Thomas v. Henderson

795 S.W.2d 847, 114 Oil & Gas Rep. 549, 1990 Tex. App. LEXIS 2441, 1990 WL 146653
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 30, 1990
DocketNo. 09-89-133 CV
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 795 S.W.2d 847 (Thomas v. Henderson) 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
Thomas v. Henderson, 795 S.W.2d 847, 114 Oil & Gas Rep. 549, 1990 Tex. App. LEXIS 2441, 1990 WL 146653 (Tex. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinions

OPINION

BROOKSHIRE, Justice.

A trespass to try title proceeding was conducted below. The Appellants, including one Odessa Loston, instituted the trespass to try title cause of action against Ollie S. Henderson, the Appellee here, and others, petitioning to obtain title including certain mineral rights in, to and under a 100 acre tract of land. The Appellees filed a general denial and a “not guilty” plea. A jury found in favor of the Appellants on the necessary elements of an adverse possession claim. The trial court, nevertheless, awarded one-half of the mineral interests to the Appellees, and also awarded an undivided five acres of land on the western one-half of the property to a third-party defendant. The trial court awarded Attorney Ad Litem fees.

The Appellants advance three points of error. The first point of error reads:

THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN. AWARDING APPELLEES, HENDERSON, ET AL, TITLE TO MINERALS UNDER THE EASTERN ONE-HALF OF TRACT.

The Appellants argue that they traced their claim of title from the sovereignty of the soil. By an opening statement the attorneys for the plaintiffs, Appellants here, were shown to be Odessa F. Loston, Ollie F. Douglass, Ross Burrell, Lawrence Charles Burrell, Sr., Hazel Freeman — these being the plaintiffs below. The plaintiffs sued as defendants J.D. Martinez, Ollie Simmons Henderson, also known as Ollie Henderson; Luie Simmons Moore, also known as Luie Moore; W.F. Bridewell, Dorothy W. Boone, Ed Garrett Boone, Ellen Boone Schwethelm, individually, Jean Rowe Bagby, William C. Bagby, Sarah Bagby, Elisha Wooten, Ovell McKinney, Ray Wooten, Deress Wooten, Glenda Faye McCardell, Dan E. Boone, Lewis Darrell Phillips, Everett Carr, Dorothy P. Carr, Ms. Carl P. Warden, Robert F. Phillips, J.D. Boone, Dan Boone, Trustee, Herbert Made-ley and the Protestant-Episcopal Diocese of Oklahoma City, being all the defendants.

The opening statement of the plaintiffs’ attorney acknowledged that the lawsuit was in the statutory form of a trespass to try title action. The attorney affirmatively stated that the plaintiffs had affirmatively pleaded that they were in possession of the property since December of 1938. They plead the 25 year statute of limitations, the 10 year statute of limitations, and the three year statute of limitations. The defense stated that their defense would be a legal one based on the facts as raised. Without any objection, upon a proper motion for default judgment, the plaintiffs obtained a default judgment against Ruth Clark who had filed a disclaimer and the Protestant-Episcopal Diocese of Oklahoma City.

Plaintiffs introduced into evidence Plaintiffs’ Exhibit No. 1 which was a patent. The patent was from the State of Texas to Jose Dolores Martinez. The patent involved the Martinez League No. 4. Slightly later the record shows that when “they abstracted the county” the abstract number was 34, J.D. Martinez. The plaintiffs introduced their Exhibit No. 2 which was a plat or a map being the same as the Jose Dolores Martinez league abstract No. 34. Exhibit No. 3A was the very detailed and lengthy field notes of the 103.433 acres of [849]*849land, being the land in question and being a part of the J.D. Martinez Survey A34 in San Jacinto County, being the same land described in Volume 5, page 571 of the Deed Records of San Jacinto County. Plaintiffs’ Exhibit No. 3B was a plat or map of the 103.433 acres in the J.D. Martinez Survey Abstract No. 34 which shows in very considerable detail the metes and bounds descriptions of the tract of land involved. The patents were passed upon during the biennial term of 1830 and 1831. The survey was made by V.W. Gottula. He certified that the field notes correctly represented a survey made by him on the ground in October or November of 1983.

