Villalva v. Brown
This text of 148 S.W. 1124 (Villalva v. Brown) 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.
Opinion
Appellee in trespass to try title recovered certain premises in the city of El Paso, a part of land originally granted to Juan Maria Ponce de Leon. No conveyance from the grantee appears, and appel-lee claims under a deed from Dolores Ponce de Leon and Josefa Ponce de Leon Varela, the last named being joined by her husband, Mariano Varela, to Wm. T. Smith, date'd March 25, 1854, filed for record June 10, 1854, and recorded in the deed records. Appellants claim title under the 10-year statute of limitations. Upon trial the jury was instructed that appellee had shown record title in himself, and to find in his favor unless they found for appellants upon their plea of limitation.
It was shown by the testimony of Montes that Dolores Ponce de Leon and Josefa Ponce de Leon Varela were the wife and daughter, respectively, of Juan Maria Ponce de Leon, and that they survived him, but there is no direct evidence whatever to fix the date of his death. The witness Judge Edwards testified to his death, but did not know when it occurred. Montes, after testifying to his death, upon direct examination stated that it occurred before the war between the United States and Mexico, but upon cross-examination stated that he did not know when he died, but that he was still living at the time of this war. The deed to Smith contained no recitals of the death of Juan Maria Ponce de Leon or of the heirship of the grantors, but, if the date of his death were established, there was ample testimony to warrant the court in assuming their heirship and consequent ownership of the land so as to pass the title by their deed to Smith. The correctness of the trial court’s action in instructing the jury that the record title was vested in ap-pellee is raised by the twentieth assignment complaining of the refusal to give a special charge submitting to the jury for their determination the question of whether or not Juan Maria was dead at the date of the execution of the deed.
Few of the remaining assignments are presented in such manner as to require consideration. Such as are properly presented are overruled without comment.
Reversed and remanded.
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148 S.W. 1124, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/villalva-v-brown-texapp-1912.