Stringer v. Johnson

222 S.W. 267, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 589
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 12, 1920
DocketNo. 568.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 222 S.W. 267 (Stringer v. Johnson) 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
Stringer v. Johnson, 222 S.W. 267, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 589 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

HIGHTOWER, C. J.

This was an action of trespass to try title, brought by Mrs. Annie H. Johnson, as plaintiff, against T. A. Stringer and B. M. Chester, as defendants, to recover about 60 acres of land, a part of the Absolam Williams league in Jefferson county, the land being sued for as one tract, and so described in the plaintiff’s petition by specific metes and bounds. Plaintiff also specially pleaded title to the land under the statutes of limitation of 3, 5, and 10 years. Defendants disclaimed as to all the land sued for by plaintiff, save and except a tract consisting of about 30 acres, which was described by metes and bounds in their answer, and as to this 30-acre tract they pleaded the general denial, not guilty, and also interposed the 3, 5, and 10 year statutes of limitation.

The case proceeded to trial with a jury, but at the conclusion of the evidence the trial court, at plaintiff’s request, peremptorily instructed a. verdict in her favor for all the land sued for by her, and upon the verdict thus obtained, judgment in her favor was rendered. Defendants, at the proper time, objected and excepted to the trial judge’s action in instructing the verdict against them for so much of the land as was described in their answer and claimed by them, and after their motion for new trial was overruled defendants prosecuted a writ of error to this court.

Por convenience, plaintiffs in error will be referred to as “appellants,” and defendant in error as “appellee.”

At the trial below, appellee never attempted to show title in herself from the sovereignty or from any other source, but relied soley upon, her claim of adverse possession as to all the land sued for, while appellants established title in themselves from the sovereignty; and, therefore, appellee was not entitled to an instructed verdict in her favor as to the 30-acre tract described in appellants’ answer, unless it can be said that the evidence as a whole showed, without contradiction or dispute and was therefore conclusive, that appellee had acquired title thereto by limitation, as claimed by her. This alone was the issue between the parties below, and we shall try to state, as succinctly as possible, the substance of the material evidence relative to such issue, as the same is reflected .by the record.

In August, 1878, Joseph Nassis and wife, who were not shown to have any title, executed and delivered to one Ezekial Janes a deed purporting to convey to Janes a tract of approximately 33 acres of land, a part of the Absolam Williams league. The deed specifically described the 33 acres by metes and bounds, and was duly recorded soon after its execution. Janes at once took actual possession of this 33-acre tract, claiming it under his deed duly of record, made permanent and substantial improvements thereon and lived thereon, claiming the land as his own, and paid all taxes as they accrued, and continued in peaceable and adverse possession of this 33-acre tract until 1910. By such continuous adverse possession, Janes acquired title to said 33-acre tract, and this is admitted by appellants. In 1892, one G. U. Connellee, who was not shown to have any character of title, but who, it seems, was asserting some character of claim antagonistic to Janes, made a deed to Janes, purporting to convey to Janes said 33-acre tract, title to which at that time Janes had already acquired by limitation under both the 5 and 10 year statutes, and such deed also purported to convey to Janes the 30-acre tract which is claimed by appellants in this suit, and of which they were the true record owners, the two tracts, *269 however, being conveyed as one described by specific notes and bounds. This deed' from Connellee to Janes was duly recorded within a few weeks after its execution, and the proof showed, without dispute, that Janes thereafter regularly paid all taxes due on the SO acres in controversy until 1910. The undisputed proof, shows that up to the time Janes got said deed from Connellee, his improvements of every kind and character had been confined to the 33-acre tract, which lies immediately south of the 30-acre tract in controversy, and Janes, up to that time, never had any character of possession of any portion of the 30-acre tract owned by' appellants, or rather their predecessors in title. As to whether Janes ever had such actual possession of the 30-acre tract here in controversy, or any portion thereof, subsequent to the deed from Connellee and for such length of time as would confer title by the 5 or 10 year statute of limitation (there could be none under the 3-year statute, because there was no connection with the •sovereignty) was, we think, an issue of fact for the determination of the jury.

Counsel for appellee, in their argument in this court, conceded that her right to recover the 30-acre tract in controversy must depend upon proof that title to that tract was acquired by Janes by limitation subsequent to the execution of the deed to him from Connellee • in 1892. If the evidence upon that point showed, conclusively, that is to say, without dispute or contradiction, that Janes had so acquired title to the 30-acre tract, then the instructed verdict was proper ; but, if not, the issue should have gone to the jury.

Appellants have attacked the action of the trial court, in peremptorily instructing the verdict against them, by several assignments of error, but the gist of their contentions may be stated as follows:

(1) That Janes’ possession of the 33-acre tract under the deed from Nassis and wife having continued for such period of time as to give him perfect title by limitation, the 33-acre tract was thereby effectively segregated from all remaining portions of the league, and just as much so as if the true owner had conveyed the 33-acre tract to Janes; and that, when Janes took the deed from Connellee in 1892, which, according to the boundaries specified, conveyed both the 33-acre tract and the 30-acre tract here in controversy, Janes’ actual possession of the 33-acre tract was not thereby extended by construction to the 30-acre tract, and that Janes’ actual possession of the 33-acre tract remaining1 the same after the deed from Connellee as before, and being in no manner enlarged or extended to the larger tract described in the Connellee deed, such continued, actual possession of the 33-acre tract, however long continued, without enlargement or extension so as to reach the 30 acres here in controversy, was insufficient to require the true owner of the 30-acre tract to go to the records to ascertain the extent of Janes’ claim.

(2) That as to whether Janes ever had and held such continuous, actual possession of the 30-acre tract in controversy, and so used, cultivated, or enjoyed the same for a period of time sufficient to give him title by limitation under either the 5 or 10 year statute, after taking the deed from Connellee, was under the evidence adduced, an issue of fact for the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
222 S.W. 267, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stringer-v-johnson-texapp-1920.