The next proffer was Plaintiffs’ No. 4 which was an oil, gas and mineral lease dated August 19, 1970, between Odessa Loston of 5609 Wayne Street, Houston, Texas, to the Ada Land Company covering a tract of land containing 100 acres more or less. Upon the cross-examination of the surveyor, Mr. Gottula, there was objection made by the Appellant’s attorney that any questions concerning the property in the lawsuit to whatever happened or transpired to this property since 1939 would be admissible but anything before 1939 would be inadmissible. The position taken at trial was that the lawsuit of the Appellants pertains to “whatever transpired to this property since 1939”. By a witness proffered by the plaintiffs below, it was shown that Ann Ford had lived on the tract in question and used the tract in question for a long time. Ann Ford and her husband farmed the tract. They also ran cattle on the tract. The tract was fenced except for the big creek which ran as a boundary line in the rear of the tract or towards the back of the tract. Witnesses proffered by the Appellants proved that the tract was used for farming and for pastures for some cattle as well as some of the timber as a wood lot, apparently for domestic fuel. It was shown by one of the heirs that all the plaintiffs in this lawsuit were claiming land as heirs of Ann and Henry Ford. More specifically, as the grandchildren of Ann Ford.

The defendants offered a deed from Henry Ford and wife, Ann Ford to W.J. Simmons dated July 30, 1909, which had been duly recorded in the Deed Records of San Jacinto County. Defendants below also offered their Exhibit No. 2, which was a power of attorney from W.J. Simmons to G.I. Turnley dated February 25, 1910, and defendants’ Exhibit No. 3 was a deed from G.I. Turnley as agent for W.J. Simmons to Henry Ford and wife, Ann Ford, dated May 18,1910, and recorded in the Deed Records. That deed from Turnley to Henry and Ann Ford was for the west 50 acres of the 100 acre tract. The defendant next offered a mineral deed, being a mineral deed from W.J. Simmons to Logan H. Bagby, Jr., dated November 3, 1932, which conveyed the minerals under the 50 acres of land retained by W.J. Simmons in his deed out of the 100 acres being the east 50 acres. Another mineral deed was offered into the evidence being from Garrett Boone to Ser-bo Oil Company conveying an undivided one-eighth interest in the minerals in the east 50 acres. There was a mineral deed offered from Logan H. Bagby, Jr., to Garrett Boone, which covers the east 50 acres dated November 14, 1932.

The plaintiffs lodged objections to these instruments. The first was relevancy. The plaintiffs took the position that the lawsuit was filed and tried on a theory that the plaintiffs took adverse possession in 1938 and that what transpired by the documents in 1909 had simply no relevancy to this lawsuit. The second objection was on irrelevancy in that there was no connection in tying the title of Henry Ford and Ann Ford to the sovereignty of the soil — that the documents of 1909 were only pieces of paper. The plaintiffs took the position that there would have to be other documents as a predicate that would trace Henry and Ann Ford’s title all the way back to the sovereignty of the soil. And until the title of Henry and Ann Ford was actually traced back to the sovereignty of the soil, the documents proffered by the defendants were nothing.

The next objection was that defendants’ exhibits 1, 2 and 3 together make a mortgage and that the Fords therefore could not convey their homeplace. The last ob[850]*850jection was like the one immediately before it that as to defendants’ exhibits 1, 2 and 3, that the same were nullity until “they can go back to sovereignty of the soil.” The defendants claim specifically when Henry Ford and wife, Ann Ford, conveyed to W.J. Simmons that that made W.J.

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Bluebook (online)
795 S.W.2d 847, 114 Oil & Gas Rep. 549, 1990 Tex. App. LEXIS 2441, 1990 WL 146653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-henderson-texapp-1990.