Waddell v. Coleman

248 S.W.2d 216, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 1600
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 25, 1951
DocketNo. 4731
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 248 S.W.2d 216 (Waddell v. Coleman) 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
Waddell v. Coleman, 248 S.W.2d 216, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 1600 (Tex. Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

WALKER, Justice.

The action is in trespass to try title, to recover a tract of 100 acres of land in Hardin County, in the southeastern corner of the Frederick Helfenstein Survey. This corner is on Village Creek [218]*218and from it the boundary of the 100 acre tract runs north 850 varas along the eastern boundary of the Helfenstein Survey, and then turns and extends west a distance of 618 varas. From the point thus fixed, which is the northwestern corner of the 100 acre tract, the boundary extends south to Village Creek, and Village Creek is the southern boundary of the 100 acre tract.

Under the pleadings, the appellees were cross-plaintiffs and the appellants were cross-defendants, but the appellees will be referred to as plaintiffs and their cross-action as the petition, and the appellants will be referred to as defendants and their pleading as an answer and cross-action.

In addition to the formal allegations in trespass to try title and their prayer for recovery of the land, plaintiffs alleged that defendants had wrongfully cut and removed timber from the land and prayed recovery of damages.

The 100’ acre tract in suit was the eastern 100 acres of a 160 acre tract on which M. C. Spell (Mack Spell) and his wife, Lucy Spell, had resided at a time many year's before the present controversy arose but it is often referred to in the proof as the “Spell tract”. M. C. Spell and Lucy Spell were divorced, and Lucy Spell married one Lock. After her marriage to Lock, she and her former husband sued one Chapman in whom, apparently, the title to the land was vested, to recover some land in the Helfenstein Survey which either was or included the 160 acre tract; and by a judgment dated July 7, 1919, which was rendered by agreement, Mrs. Lock and M. C. Spell recovered an undivided 100 acres of the 160 acres, which was to be surveyed so as to include the improvements they had made on the 160 acres. The 100 acre tract was surveyed later; the field notes are. dated September 29, 1919. The title of Mrs. Lock and M. C. Spell was acquired by the plaintiff Lowe and the former plaintiff Tom Coleman and Mr. Lowe and Mr. Coleman conveyed the pine timber on the 100 acre tract to the Kirby Lumber Company by a deed dated February 14, 1920. The Kirby Lumber Company cut this timber in 1920.

Such title to the 100 acre tract as the defendants may have is founded upon adverse possession of a part of the 100 acre tract which, defendants say, amounted to a compliance with the 10-year statute of limitation, since the year 1920, by E. M. (or Emory) Waddell and his family. E. M. Waddell died in 1936. Of the defendants, Mrs. Emmie Waddell is the widow of E. M. Waddell; and the other defendants (except Lindsey, Diffey and Payne) are the children of E. M. Waddell and the husbands of some of these children. The rights of Lindsey, Diffey and Payne were derived from the other defendants.

The defendant Mrs. Emmie Waddell was the second wife of E. M. Waddell. She and Mr. Waddell were married in 1906 and established their home on a tract of land in the Bryan Survey which is east of, and adjoins, the 100 acre tract in suit. They apparently established their residence on this tract in 1909 and they resided there until 1927, and in that year they removed from this tract in the Bryan Survey to the community of Village Mills, where they resided until Mr. Waddell’s death in 1936.

The western line and corners of the Waddell tract on the Bryan Survey coincide with the eastern line and corners of the 100 acre tract in suit. Some evidence was adduced which tended to show that the eastern line of the Helfenstein Survey, in which the 100 acre tract in suit is supposedly situated, was actually separated from the western line of the Bryan Survey by a vacancy which was about 145 or 150 varas wide, and that all of the land in suit which was held in actual possession by the Waddells lay on this vacancy. However, this question was resolved in the defendants’ favor by the jury.

The cause was tried to a jury who returned the following answers to the Special Issues submitted to them: (1) The true eastern line of the 100 acre tract (which we construe as meaning the eastern line of the Helfenstein Survey) was the line identified in the evidence as running north 850 varas with the west line of the Bryan Survey; (2) defendants (other than Diffey and Payne) and E. M. Waddell held peace[219]*219able and adverse possession of the 100 acres in suit, cultivating, using or enjoying, and claiming the same for a period of 10 years or more continually after the year 1920 and prior to 1948; (3) a preponderance of the evidence did not show that E. M. Waddell, within the period of 10 years found by them, acknowledged and recognized that Tom. F. 'Coleman and Grover C. Lowe, or either, were the owners of the land; and (4) a preponderance of the evidence did not show that E. M. Waddell at any time immediately prior to the date of the judgment in Lock v. Chapman acknowledged and recognized that Lucy Lock was the owner of the land.

Subsequently, the plaintiffs filed a motion for judgment non obstante vere-dicto, and this motion was sustained and judgment was rendered by the trial court that plaintiffs recover the title to and the possession of the 100 acre tract in suit. The trial court also rendered judgment in behalf of plaintiffs against defendants for $3,913.49, the value of the timber cut and removed by the defendants from the land. From this judgment the defendants 'have appealed.

Defendants have assigned nine Points of Error but these Points raise only the questions now to be discussed.

(1) A deed from Kirby to 'Chapman is an element of plaintiffs’ chain of title, and defendants say that the description of the land conveyed by this deed did not cover the land in suit. In their argument under one of their Points, they make the same criticism of Mooney’s deed to Kirby, which was another element of plaintiffs’ chain of title. These contentions are overruled. It is the position of all parties that the land in suit is a part of the tract known as the Mack Spell or Lucy Lock tract, or “place”, and that this Spell-Lock tract is in the Helfenstein Survey, and in Hardin County, on the north bank of Village Creek. Plaintiffs proved a patent to Frederick Helfenstein for a 1280 acre survey, and the description in Mooney’s deed to Kirby and the description in Kirby’s deed to ‘Chapman obviously refer to tile survey described in and conveyed by this patent. Further, the proof showed that the 1280 acre survey thus patented to Helfenstein is the particular Helfenstein Survey in which the parties have located the Spell-Lock traict. Thus Grimes’ field notes of the tract awarded to Mrs. Lock and Spell in their suit against 'Chapman are accompanied by, and obviously refer to, some field notes which are the field notes of the Helfenstein Survey described in the patent. The patent locates the survey in “Liberty District, Tyler County, on the north bank of Big Sandy 'Creek;” but Ellis, a surveyor, located the Spell-Lock tract in a Helfen-stein Survey of 1280 acres which was located in both Hardin and Tyler Counties, on Village Creek, and he contended that he had found the original southeastern corner of the Helfenstein Survey which is described in the patent mentioned above, but located at a point 145 or 150 varas west of the point contended for by the defendants as the southeastern corner of the Helfenstein Survey in which the Spell-Lock tract is located. Ellis was, unquestionably, referring to the same Helfen-stein Survey as is described in the patent.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Pewitt v. Renwar Oil Corp.
261 S.W.2d 904 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1953)
Powell Lumber Co. v. Dickerson
203 F.2d 189 (Fifth Circuit, 1953)
Coleman v. Waddell
249 S.W.2d 912 (Texas Supreme Court, 1952)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
248 S.W.2d 216, 1951 Tex. App. LEXIS 1600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waddell-v-coleman-texapp-1951.