suit in trespass to try title against appellant W. E. Smith, as defendant, for 120 acres of land of the R. Burroughs 160 acre survey in Sabine and Newton Counties. Upon trial before a court and jury and a favorable verdict to it, appellee recovered judgment for the premises. Appellant assails this judgment upon fifteen points which include the sufficiency of the evidence of adverse possession to support the verdict, and chain of record title relied upon by appel-lee. These points are answered by appellee in appropriate counterpoints.

The court submitted two issues to the jury, the first inquiring whether appellee *174 had acquired 'limitation "under the 10-yeaf statute and the second, inquiring whether appellee acquired limitation under the 5-year statute, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 5509. Both issues were answered in its favor.

Appellee by its points 12 to 15 con7 tends that the finding of the. jury in answer to Special Issue No. 2, having support in the evidence, concludes this case in its favor.’ .’The facts show that the 120 acres of the Rush Burroughs Survey lies immediately north of and adjoining the W. M. Robin? son Survey; that the “¡Watkins place,” owned by W. L.'Trotti. of .Beaumont, was situ? ated on the- Robinson survey and -adjoined the 120 acres involved. The facts further show that Elmo Hifckman, as a tenant of W.‘L. Trotti from 1943 through 1949, lived on'and cultivated the Watkins place; that in connection with- his cultivation he farmed a tract of about two acres each of the years in the most westerly' or "southwest corner of. the Burroughs Survey. It was further shown that beginning with 1946 to. the present time a fence cut off this., two-acre area from the rest of the 120 acres and was included as' a part of the Watkins place. Taxes were shown to have been paid before delinquency each of the years 1944 through 1954 by appellee upon the 120 acres, and it contends that since it held under a deed describing the boundaries of the tract and .that there ,was possession, and use of the two acres , included in the Watkins area .and'that this area was used with its consent and permission by Trotti,'and Trotti’s tenants Hickman and one Artie McGraw', who from.1951 up to the time of trial farmed the land, that possession of Trotti and those who farmed on his' place was the possession, of appellee'and that limitation under , the ' 5-year statute was clearly established to the 120 acres. As supporting its position that Trotti and those who held under him were tenants of appellee, it offerr ed in evidence an,acknowledgment of tenancy executed by W. L. Trotti, on May 25, 1955,-.a few days, after-this.suit ¡was filed, in ; which ■,acknowledgment Trotti ■’ recited that he had had possession of the 120 acres since January 1, 1943.

-[2,3] Appellant contends that this evidence could not establish the 5-year period of limitation and that the use of the two acres under fence of the 120 acres was a mere encroachment, and further that the tenancy acknowledgment signed by Trotti and the recitals therein were hearsay as to appellant. We agree that the recitals in said acknowledgment were hearsay as to appellant. Texas Co. v. Lee, 138 Tex. 167, 157 S.W.2d 628. And even though objection was not made to it on this ground, such recitals have no probative force. Henry v. Phillips, 105 Tex. 459, 151 S.W. 533; Texas Company v. Lee, supra.

' The- testimony shows that the 120 acres involved, was nob fenced and there were no improvements on it except an in-completed small frame house which appellant was erecting at the time the temporary injunction was served upon him and except for the fence which isolated the two acres from the balance of the tract. There is testimony that there were improvements on the Watkins place and tenants lived in them while they farmed the two acres. There- is nothing in the record- which explains how ,or why the two acres were included in the enclosure of the Watkins place. It seems that the doctrine of encroachment applies •when a small portion of an adjoining tract is occupied by mistake in boundaries or otherwise, and there is an absence of evidence of intention to claim beyond the enclosure on the adjoining tract. Fielder v. Houston Oil Co., Tex.Com.App., 210 S.W. 797. Especially is this true where the incidental use of the small portion is not of such a nature as to give the appearance of a claim beyond the enclosure. Such we think is the present case, r The Commission of Appeals in Temple Lumber Co. v. Low, 272 S.W. 769, 770, quoting from Bailey v. Kirby Lumber Co., Tex.Civ.App., 195 S.W. 221, said; “*• * * where an adjoining owner or claimant in possession, with his home or place of residence on another survey, cross *175 es, either through mistake or design, upon the adjoining survey, through the medium of an inclosure, or otherwise, and thereby subjects a portion of the adjoining survey to a use, which, in its external manifestations, is merely subsidiary and incidental' to, and therefore referable to, the home and place of residence, such encroaching possession and use is, as a matter of law, insufficiently distinct to afford a basis for the acquisition, under the statutes of limitation, of more of the adjoining survey than is actually so possessed and used throughout the statutory period.”

• Since W. L. Trotti :could not establish - any limitation under the above facts as to any part of the 120 acres outside of the two acres enclosed, it cannot be seen how appel-lee, by making itself the landlord of W. L. Trotti after this, suit was commenced, could retroactively clairn such limitation.

Appellee cites Cook v. Easterling, Tex.Com.App., 290 S.W. 731; Houston Oil Co. v. Holland, Tex.Com.App., 222 S.W. 546, and other cases which hold that an adverse claimant’s entry upon land-is ordinarily coextensive with the boundaries of the land in his deed or other muniment of title under which he enters. Even so, what started out as encroachment and apparently thus continued until after suit was filed, cannot thereafter, by hearsay evidence, be turned retroactively into adverse occupancy.

Appellee urges that under the finding of the jury in answer to Special Issue No. 1, it and its predecessors in title had established adverse .possession of the premises involved under the 10-y'ear statute of limitation. The testimony is undisputed that the Temple Lumber Company built the main line tram road across this survey either in late 1926 or the early part of 1927; that thereafter for a period of ten consecutive years it maintained and continuously used said tram road practically every day of such time; Temple Lumber Company obtained a timber deed from Wier-Long-leaf Lumber Company on September 14, 1927; and this- deed conveyed all timber on 42½ acres of this survey, being all of the land lying east of the tram road right of way in said 'survey, except said portion cif the 40 acre tract not here involved and owned by others.

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323 S.W.2d 172, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 2329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-temple-lumber-co-texapp-1959.