Thompson & Tucker Lumber Co. v. Platt

154 S.W. 268, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 240
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 29, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 154 S.W. 268 (Thompson & Tucker Lumber Co. v. Platt) 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
Thompson & Tucker Lumber Co. v. Platt, 154 S.W. 268, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 240 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

REESE, J.

This is an action of trespass to try title by B. A. Platt against the Thompson & Tucker Lumber Company, to recover a tract of 322 acres of land in Trinity county, being part of the Benj. Ellis, Sr., 432-aere survey, and for damages for cutting and removing timber therefrom. The defendant pleaded the general issue and not guilty. Upon trial with the assistance of a jury there were verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the land sued for, and damages in the sum of $3,200. Its motion for a new trial being overruled, the defendant appeals. ' .

On September 5, 1839, a conditional certificate for 640 acres of land was issued to Benj. Ellis, Sr., under the act of January 4, 1839. The unconditional certificate was issued to Benjamin Ellis, Sr., by the board of land commissioners of Houston county, March 7, 1842. The unconditional certificate was located by Benjamin B. Ellis, son of Benjamin Ellis, Sr., and father of plaintiff’s grantors, on 432 acres of land in Trinity county, of which the 322 acres here involved is a part, in 1857, and also in 1860 upon 208 acres in Polk county — 640 acres in all. Patent was issued to Benjamin Ellis, Sr., to the 432-acre tract April 13, 1882. The land in Polk county was patented to Benjamin Ellis, Sr., October 18, 1861. Benjamin Ellis, Sr., emigrated to Texas from Mississippi in 1839, and settled near old Sumpter in Trinity county. He had a large family, consisting of his wife and 13 children, some of whom were born after his removal to Texas. Among the older, if not the oldest, of these children was Benjamin B. Ellis, who also came to Texas in 1839. It appears that he was then a man grown and married. Benjamin Ellis, Sr., died in 1844,. his wife, Hannah, in 1861. None of the children appear to be living, though many of their children are still living in Trinity and Houston counties. Benjamin B. Ellis married Arrita Adams.- He died in 1867, and his widow in 1886. They had four children, three of whom survived both parents, to wit, S. A. V. Ellis, Frances G., who married J. A. Brent, Jane F., who married J. B. Anderson. The fourth, Solomon A. Ellis, survived his father, and was alive in 1881, but afterwards died, the date of his death not being given. He .was several times married, and left several children, still living.

September 8, 1881, S. A. Ellis executed to his brother S. A. V. Ellis a deed of conveyance to “all my right, interest and claim to the land interest of the estate of B. B. Ellis, *269 the same my undivided interest in all the land belonging, to the estate of B. B. Ellis, deceased.” On December 20, 1909, J. E. Anderson, joined by her husband, J. B. Anderson, and Frances G. Brent, joined by her husband, J. A. Brent, executed and acknowledged in due form of law a power of attorney to C. M. McKinnon, authorizing him “to sue for and recover, to compromise with all adverse claimants, all our lands situated in the counties of Trinity and Polk, which we may own or have an interest in as heirs at law of B. B. Ellis, deceased, and no other, and also to sell all such lands, tenements, hereditaments and real estate whatever that we may own or have an interest in as heirs as aforesaid.” This instrument also contained the following: “And in consideration of one dollar to us in hand paid by the said O. M. McKinnon, the receipt of which we hereby acknowledge, and the further consideration of money paid and to be paid by the said C. M. McKinnon for expenses of investigating the title to our said lands and in recovering the same, and the still further consideration of services heretofore rendered and hereafter to be rendered by the said McKinnon in the said premises, we do hereby grant, bargain, sell and convey unto the said G. M. McKinnon, his heirs and assigns, an undivided one-half interest in and to the above-described lands and premises, which he may recover for us by suit or compromise as the case may be.”

On February 28, 1910, S. A. V. Ellis executed to C. M. McKinnon a similar power of attorney, but on March 15, 1910, he executed to said McKinnon a special warranty deed, by which there was conveyed all the right, title, and interest of said S. A. Y. Ellis in and to the land in controversy in this suit. On said March 15, 1910, G. M. McKinnon, as agent and attorney in fact for Anderson and wife and Brent and wife, under the power of attorney aforesaid, conveyed to B. A. Platt an undivided one-half interest in the land in controversy, and on March 16, 1910, he conveyed to said Platt his (McKinnon’s) one-half interest in the land in controversy. On March 15, 1910, S. A. V. Ellis assigned and transferred to said Platt any and all rights of action which the said S. A. Y. Ellis might have against any person or corporation for damages done to the land in controversy by reason of timber having been cut and removed therefrom. On April 14, 1910, Anderson and wife and Brent and wife executed a similar instrument, transferring and assigning to said Platt their cause of action for damages for cutting timber. This constituted appellee’s paper title of the land, and damages for cutting timber.

Appellee further claimed, and introduced evidence in support thereof, that the ancestor of their grantors, of whom we have spoken as Benjamin B. Ellis, was the same person as Benjamin Ellis, Sr., named in the certificate and patents. On this issue we find that the practically undisputed evidence establishes the fact that this is not true. It is true that the witness J. B. Anderson testifies that Benjamin Ellis, Sr., and Benjamin Ellis are one and the same man, but he shows that he never knew Benjamin Ellis, Sr., and could not have known that the fact so stated was true. On the contrary, the testimony of all of the members of the family, most of them witnesses for appellee, shows conclusively that Benjamin Ellis, the father, and Benjamin B. Ellis, the son, came to Texas in 1839 and settled in the same neighborhood. Benjamin B. Ellis under that name procured a pre-emption of 160 acres. None of the testimony, except the isolated statement of Anderson, lends any support to the contention that the grantee in the certificates and patents was the Benjamin B. Ellis who was the ancestor of appellee’s grantors. We think the statement of Anderson, in the face of the adverse testimony, may be discarded entirely, and we find,, as the result of the undisputed evidence, that the ancestor of appellee’s grantors, Benjamin B. Ellis, was in fact the son of Benjamin Ellis, Sr., the grantee in the certificates and patents.

[1,2] Another contention of appellee is that if the said Benjamin B. Ellis was not the original grantee in the certificate, by verbal sale and delivery by Benjamin Ellis, Sr., in his lifetime, or his heirs after his death, Benjamin B. Ellis became the owner of the unconditional certificate. To support this contention appellee relied upon a number of circumstances, consisting largely of the continuous, open, and active assertion of ownership of the land by Benjamin B. Ellis, and the nonclaim on the part of the other children of Benjamin Ellis, Sr. From this evidence it appears that Benjamin B. Ellis during his lifetime, and his heirs since his death, have always asserted title to this tract of land' in controversy, and to the tract of 208 acres in Polk county located under the same certificate, since the location of the certificates, and that, although the other children and heirs at law of Benjamin Ellis, Sr., many of them at least,'lived in the neighborhood of this land, and knew of this claim, they have never at any time, and do not now, dispute it. It is unnecessary to discuss ■this evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
154 S.W. 268, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-tucker-lumber-co-v-platt-texapp-1913.