South Texas Development Co. v. Manning

177 S.W. 998
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 23, 1915
DocketNo. 5499.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 177 S.W. 998 (South Texas Development Co. v. Manning) 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
South Texas Development Co. v. Manning, 177 S.W. 998 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

CARL, J.

Appellant states the case thus:

“This was an action of trespass to try title, filed by the South Texas Development Company against Walter Manning for 384.3 acres of land, a part of the Texas & New Orleans Railroad Company survey No. 15, in Montgomery county, Tex. Appellee, Walter Manning, answered, disclaiming as to all of said land sued for, except 160 acres out of said tract, which he claimed by statute of limitations of 10 years, and setting up by definite description the 160 acres claimed by Mm. On the trial, appellant showed a perfect record title to the éntire 384.3-acre tract sued for. The court charged the jury that the uncontroverted evidence showed the appellant to have the legal title to all of the land described in its petition, and is entitled to recover of the appellee, unless such recovery is defeated by his plea of limitation. The case was tried with the aid of a jury, who returned a verdict for appellee for 160 acres of land, and judgment was entered accordingly for said appellee.

The period during which it is claimed Manning’s limitation title matured began about September 6, 1902. It is admitted that one Ed Rayne and Joe McDonald, at different times during the 10-year period, were living upon the premises, the difference of opinion being as to the capacity in which they were in possession. Appellee claims that McDonald got permission from his tenant, E. A. Smith, to stay in the house while he, McDonald, was cutting ties on this 160 acres and other lands. McDonald bought Manning’s little crop of sweet potatoes at the time he went into, possession of the house and premises in 1906. Appellee admits this, but claims that McDonald became his tenant through permission from Smith, whom he had placed in charge of the place. It is not denied that McDonald was working under authority of the record owner in cutting cross-ties.

Appellee testified, on the trial, substantially, to the following facts:

He says that he married in March, 1902, and that he went upon this land about the 6th of September of that year; that he went upon it on his own hook. “I did not buy a claim from any one. There was no one claiming it that I knew of. If Mr. Payne was claiming the improvements, I did not know it; I did not know who put the house there.” He says that he went upon it with the intention of acquiring *999 the title by 10 years’ limitation; that he offered to give Ed Payne $25 for a quitclaim deed to the place if he and his father could show any substantial claim; that he would simply pay them for their rights, but that Payne did not claim to have any rights and he did not buy it. There were four or five acres under fence at that time, part of it grown up with hushes. There was a little box house on it in 1902, and he says he lived there continuously about five years, raising a crop in 1903, consisting of potatoes, corn, cotton, sorghum, etc., and in 1901 and 1905 he made a crop there. “It was in 1906 that I moved my wife over to my father-in-law’s and did contract work. My father-in-law’s name was Uriah Smith. I moved over there about January 1, 1906, and did contract work that year, and did not live on the place at all that year, but Mr. Smith cultivated the place for me and raised a crop of goobers, oats, and sorghum, and used it as a .general pasture. No one lived on the place that year, but Mr. Smith put in his crop at the usual time in the spring of the year. In 1907 I did not live on the place, but cultivated it myself. I lived at Mr. Smith’s in 1907. * * * I had seven or eight acres in cultivation and under fence. I don’t remember whether it was 1907 or 1908 that I lived at Uriah Smith’s, but to the best of my recollection it was 1907 that I tore the old house down and moved it over to Uriah Smith’s. I lived at Uriah Smith’s that year, but cultivated the place myself. In 1908 there was no house on the place, but I cultivated it myself. In 1910 I built a new house. After the South Texas Development Company people were in there surveying, I built the new house. In 1909 I lived with Smith, but I cultivated the land and along in the summer — about August, I think, of 1910 — I built the new house and have been living there continuously since. When I stated in my evidence that I had lived on the place continuously for 11 years, I meant that I had held possession of the place and claimed it and made it my home, and had my stock there. I moved off the place and lived off of it one or two years, but I cultivated it. I rented the place only one year to Mr. Smith. * * * It was in 1906, while I was doing contract work, that I was told that Ed Payne had moved into the house on this place. He lived there only a short time, I don’t remember how long. I knew my father-in-law would take care of my interest. Ed Payne did not live there over two or three months. T came back in February, 1907, and cultivated the land myself that year.” He says, further, that his father-in-law, Smith, as his agent and tenant, gave Joe McDonald permission to move into the house; that he cultivated the land himself that year, but was not living there. He says that it was later than June, 1907, when McDonald moved into the house, because he sold him his sweet potato crop growing around the house, but he does not remember how long he lived there, but thinks it was during the summer and fall of that year. “ * * * I did not give Mr. McDonald pei-mission to move into the house, but he got permission from Mr. Smith. I was working at Waukegan as a day laborer, but I was working my place. I had 7 or 8 acres in cultivation and when I would catch up with my crop I would work out as a day-laborer. Although I was working part of the time right there at the house, McDonald got permission from my father-in-law to move into the house. My father-in-law is now dead. While McDonald lived in this house he was cutting ties off the entire tract, including my 160 acres, cutting them for the Kirby Lumber Company, or for Mr. Ben-nette, who I suppose was the agent for the Kirby Lumber Company. I did not know this timber belonged to the Conroe Lumber Company; I knew they claimed it. I did object to McDonald cutting ties on this 160 acres, and went to town to try and find out if I could stop him, and my lawyer told me I did not have any right to; that I would have to wait until the ten years run out. I went on this land and set up my claim, * * * and knew it would be mine if I could stay there 10 years. I did not know the Conroe Lumber Company was claiming this land, did not know anybody was claiming it but me, but I heard the Conroes were claiming it. * * * Ed Payne stayed there tw-o or three months, probably. I moved some lumber there to improve the place, and afterwards moved it away, but no one notified me to move it. I sold the lumber to old man Goss. * * * Joe McDonald * *' * did not pay any rent. He agreed to take good care of the place while there, said he wanted it only for a camping place and did not want it very long.”

Joe McDonald says that he recognized Will Conroe as the owner of the land while he was there cutting ties; that he knew al-1 of the lines of the 384-acre survey, section 15, Texas & New Orleans, formerly owned by the Con-roe' Lumber Company and now owned by the South Texas Development ’Company, by reason of having cut the timber off of said tract during the years 1907 and 190S, and was governed by the lines of the tract. He says he lived there from June, 1907, continuously until March, 1908. He made ties for the Kirby Lumber Company, but never did cultivate the land while living there.

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Bluebook (online)
177 S.W. 998, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-texas-development-co-v-manning-texapp-1915.