Surghenor v. Ayers

139 S.W. 28, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1170
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 23, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 139 S.W. 28 (Surghenor v. Ayers) 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
Surghenor v. Ayers, 139 S.W. 28, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1170 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

REESE, J.

This is an action of trespass to try’ title instituted by John W. Surghenor and others, on January 1, 1903, against T. P. Ayers and others, for the recovery of two certain tracts of land in Liberty county, Tex., described in the petition as a tract of 640 acres out of leagues 6 and 9, and 345 acres out of league 9, all in the Jose Dolores Martinez 11-league grant.

The defendants pleaded general demurrer and general denial, and the statutes of limitation of three, five, and ten years, in bar of the action. Defendants J. S. and Z. S. Johnson also, by cross-action, set up that they were the owners of the land; that plaintiffs’ claim was a cloud upon their title, which they prayed to have removed. There were also certain claims against the warrantors which do not affect this appeal. By supplemental petition, plaintiffs set up the disability of minority and coverture as to certain parties under whom they claim title, in reply to the defense of limitation interposed by defendants. The case was tried by the court without the assistance of a jury, and resulted in a judgment for defendants, from which judgment- plaintiffs prosecute this appeal.

The court prepared and filed conclusions of fact and law, which are incorporated in the record. Appellants claim title as the sole surviving heirs of Wm. Hardin and his wife, Sarah A. Hardin, and their two' children, Jane O. Hardin and Joseph W. Hardin. Appellees claim titie under James Davis, who claimed title by deed of conveyance from the original grantor, Jose Dolores Martinez.

The following facts found by the trial court are adopted by us as authorized and supported by the evidence; no objection being presented to any of the findings by ap-pellees and those presented by appellants being overruled, as shown, by conclusions upon certain assignments of error. The first two paragraphs of the findings are omitted, being merely a statement of the pleadings.

“(3) It was admitted that the plaintiffs are the sole surviving heirs of Wm. Hardin and his wife, Sarah A. Hardin, and their *29 two children, Jane O. Hardin and Joseph W. Hardin, all deceased.

“(4) On August 30, 1830, Jose Dolores Martinez petitioned the Governor of Coahui-la and Texas to concede him by way of sale 11 leagues of land, which petition was granted on March 16, 1831.

“(o) September 7, 1832, Jose Dolores Martinez entered into a contract with Adolph •Sterne and Charles Taylor, residents of the jurisdiction of Nacogdoches, by which he •agreed to sell the said 11 leagues of land, which he had acquired by means of purchase from the Mexican government, and to transfer to them as soon as he had obtained formal possession of the same.

“(6) On April 14, 1833, Adolph Sterne, in the town of San Felipe, before an officer appeared and executed an instrument reciting that, whereas the citizen Jose Dolores Martinez, on September 7, 1832, had obligated himself to the grantor and his ‘partner,’ Charles Taylor, to sell the 11 leagues of land which he had, by means of a sale from the Mexican government, obtained March 16, 1831, and reciting the payment of $1,000 to him by Wm. Hardin, and that the said Sterne, for himself and his companion, the said Taylor, transfers to the said Hardin said writ of sale and all its obligations, rights, and actions, which in it are expressed, etc., and substitutes the said Hardin in his stead, with all of said obligations and actions, and confers upon him absolute power, etc.

“(7) Upon the petition of Hardin to the government, made on November 11, 1833, the formal and final extension of title to said 11 leagues was issued to Wm. Hardin, as attorney for Jose Dolores Martinez, November 28, 1833.

“(8) Wm. Hardin died in June, 1839, in Liberty county, Tex. Administration was taken out by his widow on his estate in Galveston county, Tex., some time thereafter, and the evidence does not disclose that said administration was ever closed. None of the heirs of Wm. Hardin, deceased, have lived in Liberty county since the Civil War.

“(9) The widow, Sarah A. Hardin, married O. P. Kelton in 1840, and again became a widow on death of said O. P. Kel-ton, on the-day of-, 1857.

“(10) Jane O. Hardin, daughter of Wm. Hardin, became of age on the - day of-, 1850, and Joseph W. Hardin, son ■of Wm. Hardin, became of age on the -day of-, 1852.

“(11) The only evidence of partnership of Adolph Sterne and Charles Taylor adduced on the trial was that recited in the instrument from Sterne to Hardin. On rebuttal the plaintiffs introduced in evidence, over defendants’ objection, a copy of the instrument, dated April 10, 1843, between Charles S. Taylor and H. Washington, of one part, and James Davis, of the other part, reciting that the said parties are jointly interested in the 11 leagues of land granted to Wm. Hardin for Jose Dolores Martinez, and reciting that an undivided one-half of the same was held by said Taylor and Washington and the other by said Davis, and reciting that the heirs or representatives of Wm. Hardin have an unsettled claim to a portion of said land on account of his service in locating and surveying, and that the said Taylor and Washington will release IV2 leagues of their undivided one-half of said land to the said Davis, providing that he will settle the aforesaid claim of said Wm. Hardin to the satisfaction of his heirs or other representatives aforesaid, etc. The objection on the part of the defendants is that said instrument was not in their chain of title, and that said instrument was not available to the plaintiffs as an estoppel, nor admission of title.

“(12) The defendants in this case claimed title as follows and supported their claim by the following evidence: The grant from the government, on application of Wm. Hardin, attorney for Jose Dolores Martinez, to 11 leagues of land, issued November 28, 1833, embracing the land in controversy.

“(13) The deed from Jose Dolores Martinez to Charles S. Taylor, dated August 9, 1837, conveying an undivided one-half interest in the 11 leagues, and recorded in Liberty County Deed Records, November 28, 1837, and recorded in the same records April 19, 1844, and again recorded February 15, 1904.

“(14) A deed from Charles S. Taylor to James Davis, June 20, 1846, conveying an undivided one-half interest in the 11 leagues of land, which was recorded in Liberty county, Tex., November 6, 1848, and again April 1, 1890.

“(15) A deed from Jose Dolores Martinez to James Davis, dated April 10, 1843, recorded April 27, 1843, in Polk county, and again in Liberty county, Book IT, page 608, conveying a one-half undivided interest in the 11 leagues of land.

“(16) A deed from Jose Dolores Martinez to James Davis, dated December 12, 1850, conveying an undivided one-half interest of the 11 leagues, or 5% leagues, of the Jose Dolores Martinez grants.

“(17) James Davis took possession of leagues Nos. 9 and 6 and had his improvements upon league No. 9 in 1847, and said leagues adjoin side by side.

“(18) James Davis cultivated a portion of league No. 9 of said land continuously every year thereafter up to the time of his death in 1859. He had one dwelling house and several tenant houses for his slaves and overseers thereon. He had a cotton gin. From 100 to 200 acres were in cultivation during said time. From 1847 to the time of the James Davis’ death in 1859, he had said land in his possession.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 S.W. 28, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 1170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/surghenor-v-ayers-texapp-1911.