Taffinder v. Merrell

65 S.W. 177, 95 Tex. 95, 1901 Tex. LEXIS 126
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1901
DocketNo. 1050.
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 65 S.W. 177 (Taffinder v. Merrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taffinder v. Merrell, 65 S.W. 177, 95 Tex. 95, 1901 Tex. LEXIS 126 (Tex. 1901).

Opinion

*99 WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

This was an action of trespass to try title which, by the pleadings under which the last trial was had, involved a controversy between the plaintiffs in error, who, as heirs of James C. and Martha C. Taffinder, were plaintiffs, and W. M. Merrell, as defendant, over the title to the north half of lot No. 5 in block No. 5, in the town of Hamilton.

James C. and Martha Taffinder were husband and wife, and owned the whole of the lot as their community property. James C. Taffinder died, and his widow, Martha C., married A. Bivens and afterwards died, leaving children by both marriages, and these, or their representatives, are the plaintiffs. After the death of Martha C., her surviving husband, A. Bivens, administered on her estate and procured in the probate court a partition of the property, which had belonged to her and her first husband, between the children of the two marriages, in which the property in controversy is claimed by the defendant to have been set apart, with other property, to the Bivens children. Thereafter Bivens was appointed guardian of his children, and, as such, sold the land belonging to them, and the defendant claims the property in controversy under that sale.

The principal questions raised are, first, as to the sufficiency of the partition proceedings to vest the title in severalty to lot No. 5 in the Bivens children; and second, as to the validity of the sale by the guardian.

The objection to the partition is that the decree .of the county court gave no description of the property in question sufficient to identify it. Upon this point it appears that James C. Taffinder, when he was the husband of Martha C., received a deed conveying the whole of lot 5, in block 5, in the town of Hamilton. Bivens, as administrator of his deceased wife’s estate, filed an inventory “of all the property both real and personal, belonging to said estate,” among which the following appeared: “2 vacant lots in Hamilton, Hamilton County, Nos. of lot and blocks not known, $25.”

The application by Bivens and the order appointing commissioners for partition are not found in the record and it is not known how the property was therein described. But a report of comihissioners, of date May 22, 1878, is shown, which recites that they were appointed by the county court on the 25th day of January, 1878, to partition the estate (of Martha C. Bivens) among the heirs and distributees thereof, and states such property, among which appears “two lots in the town of Hamilton valued at $40 each,” and reports that they have made the division, setting apart to the Taffinder children named property, and to the Bivens children other property, including these lots.

There also appears an order of the county court, of date May 23, 1878, in the estate of Martha C. Bivens, showing that it is made in a proceeding by Bivens, administrator thereof, for a partition between the children of the two marriages of the decedent, reciting that the property was community property of James C. and Martha C. Taffinder, after- *100 wards Mrs. Bivens, stating the shares to which the two sets of children are entitled, and confirming the report of the partition, and adjudging to the Taffinder children certain property and to the Bivens children other property, including “two town lots in the town and county of Hamilton.” It was shown' by oral testimony that the location and identity of the two lots in Hamilton which had belonged to Taffinder and wife were well known at the time of these proceedings and since, and that they owned no other lots in that town.

The objections to the sale made by Bivens, as guardian of his children, are, first, that it appears from the record of the probate proceedings that such sale was made for a purpose for which a sale was not authorized by law; second, that no sale to one Emmett, to whom the guardian made the deed under which defendant claims, was ever confirmed by the court; third, if there were an attempted confirmation, it was made at a time when the court had no jurisdiction to make it, the time required by law between the filing of the report and action upon it not having elapsed; and fourth, the deed from Bivens, guardian, to Emmett gave no sufficient description.

The proceedings for sale were begun by the guardian filing an application therefor December 4, 1878, in which he asks for authority to sell the property of the minors, describing it, at private sale for cash or on credit, and states that “it would be greatly to the interest of his said wards for said property to be sold, because said property is unimproved and can not be rented for anything and the taxes will soon consume the entire amount.” No reason but this is given for the sale. The court, on January 10, 1879, granted the authority to sell all the real estate at public or private sale for cash or on credit, and, if on credit, the vendor’s lien to be retained, the order reciting that it appeared to the satisfaction of the court that “it is for the best interests of the minors that said real estate be sold.”

At the January term, 1879, Bivens made a report of sale of all of the property, stating that he had sold lot No. 5 in block No. 5, in the town of Hamilton, to T. C. Bivens, on credit. On January 14, 1879, the court entered an order confirming in general terms the sale thus reported.

On the 14th day of March, 1879, A. Bivens, as guardian of his children, executed a deed to T. C. Bivens for the south half of lot No. 5 in block No. 5 in the town of Hamilton, Hamilton County. On the same day, Bivens, as “guardian of the minor heirs of Martha T. Bivens, deceased,” executed a deed to Thomas Emmett for the north half of the same lot, reciting a consideration of $30.

Both Bivens and Emmett testified that the property in controversy-(the north half of lot No. 5) was sold by Bivens to Emmett under an order of the county court, and that Emmett paid for it. Emmett took possession soon after his purchase, and conveyed it to the party under whom, through a number of mesne conveyances, Merrell claims, actual possession having been held by various owners. The Court of Civil *101 Appeals found as a fact that the sale to Emmett “was by proper order of court confirmed.”

1. We are of the opinion that the description of the two lots in Hamilton in the decree of partition in estate of Mrs. Bivens was sufficient.

Under the decisions of this court, it is proper to look not only to the order itself but to the inventory and to the report of the commissioners. By these documents and by the order taken together, the property is referred to, not merely as two lots in the town of Hamilton, but as the two lots in that town owned by Taffinder and wife as community property. All that it was necessary to do in order to identify the property was to ascertain the lots which were thus owned, and the evidence shows ■that this was easily done. The stated ownership of the lots was in itself a circumstance of description which led to their identification. That this was true is held in Herman v. Likens, 90 Texas, 448, and ■whatever doubt may have previously existed as to the sufficiency of such descriptions is removed by that decision. There the land was described in'the inventory and the proceedings through which it was sold as “half interest in and to eight hundred and ninety-three acres of the T. W.

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Bluebook (online)
65 S.W. 177, 95 Tex. 95, 1901 Tex. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taffinder-v-merrell-tex-1901.