Walker v. Pittman

46 S.W. 117, 18 Tex. Civ. App. 519, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 120
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 5, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 46 S.W. 117 (Walker v. Pittman) 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
Walker v. Pittman, 46 S.W. 117, 18 Tex. Civ. App. 519, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 120 (Tex. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

B00KH0UT, Associate Justice.

This suit was instituted by S. S. Walker for himself and Mary A. Walker, as administratrix of the estate of S. D. Walker, on August 1, 1895, in the usual form of trespass to try title, against J. U. Pittman, to recover 400 acres of land, a part of the Sanders Walker 640-acre survey in Ellis County, Texas. The petition alleged that S. D. and S. S. Walker were the sole heirs of the patentee, Sanders Walker.

The defendant Pittman having filed a disclaimer as to any interest in the land, plaintiffs amended, making T. J. and Josiah Emery parties defendant. The Emerys answered first, by plea of not guilty, and further alleging their purchase of the land by a warranty deed, and a chain of title to them by warranty deeds, and making their immediate and remote vendors parties, and asking judgment on their respective warranties in the event of plaintiffs recovering in the case. They further alleged that Sanders Walker, the ancestor of plaintiffs, during his lifetime executed a deed of conveyance to the land in controversy to W. A. Brown, and that said deed was delivered by said Brown to W. 0. Steele, and that while said deed was in the possession of said Steele it was lost and destroyed and burned up by fire, and that defendants can not procure the same or file a certified copy, and they ask that secondary evidence of the existence and contents of said deed be admitted in this cause.

There was a trial with the aid of a jury, and a verdict for defendants *521 upon which judgment was duly entered. Plaintiffs filed a motion for new trial, which being overruled, they excepted, and prosecute this appeal.

1. Plaintiffs introduced in evidence a patent from the Republic of Texas to Sanders Walker to 640 acres of land in Ellis County, Texas, dated in 1846.

2. A deed dated in 1855 from Sanders Walker to H. Sharp for 240 acres of land, part of the Sanders Walker survey in Ellis County, describing the same by metes and bounds.

3. They proved the death of S. S. Walker, and that plaintiffs were his sole heirs at law.

Defendants introduced (1) a deed from W. A. Brown and wife to W. C. Steele for 400 acres of land out of the Sanders Walker survey in Ellis County, dated in 1856, reciting a consideration paid of $500.

2. General warranty deed from W. C. Steele to F. Cameron to said land, dated in 1872, consideration $2000.

3. Special warranty deed from F. Cameron to J. H. Emery.

4. General warranty deed from K. E. and E. J. Emery to T. J. and J. J. Emery, conveying a one-half interest in the land. J. H. Emery died, unmarried, and ,K. E., E. J., T. J., and J. J. Emery were his brothers and sole heirs. Defendants also introduced paroi evidence of the existence, loss, and contents of a deed from S. S. Walker to W. A. Brown.

Apppellants’ several assignments of error challenge the competency and sufficiency of the evidence to show the existence, loss, and contents of said deed to W. A. Brown.

Appellants’ first assignment of error reads: “The court erred in allowing W. C. Steele, as witness for defendants, for the purpose of proving a conveyance of the land in controversy by Sanders Walker to W. A. Brown, to testify by depositions which were read to the jury over plaintiffs’ objection, that he saw in the possession of W. A. Brown a deed in the usual form to him, W. A. Brown, signed by Sanders Walker, to the land in controversy, and gave its contents; because the said W. C. Steele being a party in said cause, and the said Sanders Walker being the deceased ancestor of plaintiffs under whom they claim title to the land in controversy as heirs, is incompetent to testify to said facts, as the sole and only purpose of said testimony was to prove a transaction between Sanders Walker and W. A. Brown and statements made by Sanders Walker to said W. A. Brown contained in said deed.”

Plaintiffs were the heirs of Sanders Walker. W. C. Steele was a remote warrantor in the chain of title through which defendants deraigu title. Steele had been made a party to the suit and judgment asked over against him on his warranty by the defendants in the event of a recovery by plaintiffs of the land. Upon the trial the defendants dismissed their suit against all the warrantors, including W. C. Steele. Steele testified: “In the year 1856 I went to W. A. Brown’s residence in Limestone County for the purpose of buying 400 acres of land in controversy. I *522 asked W. A. Brown if he had a good title to the land. He handed me a deed, which I examined carefully, and was satisfied with it. It was a deed from Sanders Walker to W. A. Brown. It was in regular form of a deed, and acknowledged the receipt of $1600—as well as I remember it—as the consideration. It was witnessed by two witnesses, but don’t remember who they were. It was acknowledged in proper form before a notary public, but can not remember the notary’s name. I bought the 400 acres of land from W. A. Brown. The deed from Sanders Walker to W. A. Brown conveyed the same land that Brown’s deed conveyed to me. W. A. Brown gave me the deed from Sanders Walker to himself.” Appellants excepted to this testimony, as set forth in the above assignment of error.

Our statute prohibits the introduction of testimony “as to any transaction with, or statement by the testator, intestate or ward, * * * and the provisions of -this article shall extend to and include all actions by or against the heirs or legal representatives of a decedent arising out of any transaction with such decedent.” Sayles’ Civ. Stats., art. 2302. It will be seen that the statute denounces “any transaction with, or statement by” the testator or intestate as incompetent evidence. In the case of Martin v. McAdams, 87 Texas, 227, our Supreme Court held that a witness who was a legatee in a will was a competent witness to prove that the will was in the handwriting of the testator. That the making of a will is not a transaction of the testator with the devisees or legatees.

The case of Choate v. Huff, 4 Court of Appeals Civil Cases, section 281, was a suit against Huff and Cole, as executors of Fielding Hill, brought by Choate to recover on a note executed by Hill, deceased. It was held in that case that Choate could testify that he had lost a note which purported to have been signed by the deceased, and given to him, and which was the subject matter of the suit. It was held that this evidence was not “any transaction with, or statement by the testator or intestate.” In the case before us the evidence of Steele that he saw in “the possession of W. A. Brown a deed from Sanders Walker to W: A. Brown in regular form to the land in controversy, -and that W. A. Brown gave me the deed from Sanders Walker to himself,” does not evidence a transaction with or statement by Sanders Walker and W. C. Steele. It but evidences an independent act of Steele in no way connected with the deceased, Sanders Walker. We do not think the evidence was prohibited by the statute, and the court did not err in overruling appellants’ exception. Howard v. Galbraith, 30 S. W. Rep., 689; Moore v. Willis, 69 Texas, 109.

Appellants’ third assignment of error complains that the court erred in admitting, over the objection of plaintiffs, the testimony of W. C. Steele as to the contents of the deed from Sanders Walker to W. A.

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.W. 117, 18 Tex. Civ. App. 519, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-pittman-texapp-1898.