Tevis v. Armstrong

9 S.W. 134, 71 Tex. 59, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 1100
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1888
DocketNo. 6207
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 9 S.W. 134 (Tevis v. Armstrong) 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
Tevis v. Armstrong, 9 S.W. 134, 71 Tex. 59, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 1100 (Tex. 1888).

Opinion

Walker, Associate Justice.

This is an action by appellees as tenants in common, each claiming one-half undivided interest in two tracts of land, one in Comanche county and one in Brown county, located and patented by virtue of certificate Ho. 13 in the name of Haney Tevis, granted by the board of land commissioners of Jefferson county. .

Armstrong claimed as sole heir of his father, William Armstrong, who owned one-half interest under a contract for locative interest in one-half, fully executed by said Armstrong in his life time, save only in obtaining the patents from the land office, which was done and expenses paid by his executor.

French claimed the other half interest in said lands, under a conveyance by A. J. Tevis, who claimed as an heir and devisee of Haney Tevis and under an order of partition of her estate in the probate court of Jefferson county, by which he ' claimed the land had been allotted to him. Suit was filed August 29, 1883. The heirs of Haney Tevis were made defendants. They are numerous.

Defendants answered by general demurrer, and specially excepting because the names of all the defendants were not clearly and with certainty set out. (2) Because the interest claimed by the plaintiffs is not set out. (3) Because it is not stated that plaintiffs were in possession of the land sued for or entitled to such possession, not guilty, limitation of ten years, and stale demand.

[62]*62On trial before the court, the demurrer and exceptions having been overruled, judgment was rendered for the plaintiffs for the two tracts of land sued for.

.The first assignment of error complains of the refusal to sustain the general and special exceptions urged by the defendants to the petitions, specially in not striking from the petition so much of it as related to the tract of land lying in Brown county. The authority cited (67 Texas, 382, Martin v. Robinson) as construing article 1198 of Revised Statutes, section 13, does not apply to a state of facts like those here presented. Where the rights of the plaintiffs and of all the defendants are identical in the two tracts. An adjudication upon the ownership of one tract would necessarily determine the ownership of both so far as the title would be ascertained by the facts. But the objection was not specifically made, nor plea in abatement urged. The plea of not guilty applied to the entire suit. (Ryan v. Jackson, 11 Texas, 400.)

The exceptions for want of parties would be well taken had partition been asken. The parties interested and not joined in this suit will not be bound thereby. The objections seem to have been to a great extent corrected by amendment. But it was not error to proceed to try the case for the land against the parties in court. (45 Texas, 8; 64 Texas, 210.)

The exceptions urged that the petition was insufficient from not alleging that plaintiffs were in possession or were entitled to it are not well taken. In 68 Texas, 526, Day Land and Cattle Company v. The State, it was held that allegation of title in plaintiff in the lands sued for, and of adverse claim by defendants, was sufficient statement of cause of action.

The many assignments of error attacking the rulings of the court, in admitting testimony insisted to be irrelevant and incompetent, do not become material in appeals where the cases Were tried by the court without a jury. The declarations in evidence made by A. J. Tevis were competent against his heirs when relating to the contract for location between Armstrong and Mrs. Nancy Tevis. The testimony by French to his vendor’s declarations touching his interest in the Tevis lands were immaterial, for they are but a repetition of the recitals in the deed made at the time, and which was the occasion of the conversations detailed in evidence.

The testimony to the existence and contents of the contract between Nancy Tevis and William Armstrong was competent. [63]*63No objections were filed to the form or manner of taking the depositions. Whether the questions were leading or suggestive, or the answers pertinent, are not raised in the record. (Rev. Stats., 2235; 46 Texas, 198; 57 Texas, 444; 55 Texas, 626.) Objections were not made to the testimony as secondary. The original seems to have been in the possession of one of the executors of Nancy Tevis, and from his papers after his death it passed into possession of some of the defendants, and probably to the attorneys for the défense in this suit. If the deed was with the papers left by Langham at O’Brian’s office it doubtless would have been produced if necessary.

The pleas of stale demand and limitation of ten years were not sustained by the testimony. The suit was filed less than ten years after patent issued. The surveys were made and certificates and field notes returned to the land office ready for patent by Armstrong in his lifetime. After his death patents were obtained, the office fees and dues being paid by his executor. While Armstrong was slow in making the locations there is not shown any repudiation of the contract by Mrs. Nancy Tevis, or her heirs or legal representatives, or any complaint at his delay.

Exceptions were taken to the admission of extracts from the records of the probate court of Jefferson county, in the administration of the estate of Nancy Tevis. Objections were urged to the relevancy, and again to the sufficiency of the records as a link in the chain of French’s title claimed under A. J. Tevis.

It was shown that Nancy Tevis (Hutchinson) died January, 1863, and that her will was probated January 26, 1863, in probate court of Jefferson county; that her executors qualified February 26,1863. The executors filed an “additional inventory and appraisement of property belonging to the estate of Nancy Hutchinson, deceased,” including

“1107 acres of land, Hdf., of Noah Tevis, dec’d, supposed to lie in Throckmorton county, valued of Si per acres; $1107.00.”

A certified copy of record of partition of estate of Nancy Hutchinson was read, decreeing that “Andrew J. Tevis take the property set apart to him, to wit: A negro boy, Abe, a certificate of one-fourth of a league, the headright of Noah Tevis; two acres of land in Jefferson county near Beaumont; a note against Mary Stephenson of three hundred and fourteen [64]*64dollars and eleven cents—and household furniture valued at seventy-five dollars. The whole valued at $3207.69. * * * And that the title to said property is hereby fully vested in said distributees, as set forth in said report.” The date of this partition is not given. May 21, 1871, A. J. Tevis conveyed to plaintiff, French, by warranty deed, as recited; all his “right, title and claim of, to, and in one equal undivided one-half league and one labor of land—the certificate of which is Ho. 13, issued to Haney Tevis, by the board of land commissioners of Jefferson county, and State of Texas, which certificate was recently located-in the counties of Brown and Comanche, in two surveys. Said certificate was set apart to me as oneof the heirs of my deceased mother, Haney Tevis.”

It appeared that on January 17, 1835, a title for half a league of land had been issued to Noah Tevis, as an emigrant, and head of a family in Zavalla’s colony. The date of his death is not shown. In 1843 a partition of his estate, including this land, was made in the probate court of Jefferson county.

The details of the administration are not given.

It appeared that January 22, 1838, Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.W. 134, 71 Tex. 59, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 1100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tevis-v-armstrong-tex-1888.