Stark v. Leonard

196 S.W. 708, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 743
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 21, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 196 S.W. 708 (Stark v. Leonard) 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
Stark v. Leonard, 196 S.W. 708, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 743 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

BROOKE, J.

This is an action brought by appellees to recover 160 acres of land, part of the John McGee league in Newton county, claimed by virtue of the 10-year statute of limitation, it being admitted that appellants own the regular record title, and are entitled to the property, except for the limitation plea. One Richard Holmes, the father of Lou Leonard, in about 1872 bought out a claim asserted by one Joe Hardy to the land, it being then supposed that the land was vacant public domain subject to settlement, and appellee, who was then Lou Foster, the wife of one Dan Foster, with her husband moved on the land where they lived a short time, after which Dan left the country and his wife, Lou, lived with her father and mother, who then lived on the David McWilliams tract of land, adjoining the land in controversy, where she remained until she married Levi Leonard in 1881. Shortly after ■ Lou and Levi were married) they lived on the land sued for, and afterwards at different places, until they pre-empted a tract of land in. 1896, where they have since lived. The land in controversy covers a part of the John McGee league, and a part of the David McWilliams original location, and all of the T. P. Dickerson survey, conflicting and being covered by the three tracts of land mentioned. Ap-pellees based their right to recover on the ground that when Richard Holmes bought the Hardy claim he gave it verbally to his daughter Lou, who subsequently occupied and claimed the particular 160 acres for a length of time sufficient to mature in her a limitation title. At least the questions of fact submitted to the jury were answered favorably to appellees’ claim. In 1872, about the time Richard Holmes acquired the Joe Hardy claim, and after he had bought and was living on the David McWilliams tract, he had the land surveyed by the county surveyor, in an attempt to file on same as vacant land, and subsequent to that time the land was known as the Richard Holmes survey, and Richard Holmes rendered the same for taxes and paid taxes on same until it' was discovered that the land was not all public land, and was in conflict with the John McGee league as well as the David McWil-liams original location, and ho then abandoned all claim to the Richard Holmes tract, the land sued for, being at that time the owner of the David McWilliams, and residing thereon. The David McWilliams field notes were corrected, and the 62 acres thereof not in conflict with the McGee was patented, and that part of the Holmes tract, the land sued for, not in conflict with the McGee was subsequently awarded as public land to T. P. Dickerson in March, 1902. The portion of the land sued for, the Holmes tract, in conflict with the McWilliams was patented under the McWilliams entry, and in this condition appellants acquired by purchase for value the" land as a part of the John McGee league in 1900, obtaining a regular and perfect title of record from the sovereignty. There was a judgment for appellees for so much of the land sued for as was located on the McGee league," and after the judgment of the lower court had been entered, motion for new trial was made, on the ground, among other things, of newly discovered testimony. The motion was overruled, and appellants have properly perfected this appeal.

The first and second assignments of error and the third will be considered together, being as follows: (a) The court erred in refusing to give the peremptory instruction to the jury to return a verdict in favor of defendants, as requested by defendants, (b) The court erred in submitting question No. 1 to the jury, for the reason that the undisputed evidence in the case shows that the plaintiffs and the persons under whom they claim, through themselves or through tenants, have failed to hold peaceable and adverse possession of the premises sued for, claiming the same for 10 consecutive years before the filing of this suit, (c) The response of the jury to question No. 1 is contrary to the preponderance of the evidence, and not supported by the evidence, in that the evidence discloses that the plaintiffs had not in person or through their tenants had peaceable and adverse possession of the land in controversy, cultivating, using, and enjoying the same for a period of ten consecutive years before the filing of this suit. This is followed by the proposition that the evidence shows that the only occupancy of the land had by any person was under a claim of ownership in Richard Holmes and not in appellee.

Lou Leonard, who is the plaintiff in the case, testified as follows:

“My name is Lou Leonard. My father’s name was Richard Holmes, and my mother’s name was Cynthia Holmes. I have a sister and a brother. Their names are Will Holmes and Mazy Holmes. They are the only children of my father and mother living. My mother and *710 father are both dead. I have been married twice. I first married Dan Foster. The first year after I married Dan Foster, we made a crop with Mr. Charley Holmes. I made a crop the year I married Dan. We went then to the place called the Joe Hardy place my papa •bought. As to whose place was the Joe Hardy place, will say my papa got it from Mr. Joe Hardy, and we called it his place. I came by it by my father giving it to me. As near as I can come at it, this tract of land I call the Joe Hardy tract that my father gave me is a mile or a mile and a half southwest of Farrsville. It is the place me and Dan went to the year after we married. Dan and I lived there on the place two or three months. Dan went off. He went off when we were there two or three months. When we first went on the place, we went on another place. We went on the place where we went to make a crop, and we came back on the place that my papa gave me; then we changed places with him because the house wasn’t big enough. When we lived there two or three months, Dan wanted his sister to live with us, and the house wasn’t big enough, and we left that place and went to the Dave Mack place, changed places with my father; and while we were there, Dan got into some trouble and went off. I then moved right back in the house with my papa. When me and my husband went over to the Dave Mack place, my father was on the place he gave me, on the Jo6 Hardy tract. When my husband left, I went right back to my place that my father gave me. I married Levi Leonard the second time. I don’t know exactly what year I married him. From the time I went back to the Joe Hardy place after my first husband went off until I married Levi Leonard, I lived on the Joe Hardy place - with my father; I worked about and stayed with my father. I didn’t move anywhere. During this time, my household goods stayed right on the same place with my father until I married. The place was cultivated and worked every year by me and my father. I don’t know what year I went there and don’t know the year I married Foster; I couldn’t tell you exactly what year. The Joe Hardy place was run out. Mr. Allison Nations run it off. When that was done, I was living right on the place, me and Dan. The place that Mr. Allison Nations run off is the same place I call the Joe Hardy place that my father gave me. When I married Levi, I was living on that same place the Joe Hardy place. After we married, Levi moved me to a place at Shanklesville. We married and finished this crop, and then we moved back there that same year at my place that my papa gave me. At Shanklesville, we lived at the place called the Ben Pierce place, as near as I can remember. As to how long we stayed on the place at Shanklesville, will say I think we married some time in April, and we stayed up there long enough to make a kind of a crop, and moved back that same year.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hudmon v. Foster
210 S.W. 262 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 S.W. 708, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stark-v-leonard-texapp-1917.