Wallis v. Long

75 S.W.2d 138
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 1, 1934
DocketNo. 9772.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 75 S.W.2d 138 (Wallis v. Long) 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
Wallis v. Long, 75 S.W.2d 138 (Tex. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Chief Justice.

This is a suit brought by appellants against appellees to recover title and possession of an undivided interest of approximately 270 acres of land out of a survey of 519 acres, known as the E. H. R. Wallis survey, abstract No. 310, in Chambers county. The petition also seeks recovery of the value of oil alleged to have been taken from the land by the defendants Pure Oil Company andi Humble Oil Company. There are more than one hundred plaintiffs and their names need not be here stated. All of them claim as heirs or through and under heirs of the original grantee, E. H. R. Wallis, to whom land certificate No. 70 for 8,276,000 square varas of land was granted and issued by the Republic of Texas in 1838, a part of which certificate was located on the land in controversy on January 23, 1862, and patent to the land thereby appropriated was issued on April 8, 1S74.

The defendants in the 'suit are devisees of Josh J. Mayes, deceased, and their descendants and those holding under them, the two oil companies above mentioned being vendees of the other defendants. There are a number of these defendants and it is unnecessary to here give their names.

The defendants all answered by general demurrer, plea of not guilty, and general denial, and specially pleaded the statutes of three, five, ten, and twenty-five-year limitation (Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. arts. 5507, 5509, 5510, 5519), in bar of plaintiffs’ suit. They further specially pleaded:

“That plaintiffs ought not to have and maintain their alleged cause of action against these defendants, because if it could be shown (and defendants deny that such is the fact) that plaintiffs, or any of them, hold, or ever held, the apparent record title to the land sued for by them, they have not exercised any dominion over such land and have not paid any taxes thereon, for one or more years during the period of fifty years next preceding the filing of this suit, but these defendants, and those whose estate they have and hold, have during such period of time openly exercised dominion over and asserted claim to said land and premises, and have paid taxes annually thereon for more than twenty years during such period of time, and this, these defendants are ready to verify.”

The trial in the court below with a jury resulted in a verdict in favor of defendants. The jury found that certificate No. 70 was set aside and allotted to Daniel B. Wallis under and by virtue of some order or orders of the probate court of Liberty county made in settling up and dividing the estate of E. H. R. Wallis among his children and heirs, and that. Daniel B. Wallis was on the 29th day of May, 1858, the owner of all the unlocated balance of said certificate No. 70, such balance being for 2,847,292 square varas; that all the title of the heirs and children of E. H. R. Wallis in said certificate was divested out of them and vested in J. J. Mayes (the testator under whom appellees hold title) to the extent of the 2,847,292 square varas thereof which was located on the land in controversy, under and by virtue of whatever acts of the probate court, orders, agreements,, sales, transfers, or deed that were necessary to divest the title out of the prior owners thereof and vest that title in J. J. Mayes.

They further found that plaintiffs and those under whom they claim had not exercised dominion over the land nor paid any taxes thereon within the period of fifty years next preceding the filing of this suit; and that J. J. Mayes and defendants, who hold under him, have openly exercised dominion over and asserted claims'to the land in controversy, and have paid taxes annually thereon for as many as twenty years during the period of fifty years next preceding the filing of this suit; that defendants and those under whom they claim have had peaceable and adverse possession of the land in controversy, using and enjoying the same and paying taxes thereon, and claiming under a deed or deeds duly recorded for as long as five years continuously prior to ‘the filing of this suit. The jury made the same findings as to defendants’ adverse possession and their use and enjoyment of the land for ten years prior to the filing of the suit' that it made in re *140 gard to 'such possession apd enjoyment for the fiye-year period. The time fixed by.the jury in which such adverse possession, claim, and use of the land by the defendants existed was from 1908 to 1929.

The jury further found that J. J. Mayes had no conversation with plaintiff Norman V. Wallis in or about the year 1907, in which he recognized that Sol. B. Wallis and some of his sisters and brothers owned an interest in the land; and that J. J. Mayes did not at that time have any agreement or understanding that he would have the privilege of pasturing and using all the land, and would pay all the taxes.

Upon return of this verdict, judgment was rendered thereon in favor of defendants, that plaintiffs take nothing by their suit.

Under an appropriate assignment and proposition, appellants complain of each of the findings of the jury above stated, upon the grounds hereinafter indicated. Without setting out these propositions in detail, we will consider and determine each of the points presented by appellants in support of their claim that none of these findings should' be sustained. Before doing this, we will make the following general statement of the facts disclosed by the evidence:

E. H. R. Wallis, the ancestor of plaintiffs, emigrated to Texas in 1824 and became entitled to a grant of a league and labor of land from that republic. Por that quantity of land, two certificates were issued to him by the government of the Republic in January, 183S, one of which, No. 69, was for 17,724,-000 square varas, and the other, No. 79, for 8,276,000 square varas. Wallis died in 1846 and his estate was administered upon in the probate court of Liberty county, which at that time embraced all of the territory included in Chambers county, which was organized in 1858.

One-half of these certificates for the aggregate of 26,000,000 square varas of land was inherited by the eight children of Wallis by his first wife from their mother, the certificates being the community property of Wallis and his said wife. Wallis married a second time and left two children by his second wife. Upon his death intestate in 1858, the remaining half of the two certificates became the property of his ten children, and his widow.

The records of Liberty county were all destroyed by fire in December, 1874, and the courthouse of Chambers county and all of its records were destroyed by fire in December, 1875.

There is ample evidence to show that there was a division and distribution of the estate of E. H. R. Wallis by the probate court irt 1854. There is no direct evidence as to whom certificate No. 70 was allotted, but all of the circumstances disclosed by the evidence are sufficient, we think, to show that it is more probable that D. B. Wallis, in such division and distribution and by deeds and transiers made to him by other children of his father, became the owner of all of certificate No. 70 for 8,276,000 square varas, than that he did not so acquire title to that certificate.

The record shows that on April 6, 1848, he acquired the one-third interest of Sarah Wallis, the widow of Elisha Wallis, deceased, a son of E. H. R. Wallis by his first wife. Thereafter, in March, 1S54, three of the other children of B. H. R.

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75 S.W.2d 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallis-v-long-texapp-1934.