Vineyards, Guardians v. Brundrett

42 S.W. 232, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 147, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 333
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 4, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 42 S.W. 232 (Vineyards, Guardians v. Brundrett) 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
Vineyards, Guardians v. Brundrett, 42 S.W. 232, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 147, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 333 (Tex. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

GARRETT, Chief Justice.

This was an action of trespass to try title brought in the District Court of Aransas County on the 10th day of March, .1894, by Samuel 0. and his wife Anna W. Vineyard, as the guardians of their minor daughter, Lillian Vineyard, against John M. Brundrett for the recovery of certain lands described in the petition. The case has been before this court on a former appeal, 35 Southwestern Reporter, 1084, and before the Supreme Court on writ of error to this court. 36 S. W. Rep., 424. The former appeal turned on the validity of a deed for the property in controversy from Samuel C. Vineyard to his minor son, Samuel Harvey Vineyard, which the Supreme Court finally held good. The controlling question on this appeal is whether or not the right of the plaintiffs to recover the land in controversy is barred by the statute of five years limitation.

The lands sued for form a body of about 13,000 acres, composed of seven tracts situated in Aransas County, upon a peninsula, and is known as the “Lamar property.” On February 12, 1850, James W. Byrne owned the entire property. Afterwards he sold and conveyed to various parties different undivided interests in the property, and at his death, in 1862, owned only an undivided interest therein of about one-fourth in fee simple, and an equity for unpaid purchase money to about the same amount which had been conveyed to Samuel Colt. The facts with regard to the creation of this equity are as follows:

1. James W. Byrne conveyed to W. G. Hale and Ebenezer Allen an undivided one-half interest in the land by deed dated February 12, 1850.

2. James W. Byrne conveyed to Samuel Colt and J. B. Colt, jointly, an undivided one-twenty-fourth interest in the land, less 200 acres, by deed dated April 21, 1856.

3. W. G. Hale and Ebenezer Allen conveyed to Samuel Colt and J. B. Colt an undivided one-eighth part of the land, less 200 acres, by deed dated April 22, 1856.

4. On May 24, 1858, the interest of J. B. Colt, which was an undivided one-twelfth, was vested back in Byrne, Hale, and Allen jointly.

5. On January 30, 1858, James W. Byrne, Ebenezer Allen, and William G. Hale conveyed to Samuel Colt one-twelfth of the land, less 200 acres.

6. On April 2, 1861, James W. Byrne conveyed to Samuel Colt an undivided three-sixteenths of the land, less 200 acres.

7. On April 2,1861, William G. Hale and Ebenezer Allen conveyed to Samuel Colt an undivided three-sixteenths of the land.

*149 8. The deeds conveying the several interests to Samuel Colt all acknowledged receipt of the purchase money.

The heirs and legal representatives of Samuel Colt, by a deed dated August 8, 1870, and recorded June 30, 1876, for a recited “consideration of a balance of all further demands against the estate and legal representatives and heirs of Samuel Colt, deceased, duly made and executed by William George Hale, Sylvia J. Allen, and Anna William Vineyard and her husband, S. C. Vineyard,” remised, released, and quitclaimed "unto said William George Hale, Sylvia J. Allen, and Anna William Vineyard all the right, title, and claim and interest whatever,” had by them as heirs or devisees of Samuel Colt or otherwise “in and to the following described parcel of land, to wit: A tract of land composed of various smaller tracts in the county of Eefugio and State of Texas, at and on a peninsula called Lamar, embracing all the land in said peninsula as the same is bounded by Aransas Bay, Copano Bay, and St. Charles Bay, and extending back or north to a line running from Copano Bay to Covaso Creek, and forming the western boundary line of surveys on land scrip numbered 1387-1486 and 22, and also including the flats, shoals, and islands in front of said peninsula, according to the several deeds of conveyance, and the mortgage deed made to said Samuel Colt by W. G. Hale and Ebenezer Allen and J. W. Byrne, now deceased, with full release and acquittance of the debt expressed in the deed therefor.

“To have and to hold all and singular the said premises, together with all and singular the hereditaments and appurtenances to the same belonging, unto the said William G. Hale, Sylvia J. Allen, and Anna W. Vineyard, their heirs and assigns forever, as tenants in common, the said Hale and Allen having each one-fourth undivided interest, and said Anna W. Vineyard having one-half thereof.”

Anna W. Vineyard was the granddaughter and sole legatee and devisee of James W. Byrne. She signed an agreement compromising a claim in favor of James W. Byrne, Ebenezer Allen, and William G. Hale against the estate of Samuel Colt, deceased, and the deed from them was executed in consideration thereof. The estate of Samuel Colt was never indebted to her. She never saw the deed. It was never delivered to her. She supposed it was executed to her because she was sole legatee and devisee under the will of her grandfather.

The estate of James W. Byrne was indebted. J. W. Vineyard was appointed administrator in 1863. In accordance with regular orders, and proceedings in the probate court the “Colt claim” was sold by the administrator, described as follows: “Three-eighths interest in a claim for property in Lamar sold Samuel Colt, now deceased, and not paid for, which interest amounts to about 2531% acres of land, more or less, or the corresponding price to be paid for the same, say $6750 in the hands of W. G. Hale for settlement.” Samuel C. Vineyard became the purchaser at administrator’s sale of the entire interest of James W. Byrne in the Lamar property, including the Colt claim. He conveyed all he purchased to Samuel Harvey Vineyard on October 8, 1873, by the deed *150 which was held valid by the Supreme Court on former appeal. This deed was duly recorded on the date of its execution. After the latter became of age, he conveyed to his sister, Lillian W. Vineyard, plaintiffs ward, on November 23, 1888. After this suit was filed, on to wit, August 6, 1896, Anna W. Vineyard, joined by her husband, S. C. Vineyard, conveyed the legal title to the Colt interest vested in her to Lillian Vineyard. Two other conveyances of an undivided one twenty-fourth interest in the land, less 200 acres each, were made by James W. Byrne in his lifetime; one to Erastus Williams on April 26, 1856, and the other to R. B. Marcy on April 2, 1856. By the several conveyances it appears that the minor Lillian Vineyard became invested with eleven twenty-fourths of the land sued for, unless it be that the interest was a little large in the 200 acres excepted from some of the conveyances, but appellants in their brief have claimed the interest to be as stated, and it is so found.

After the conveyance by Samuel C. Vineyard, Fanny Hale, for herself and as natural guardian of the minor heirs of W. G. Hale, deceased, brought a suit in the District Court of Aransas County against Samuel C. Vineyard, Anna W. Vineyard, and others for the partition of the Lamar property. No notice was taken in the suit of Samuel Harvey Vineyard, in whom the title of Sam C. Vineyard was then vested, and he was not in any manner made a party thereto. A partition of the property was was decreed and made, and certain parcels thereof, or eleven twenty-fourths of the whole, were set apart to Sam C. Vineyard, but none to the said Anna W. Vineyard. The partition included unsold town lots in the town of Lamar.

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.W. 232, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 147, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vineyards-guardians-v-brundrett-texapp-1897.