Sydnor v. Texas Savings & Real Estate Investment Ass'n

94 S.W. 451, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 138, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 213
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 26, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 94 S.W. 451 (Sydnor v. Texas Savings & Real Estate Investment Ass'n) 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
Sydnor v. Texas Savings & Real Estate Investment Ass'n, 94 S.W. 451, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 138, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 213 (Tex. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

rEESE, Associate Justice.

This is a suit in trespass to try title brought by Seabrook W. Sydnor and others, heirs of J. S. Sydnor, against the Texas Savings and Beal Estate Investment Association, George E. Chase, J. J. Scholl, J. V. Formy and Joseph Suezmooth to recover a certain tract of land described as block 29 of the Holman Addition to the city of Houston.

In their original petition plaintiffs claimed title as heirs of J. S. *142 Sydnor, deceased, but by amended petition they set up also title derived since the filing of the suit by purchase from heirs of Mosely Baker, who as assignee of James S. Holman, was the original patentee of the land, and they also made defendants certain other parties, heirs of said Mosely Baker. These last named parties also filed their plea in intervention, setting up their ownership of the land as heirs of Mosely Baker.

Defendants replied to petitions of both plaintiffs and intervenors by pleas of not guilty, and of five and ten years limitation, and improvements in good faith, and also pleaded their title in reconvention against all parties.

To the defendants’ plea of the statute of limitations plaintiffs replied pleading disability of coverture of Mrs. Sallie Baylor and Mrs. Kate S. Hopff, two of the plaintiffs.

Upon trial before a jury there was a verdict in favor of the original defendants herein named, upon which judgment was rendered against plaintiffs and intervenors and in favor of said defendants upon their cross bill for the land sued for.

Plaintiffs filed a motion for new trial which was overruled, and they bring error. Intervenors have not appealed.

The facts are as follows: The tract of land in question is a part of the J ames S. Holman third of a league which was patented to Mosely Baker, assignee of Holman, in 1845. The survey was subdivided into lots and ten,acre blocks the same year. Mosely Baker conveyed, among other of said ten acre blocks, the block (29) in controversy to Wm. B. T. Batterson, May 12, 1845. This deed was recorded May 26, 1845, in the deed records of Harris County, Texas. The trial court held that the certificate of acknowledgment was insufficient to entitle the deed to be registered, but admitted the original record in evidence as a circumstance along with other evidence to prove the execution of the deed as against the intervenors, heirs of Mosely Baker, who have not appealed from the judgment. The record aforesaid, as proof of the execution of this deed, was offered by both plaintiffs and defendants, plaintiffs also claiming under the deed, so no question can be made on this appeal of the proper execution of this deed.

The property was conveyed by Batterson to Chauncey B. Sabin, June 1, 1858, and Sabin to John S. Sydnor, the ancestor of plaintiffs, on August 23, 1862. Sabin has been dead many years. John S. Sydnor died in 1869. The plaintiffs are six of the seven children who survived him and are his heirs at law and devisees under his will. The other child, John B. Sydnor, has also been dead many years. The property was next conveyed by one J. T. Cyrus on April 24, 1863, to Francis and Ella Levy, which deed was recorded May 8, 1863. This deed is signed by John S. Sydnor and Robert Black as witnesses and is proved for record by both of them. The Levys conveyed to A. D. Crieff and James Byrnes, March 7, 1870, by deed recorded March 8, 1870. From Crieff and Byrnes the property has come through several mesne conveyances, all properly executed and duly recorded, to defendants. The missing link in the chain of title between the deed from Sabin to J. S. Sydnor in 1862, and the deed from J. T. Cyrus to Francis and Ella Levy in 1863 is filled in by circumstantial evidence tending to show *143 that the beneficial title and real ownership under the deed from Sabin to Sydnor was in Cyrus, and also by a deed from John B. Sydnor, oldest son and independent executor of the will of John S. Sydnor (who had died in 1869) of date March 1, 1870, and duly recorded March 8, 1870. This deed, for a recited consideration of $10 and the facts recited in the deed, conveyed the land in controversy to Francis and Ella Levy, and has the following recitals: •

“Whereas, heretofore, to wit, on the 23 d day of August, 1862, Chauncey B. Sabin executed a conveyance to Jno. S. Sydnor, of and for the tract of land hereinafter described; said deed is recorded in Harris County record of deeds, book Z, p. 287; and whereas said Sydnor held said land, not for himself, but in trust for one J. T. Cyrus; and whereas thereafter, to wit, on the 24th day of April, 1.863, said Cyrus conveyed the said land to Francis and Ella Levy, as will be seen by reference to the deed made by Cyrus, which deed is recorded in Harris County aforesaid, in record of deeds, vol. 1, pp. 67-68; said deed is witnessed by Jno. S. Sydnor (by the name of S. S. Sydnor) and by Bobt. Black.”

It was proven that John S. Sydnor died in 1869 and was, at the time of his death, making his home with John B. Sydnor, who was his oldest son, and with whom he had been at one time in business as partners. John S. Sydnor left a will whereby he devised his estate to his seven children, being the plaintiffs and the said John B. Sydnor, and John B. Sydnor was named as independent executor without bond, of his estate and qualified as such. John B. Sydnor died in 1875, being about 45 years of age when his father, John S. Sydnor, died, and was shown to have been a man of high character for integrity, and a careful business man. J. T. Cyrus was a resident of Houston where John S. Sydnor lived, in 1862, when the deed was made by Sabin to Sydnor. George Goldthwaite, the notary public before whom the deed from Cyrus to the Levys witnessed by John S. Sydnor and Bobt. Black was proven for record and who is dead, is shown to have been a man of scrupulous integrity and honor, and a personal friend of the Sydnor family. The executor of John S. Sydnor filed an inventory of the property of the estate in which the land in controversy was not included. Seabrook W. Sydnor, one of the plaintiffs and son of John S. Sydnor, has lived in Galveston and Houston since his father’s death in 1869, having lived in Houston the last ten years. He was about 25 years of age at the time of his father’s death. Hone of the heirs of John S. Sydnor have ever exercised any acts of ownership over or paid taxes upon this land, or asserted any claim to it until the filing of this suit, and were led to institute this claim by having their attention called to the fact that there was no deed from their father by some one who had examined the title about the time this suit was filed. There has been continuous assertion of ownership by those under whom defendants in error claim, evidenced by payment of taxes since 1873, and by a long chain of conveyances of different parcels of the land, which was subdivided in 1890 into lots, and the map of such subdivision duly recorded. The tract is in the residence portion of the city of Houston and much of it covered by residences.

It was proven that S. K. Mcllhenny and T. H. Scanlan, who were *144 successively the -owners of the property in defendants’ chain of title, during the years from 1884 to 1890 inclusive, holding the same under recorded deeds, occupied, used and enjoyed the property continuously and paid taxes thereon during that time.

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.W. 451, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 138, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sydnor-v-texas-savings-real-estate-investment-assn-texapp-1906.