Wardlow v. Miller

6 S.W. 292, 69 Tex. 395, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 839
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1887
DocketNo. 2360
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 6 S.W. 292 (Wardlow v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wardlow v. Miller, 6 S.W. 292, 69 Tex. 395, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 839 (Tex. 1887).

Opinion

Willie, Chief Justice.

Mrs. C. B. Miller and her husband, T. K. Miller, brought this action of trespass to try title against the appellants to recover an undivided half interest in twelve hundred and eighty acres of land, part of a nineteen hundred and twenty acre tract granted as bounty to the heirs of Orlando Wheeler, who fell at Goliad in the Fannin massacre. Orlando Wheeler at his death was a single man, and left no heirs in either the descending or ascending line. He left, however, collateral relatives as follows: Two brothers, Olin H. Wheeler and Richard M. Wheeler, who were of the whole blood, and the appellee, Mrs. Miller, who was a daughter of a brother of the whole blood who had died before the death of Orlando Wheeler; also the following brothers and sisters of the half blood; Robert J. Wheeler, William Wheeler, Catharine Wheeler, Jane Wheeler and Mrs. Bacon. Olin H. Wheeler, of the full blood, died in 1840 or 1841, leaving neither wife nor children.

It seems that the heirs of Orlando Wheeler had also received a grant of six hundred and forty acres of land in Ellis county as donation, and a headright of a league and labor located in Hill county. The total amount granted them by the State was seventy-one hundred and sixty-five acres, of which one-third went to locators. Prior to 1873, William P. Anderson purchased the interest in these lands held by R. M. Wheeler, a brother of the whole blood to Orlando; and of three of the half blood stock, viz., Robert J. Wheeler, Mrs. Moody and Mrs. Bacon. Subsequently he purchased the interest of the heirs of William Wheeler, another [397]*397half brother. All the appellants except Wardlow claim under Anderson. It was shown that a partition was made between Anderson, the heirs of the deceased William Wheeler, the appellees and the Sylvesters, who were the heirs of Catharine, one of the half sisters of Orlando Wheeler. In this partition one McCulloch represented Anderson and the heirs of William Wheeler, and one Dukes represented the other partitioners. Two-thirds of the Orlando Wheeler lands, except locative interests and some that had been previously disposed of, was assigned to the constituents of McCulloch, and was conveyed to them by Dukes; and one-third to the constituents of Dukes, which was conveyed to them by McCulloch. This was in 1873. In 1874, the appellees and the Sylvester heirs partitioned between themselves by deed. In this partition the appellees signed an instrument in which they transferred to the Sylvester heirs four hundred and twenty-six acres out of the tract in controversy, which had been assigned to the appellees in the previous partition. The Sylvester heirs conveyed to Mrs. Miller the interests set apart to them in the previous partition, except two hundred and fifty acres of the league and labor survey, the proceeds of which were divided, two-thirds to the appellees and one-third to the Sylvesters. Anderson claimed by purchase the interest of the heirs of William Wheeler, and sold the same to the appellants, except Wardlow, who claimed by purchase from the Sylvesters four hundred and twenty-six acres of the tract in dispute. The power of attorney from Mrs. Miller to Dukes to make partition and title was not signed by her husband, and was not acknowledged by her as required by sta'tute. She attempted to ratify his act by a subsequent instrument, but this, too, had the same defects in signing and acknowledgment. The transaction between Mrs. Miller and her husband on the one part and the Sylvesters on the other was signed by herself and husband, but not properly acknowledged.

Mrs. Miller and her husband took possession in 1876 of the lands set apart to her out of Wheeler’s headright and after-wards sold it. She also obtained the benefit of the purchase money of the land sold before partition.

The defendants pleaded not guilty; purchase without notice of Mrs. Miller’s claim and payment of purchase money; improvements in good faith, etc. The judge to whom the cause was submitted held in substance that under the Spanish law collaterals of the whole blood inherited to the exclusion of those [398]*398of the half blood; that Mrs. Miller signed the instruments of partition under the mistaken idea that the half blood collaterals inherited half as much as those of the whole blood; that she was not estopped from still claiming her full share of Orlando Wheeler’s estate, having committed no fraud in making the partition; and that the defendants; through recitals in the partition deeds and1 other instruments under which they claim, were 'charged with notice of her legal rights, and the extent of her interest as an heir of Orlando Wheelpr, aryl were not innor cent purchasers. Judgment's was rendered for Mrs. Miller for one third of the land sued for as heir of Orlando Wheeler, and two-ninths of one-third as heir of Oliver H. Wheeler less the actual interest of the Sylvesters in the tract directly in suit allowing defendants for improvements, etc. This case comes before us on appeal from this judgment.

By the civil law in force in Texas at the death of Orlando Wheeler, his brothers of the full blood, and Mrs. Miller, a daughter of a deceased brother, also of the full blood, were entitled to inherit his estate to the exclusion of brothers and sisters of the half blood.. (2 Demot Civ. Law, sec. 2929; Schmidt’s Law of Spain and Mexico, p. 265, sec. 5.)

The several grants to the heirs of Orlando Wheeler enured, of course, to the benefit of such persons as were heirs according to'the law in force at the time of his death, and not to those entitled to inherit under the laws of descent and distribution in force at the time the grants were made. (Goodrich v. O’Connor, 52 Texas, 375.) It wa's .made to appear from the evidence of Mrs. Miller and her husband that, at the time of making the partition, they were mistaken as to the interests of the former in the estate of Orlando Wheeler. They supposed that the collaterals of the half blood were entitled to inherit half as much as those of the whole blood, or they would not have consented to a division of the lands upon that basis.

In the view we take of the ease, it will not be necessary for us to determine whether this mistake was such as would be relieved against by a court of equity in a proper state of case; but we will consider whether, under the facts developed in this suit, the appellees were entitled to relief as against purchasers from the parties who had taken part with Mrs. Miller and her husband in the partition.

That a "parol partition of lands is valid in our State is now fully settled. It is upheld, not so much upon the ground of [399]*399estoppel as because there is nothing in our statutes of frauds that prohibits a conveyance by.-parof of an interest in real estate. Tenants in common hold an interest in the entire land to which their cotenancy extends, but neither owns any particular portion of it to the exclusion of his cotenants. To partition the land so as to give to each an exclusive ownership of a designated portion in severalty, is for each to surrender his interest in the partition allotted to the others. This release of interest is considered by our courts not to be a conveyance of lands within the meaning of the statutes of frauds. (Stewart v. Baker, 17 Texas, 420; Gibbons v. Bell, 45 Texas, 423; Shannon v. Taylor, 16 Texas, 413, Johnson v. Johnson, 65 Texas, 87.)

Such a partition is upheld under certain circumstances, where the rights of minors or married women are involved. In George v.

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Bluebook (online)
6 S.W. 292, 69 Tex. 395, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 839, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wardlow-v-miller-tex-1887.