Temple Lumber Co. v. Broocks

165 S.W. 507, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 108
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 26, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 165 S.W. 507 (Temple Lumber Co. v. Broocks) 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
Temple Lumber Co. v. Broocks, 165 S.W. 507, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 108 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This is an action of trespass to' try title brought by John H. Broocks against the Temple Lumber Company. The land involved is a tract of 284 acres, a part of the Hugh Milligan 560-acre survey in Sabine county. The defendant vouched in on their warranty of title W. F. Goodrich, J. H. Synnott, and Ola Wrinkle, who had conveyed the land to defendant by deed of general warranty. The trial in the court below with a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff for the land and in favor of the defendant against Goodrich, Synnott, and Wrinkle on their warranty of title.

The record discloses the following facts:

The tract of 560 acres, of which the land in controversy is a part, was located on August 30, 1840, by virtue of a land certificate for 640 acres issued to Hugh Milligan. On December 10, 1840, Hugh Milligan conveyed the 560 acres to Charles Peck by deed of said date duly executed and acknowledged. Peck by deed not dated but acknowledged on September 10,1841, conveyed said land to Walter Plinckley, and on November 27, 1847, Hugh Milligan, by a deed which recites the former conveyance from himself to Peck and the conveyance by Peck to Hinckley, conveyed the *508 560 acres to Walter Hinckley in order, as stated in said conveyance, “the more fully and effectually to vest the title and interest of, in and to said 560 acres of land in the said Walter Hinckley.” This deed was duly acknowledged on the day of its date. It is not shown that their deeds were recorded in the deed records of Sabine county prior to 1905, when a certified copy of each procured from the General Hand Office was recorded in said county. The land was located under a conditional certificate issued to Hugh Mil-ligan in 1838. The unconditional certificate was issued on September 6, 1841, by the board of land commissioners of Sabine county, and was registered and approved .on March 16, 1859, by the commissioner of claims. On the face of this unconditional certificate there is an unsigned written transfer of the certificate and all rights and benefits thereunder from Hugh Milligan to Charles Peck. This transfer is dated September 7, 1841. The following indorsement also appears on said certificate: “Pile 9, Sabine Co. 2nd Class, Unconditional Certificate Hugh Milligan, Walter Hinckley, assignee, August 17, 1858. Registered and approved March 16, 1859. Edward Clark, Commr. of Claims.” The following indorsement appears upon the original field notes on file in the General Land Office: “Pile 9, Sabine Co., 2nd Class Field Notes 560 acres Hugh Mil-ligan, cannot identify this with any survey on map, appears to be entirely incorrect, Nov. 1, 1847,- — Creusbaur; does not close. Otherwise correct on maps of Sabine County; November 8, 1881; E. Schultz, Relocated Hugh Mil-ligan. Canceled by cor. P. N.; error in Southing 43 varas; error in Eastings 89 va-ras, March 4, 1875. C. W. P.” A corrected survey was made on December 11, 1903, and corrected field notes returned to and filed in the General Land Office December 16, 1903. The land was patented on January 5', 1904, to “the heirs of Walter Hinckley, assignee of Hugh Milligan, their heirs or assigns.” Through mesne conveyances appellant has acquired the title of Walter Hinckley.

Hugh Milligan died in 1848. By his will, which was duly probated in Sabine county on July 31, 1848, he devised his estate, both real and personal, to Gideon A. Norford. This will does not describe or mention this land or any land belonging to said estate, and no inventory is shown to have been filed of the property of said estate. Gideon A. Norford died prior to 1882 intestate, leaving two heirs at law, a son, J. W- Norford, and a daughter, Mrs. Nannie Edwards. On June 29, 1891, Mrs. Edwards, for a valuable consideration paid to her by the plaintiff, John I-I. Broocks, conveyed to him an undivided one-half of the Hugh Milligan 560-acre survey. In a partition between plaintiff Broocks and the purchasers from J. W. Norforcl, the 284 acres in controversy were set aside to plaintiff.

All of the records of Sabine county except the surveyor’s records were destroyed by fire in 1875. It is not shown what the surveyor’s records disclose as to the location of the Hugh Milligan survey, and the only record in regard to said survey of which plaintiff had any knowledge at the time he purchased the land was a county map upon which said survey was shown as the Hugh Milligan survey.

There was no possession of the land by any one prior to plaintiff’s purchase, and no assertion of ownership by the heirs of Gideon A. Norford is shown prior to their sale of same. Plaintiff testified that he was told by Mr. Arnold, who was county clerk of Sabine county, that Mrs. Edwards owned the land, and Mr. Arnold, as agent for Mrs. Edwards, sold him the land. He did not know Mrs. Edwards and did not see her prior to his purchase. He knew that a patent to the land had not been issued, and if he had thought about it he would have known that the certificate under which it was located was on file in the General Land Office. He made no investigation or inquiries of the General Land Office as to the certificate or the title and ownership of the land. At that time the certificate with the indorsements thereon before set out and the transfers before mentioned were on file in the General Land Office. The only examination made by him was of the records of Sabine county, which, as before stated, showed absolutely nothing in regard to the title. He had no actual notice of the transfers from Milligan and believed when he purchased that Mrs. Edwards owned the land. Plaintiff was a lawyer at the time he purchased the land. He knew at the time he purchased that the records of Sabine county had been destroyed by fire in 1875.

The facts above stated show that the defendant has a regular chain of title to the land in controversy from the sovereignty of the soil and plaintiff has no right of recovery unless the facts show that he purchased the apparent title for a valuable consideration in good faith and without any notice of defendant’s title.

[1] We think the facts are wholly insufficient to establish his claim of title as an innocent purchaser without notice of defendant’s title. In the first place, as said by our Supreme Court in the case of Waggoner v. Dodson, 96 Tex. 422, 73 S. W. 518, “The very essence of the claim of an innocent purchaser, protected by the registration laws, that he must have bought from one apparently invested with title.” At the time of appellee’s purchase from Mrs. Edwards, she had no title, legal or equitable. She was not, and had never been, in possession of the land, and there was no record in existence in Sabine county or elsewhere showing an apparent title in her. How then can it be said that appellee bought the apparent title and is therefore entitled to protection as an innocent purchaser? It seems to us that to hold that a purchaser of land from one not in possession and who has neither legal nor equitable title, and when there is *509 no record or deed in existence apparently investing the vendor with title, can be protected as an innocent purchaser under our registration laws, is to pervert the purpose of these laws, and to hold in effect that, if one fails to place his title upon record, any one who may assert claim to his land may sell it and invest the purchaser with title, provided the purchaser has no notice of the owner’s title.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 S.W. 507, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/temple-lumber-co-v-broocks-texapp-1914.