Webb's Heirs v. Kirby Lumber Company

107 S.W. 531, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 543, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 489
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 16, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 107 S.W. 531 (Webb's Heirs v. Kirby Lumber Company) 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
Webb's Heirs v. Kirby Lumber Company, 107 S.W. 531, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 543, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 489 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

PLEASAHTS, Chief Justice.

This is an action of trespass to try title to a league of land in Angelina County granted by the State of Coahuila and Texas to William Webb, in 1835. The appellants, who were interveners in the court ■ below, claim the land as heirs of said William Webb. The Kirby Lumber Company disclaimed, and judgment was rendered in the court below in favor of appellee David L. Gallup and other defendants for the respective portions *545 .of the land in controversy claimed by them. This appeal is from the judgment in favor of defendants.

Appellees in the court below, in addition to a plea of not guilty, specially pleaded:

First. That interveners’ ancestors under whom they claim were aliens to the Bepublic of Mexico at the time descent was cast by the death of William Webb, and therefore no title was vested in them or passed through them to interveners.

Second. That appellees held title to the land under a deed executed by the administrator of the estate of said William Webb.

They also pleaded title under the three, five and ten years statutes of limitation.

After hearing the evidence the trial court instructed the jury to return a verdict in favor of defendants and upon the return of such verdict judgment was rendered in accordance therewith.

Upon the issue presented by appellees’ first special plea the agreed facts are as follows:

William Webb, the original grantee of the land in controversy, died in San Augustine County, Texas, in the year 1835, and left surviving him three sisters and the children of a deceased brother, to wit, Isom Webb, all of whom were at that time living beyond the borders of the State of Texas and Bepublic of Mexico, and, in fact, lived and were residents of the State of Tennessee, in the United States of America. The names of these Tennessee relatives of the said William Webb, deceased, were as follows: Elizabeth Tally, Hannah Tally and Martha Carlin, sisters of the said William Webb, who died in 1835, in Texas, and the following named nieces and nephews of said William Webb, children of said Isom Webb, a brother of said William Webb, deceased, to wit: Thomas Webb, Marena Webb, Micha D. Webb, Haney Webb and William Webb. That the persons named as interveners in the amended plea of intervention in the above cause are the descendants and heirs of the sisters and nieces and nephews who were the only blood relations of said William Webb, the original grantee of the land in controversy, who died in 1835, in San Augustine County, Texas; that aside from these sisters and said children of his brother, .Isom Webb, all of whom lived in and were residents of the State of Tennessee, in 1835, the said William Webb, the original grantee of the land in controversy, had no other relatives by affinity or consanguinity, and had no relatives who lived in Texas, so far as. the evidence shows, at the date .of the death of said William Webb.

Appellants’ first- assignment of error and the proposition thereunder are as follows:

“The court erred in holding that the interveners, although proved to be the only heirs or blood relations of William Webb, deceased, were precluded from taking title by descent, because they and those under whom they claim as heirs were aliens to the Bepublic of Mexico in 1835, at the date of the death of William Webb, because of the fact that they resided beyond the borders of said Bepublic in the State of Tennessee; and in thereupon adjudging interveners *546 to be without title because of said alienage, and in accordingly instructing a verdict against them.”

“The estate of William Webb did not eo instanti mortis escheat and vest in the Mexican government, but his alien heirs took a defeasible title subject to the right of the government to escheat it.”

Under the laws of the Eepublic of Mexico in force at the date of the death of William Webb, his heirs, who were aliens to said Eepublic, took no title to the lands theretofore granted him by the State of Coahuila and Texas. No title having passed to said heirs on the death of William Webb, none was transmitted through them to appellant. This is a well settled rule of property under the decisions both of the Supreme Court of this State and the Supreme Court of the United States.- The rule was first announced in the case of Holliman v. Peebles, 1 Texas, 673. The same question was brought before the court in the case of Yates v. lams, 10 Texas, 168. In the case last cited Chief Justice Hemphill, speaking for the court, says:

“But, whatever may have been the law of Spain or of the Indies, I am of opinion that, upon general principles pervading the law of 1833, under which this grant was made, and upon the general policy of the government in relation to the right of property in lands (granted for the purpose of colonization) at the time of the death of the intestate, an heir domiciliated out of the Eepublic of Mexico could acquire no right by inheritance to lands of persons dying in the province of Texas. That John lams, the deceased intestate, would have forfeited this land had be abandoned the country during his life, is not now open to question. Such has always been the received construction of this law, and in ■ repeated instances lands thus abandoned have been regranted; and such was the opinion of this court as to the legal effect of abandonment of lands granted under this law in the case of Holliman v. Peebles.

“If the permanent absence of lams from the country would operate of itself a forfeiture of the land, it is very clear that the domiciliation of the heir in a foreign country must have a like effect. Permanent absence in the claimant of lands was, in the law of the grant, repugnant to any property therein. It was in utter hostility to the policy of the government.”

The rule as announced in this decision is recognized and enforced in each of the following cases: Hornsby v. Bacon, 20 Texas, 556; Blythe v. Easterling, 20 Texas, 565; Warnell v. Finch, 15 Texas, 164; Hardy v. De Leon, 5 Texas, 242; McGahon v. Baylor, 32 Texas, 790; Ferguson v. Johnson, 11 Texas Civ. App., 413; Middleton v. McGrew, 23 Howard (U. S.), 45.

In none of these cases is there any intimation that the rule could only be enforced in proceedings by the government for forfeiture of the land, but the broad and unqualified holding is that such alien acquired no title. Such being the law, it matters not what the right of the State in the land might be, the person in possession would be entitled to hold it against the claim of the alien heir.

Appellants further contend that under the Act of 1840 the inhibition against the right of aliens to inherit lands in this State *547 was removed, and the title to the land in controversy became thereafter vested in their ancestors under whom they claim. This contention can not be sustained. The Act mentioned has been several times construed by our Supreme Court and held to have no retroactive effect and no application to cases in which descent was cast prior to the Independence of Texas, and the adoption of the Constitution of the Eepublic of Texas.

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Bluebook (online)
107 S.W. 531, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 543, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webbs-heirs-v-kirby-lumber-company-texapp-1908.