Terry v. Terry

228 S.W. 299, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 715
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 10, 1921
DocketNo. 1172.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 228 S.W. 299 (Terry v. Terry) 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
Terry v. Terry, 228 S.W. 299, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 715 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Statement of Case.

HIGGINS, J.

Clayborn Terry died between 1S91 and 1898. At the time of his death he owned a tract of land in Erath county consisting of 160 acres. Upon his death this land passed by inheritance in nine equal parts to his heirs, consisting of certain children and their descendants. One of his children was Joseph Terry, who died March 17, 1919. Another child was J. R. Terry, who died in 1877, leaving a surviving wife, M. M. Terry, and several children.

By general warranty deed dated July 21, 1893, the other children of Clayborn Terry executed a deed to said Joseph Terry pur-' porting to convey “an undivided eight-ninths (Vo) interest in and to” said land, describing same by metes and bounds and appropriate reference to the patent issued by the state. M. M. Terry, the surviving wife of J. R. Terry, also joined in this conveyance. The deed recites a cash consideration of $685, of which $75 was paid to M. M. Terry. This deed was duly recorded in Erath county on December 8, 1897. On July 10, 1919, the children of J. R. Terry, to wit, S. F. Terry, J. M. Terry, E. R. Terry, L. L. Terry, J. T. Terry, and Mrs. M. D. Morrow, joined by her husband, brought this suit in the district court of Erath county against the heirs of Joseph Terry, alleging that the plaintiffs owned an undivided one-ninth interest in said land and the defendants owned an eight-ninths interest therein, and praying a partition. Defendants answered by general denial and pleaded the three, five, and, ten years’ statutes of limitation. The interest in the land asserted by the plaintiffs was that which was inherited by them from Clayborn Terry through their deceased father, J. R. Terry.

Upon" trial before the court judgment was rendered against the plaintiff and fee-simple title vested in the defendants. Findings of fact and conclusions of law were not filed by the trial court. The plaintiffs in the case appeal from the judgment rendered.

Opinion.

Upon the facts stated it is shown that upon the death of Clayborn Terry an undivided one-ninth interest passed to Joseph Terry, the father of appellees. Another such interest passed to the children of J. R. Terry, appellants here. The remaining seven-ninths interest passed to the other children of the decedent, who executed the deed of July 21, 1893, which purported to convey to Joseph Terry an undivided eight-ninths interest in the land. Mrs. M. M. Terry, the surviving wife of J. R. Terry, and mother of appellants, joined in this deed as a grantor and received $75 of the consideration paid, but in fact she was a stranger to the title and had no interest therein, for upon the death of Clayborn Terry the interest of J. R. Terry passed direct to his children. It thus appears that appellants became cotenants with Joseph Terry and were entitled to the relief which they sought unless their title is defeated by limitation.

Upon trial, which was had in January, 1920, S. F. Terry, one of the plaintiffs, testified in their behalf. According to his testimony he was then 53 years old and had lived in Hill and McLennan counties in the state of Texas since 1893; L. L. Terry was 58 *300 years old; J. M. Terry, 51 years; J. T. Terry, 43 years; Mrs. Morrow, 46 years; and E. R. Terry about 5 years younger than J. M. Terry. His mother, Mrs. M. M. Terry, died in Hill county, Tex., on November 24, 1919. Prior to her death,- Mrs. M. M. Terry lived with her son, one of the plaintiffs herein, J. T. Terry, and died at his home. Since 1893 the mother and the children have visited with each other. The witness and E. R. Terry, in 18S9, while their grandfather was still alive, visited in Erath county and were upon the land in controversy.

J. O. Terry, a son of Clayborn Terry, testified for the defendants that he lived in the vicinity of Dcsdemona from 1885 until 1891 and had made two visits back since leaving; that on his first visit back, which he thought was in 1893, his brother Joseph Terry was living on the land with his wife and family and had possession of the whole premises; that there was then about 75 or 80 acres in cultivation, a two-room log house, outhouses, barns, and well. His next visit was in 1900, and at that time his brother was living on the place, and so far as he knew had entire possession thereof. At that time his brother was cultivating the place and making a crop; he had the place under fence; part of it was in cultivation; all that was in cultivation was under fence. As to the pasture being fenced, he did not remember.

W. E. Terry, a son of Joseph Terry, and one of the defendants herein, testified to the following effect: That his father bought the place in 1893 and moved onto the place at that time. The witness was then eight years old. He lived op the place with his father from 1893 continuously to 1909, when the witness left, and his father was cultivating and farming the land during that time. There were about 50 or 60 acres in cultivation upon the place in 1893, also two log houses and a log pen for a barn. The cultivated land was then fenced. During 1893 his father put in to cultivation 35 or 40 more acres and after that time fenced the rest of the place, built a barn, and added two rooms to the house; set out an orchard and cross-fenced the place, and built ditches thereon. The father resided on the land from 1893 until he died in 1919.

Walter Terry, a son of Joseph Terry, and one of the defendants, in substance testified as follows: That he moved onto the land in 1893 with his father, being then- about 11 years old, and lived continuously on the place from the time he moved there until the latter part of 1901. During that time his father used the place as a home and cultivated same; built houses and fences and put more land into cultivation. He never heard of any adverse claim until this suit was filed. From 1893 until his death his father worked and cultivated the land and collected the rents and revenues; his father put the entire tract under fence and built two additional rooms to the house; he built a three-room house for a rent house; built new barns; put out an orchard; built three or four surface tanks and cross-fenced the place. He never heard of any one objecting or raising any question about his father using, cultivating, and improving the place. His father cultivated the place continuously and lived thereon from 1893 until his death in 1919.

A number of other disinterested witnesses testified to the fact that Joseph Terry had lived continuously upon the land from about 1893 until his death, during which time he was in actual and exclusive possession thereof, cultivating, using, and enjoying the same.

Pat L. Pittman, an attorney of Stephen-ville, testified that as an attorney he visited Mrs. M. M. Terry for the purpose of securing a statement from her regarding the rights of the plaintiff's in the case. It appears that this visit took place in July, 1919. He visited her at the residence of Jess Terry (one of the plaintiffs); that upon this occasion he asked Joss Terry if he had known that Joe Terry had claimed this land as his own ever since he got that deed, and he said that he had.

It was admitted that Joseph Terry had paid the taxes on the land since 1893. It appears that this land was not of very great value until the development of oil in the Desdemona field. This land was in that vicinity and immediately became quite valuable.

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Bluebook (online)
228 S.W. 299, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terry-v-terry-texapp-1921.