West Lumber Co. v. Chessher

146 S.W. 976, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 363
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 19, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 146 S.W. 976 (West Lumber Co. v. Chessher) 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
West Lumber Co. v. Chessher, 146 S.W. 976, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 363 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

McMEANS, J.

The West Lumber Company, a corporation, sued the defendants John W. Chessher and G. H. Garrison & Co., a firm composed of G. H. Garrison and Lee Garrison, in trespass to try title to recover 490.86 acres of land, part of the H. K. Hardin survey in Trinity county, together with all the improvements on said land, including' a stationary sawmill, boilers, engines, pumps, planer, sheds, water tanks, storehouse, dwelling house, etc., which it alleged were erected on said land by defendants without plaintiff’s consent. Defendant Chessher answered, disclaiming as to all the land sued for except 5.55 acres thereof described by metes and bounds, for which he prayed judgment, and in the alternative he prayed that he be allowed to recover the value of the *978 improvements 'placed by him thereon, alleging the grounds upon which he sought such recovery as an improver in good faith. The defendants G. H. Garrison & Co. also disclaimed any interest in the land sued for except the 5.55 acres claimed by their code-fendant, Chessher, and pleaded a lease for five years by them from their said code-fendant and the erection in good faith of the sawmill and other improvements described in plaintiffs petition under the bona fide belief that their codefendant, Chessher, was the true owner of the 5.55 acres, and prayed that, in the event plaintiff recovered the land, they have judgment for the value of their said improvements. The case was tried before a jury. Under a peremptory instruction from the court, the jury returned a verdict for plaintiff for all the land sued for, including the 5.55 acres. The issue as to improvements made in good faith was submitted to the jury by a general charge, and upon this issue the jury found in favor of defendants Chessher and G. H. Garrison & Go., for the value of the improvements erected by them, respectively, on the 5.55 acres. No complaint is made of the judgment in favor of plaintiff for the 5.55 acres claimed' by defendant Chessher, and the judgment as to it will be affirmed. Prom the judgment awarding recovery in favor of defendants for the value of their respective improvements, the plaintiff, after its motion for a new trial had been overruled, has appealed.

We shall not discuss appellant’s various assignments of error in the order in which they are presented in its brief, but will first consider the thirteenth, which complains of the refusal of the court to give its special charge No. 4, which was a peremptory instruction for it as against all the defendants. Under this assignment appellant advances the proposition, in substance, that as the evidence shows that appellee John W. Chessher had not acquired either title or color of title .to the 5.55 acres of land, and that as ap-pellees G. H. Garrison & Co. claimed under a verbal lease from him, therefore defendants had neither title nor color of title to support their plea of valuable improvements made on the 5.55 acres of land, in good faith, and therefore the peremptory charge should have been given. Another proposition under this assignment is to the effect that, to entitle appellees to recover for improvements in good faith, Chessher must have held under an instrument in writing constituting title or color of title, such as a reasonable person, after the exercise of due diligence, would in good faith believe to be a valid title or valid color of title to the land, and further that when G. H. Garrison & Co. leased the land from Chessher and placed improvements thereon, then to entitle them to recover for their improvements they must have exercised reasonable diligence, inquiry, and examination to ascertain that Chessher had a reasonably valid title or color of title, in writing, to the land from the owner or from his agent, legally appointed in writing, to convey. The legal question pervading the propositions is, as we understand it, that no one making improvements upon the land of another, no matter that he acted in perfect good faith in the belief that'his title was good, can recover therefor as-against the owner, unless he holds under a written instrument constituting a valid title or valid color of title.

[1] Appellant presents no assignment questioning the good faith of either of the appellees in erecting improvements on the land in question, and, had it presented such an assignment, we would be constrained to hold that the - evidence warranted the conclusion; the jury must have reached that the appellees were improvers in good faith. Briefly stated, the evidence on this issue warrants-the following fact conclusions:

Chessher, in 1903, owned 40 acres of the H. K. Hardin survey in Trinity county, which constituted his homestead and upon which he with his family resided. At that time-William Carlisle & Co., a partnership composed of William Carlisle and George W-Pennell, owned the balance, or practically the balance, of the survey, as well as a great deal of other land situated in Trinity and adjoining counties. Both Carlisle and Pen-nell resided in Atchison, Kan.; but they kept an agent in Trinity county, by the-name of Sloan, who looked generally after their lands in Texas, and admittedly was authorized to purchase other lands-for them. In December, 1903, Chessher, knowing that Sloan was representing Car-lisle & Co., offered to purchase the 5.55 acres-in question from which practically all the-timber had been removed and which adjoined his 40-acre homestead tract. The consideration was $3 per acre, which was its-reasonable value at that time. Sloan agreed to sell at that price, but informed Chessher that he could not give him a deed until a-certain suit for the land against Carlisle & Co. had been determined, but urged him to-enter at once into the possession of the land, and place his improvements thereon, agreeing that the purchase price should be paid upon the execution and delivery of the deed, and that the deed would be made upon the-termination of the suit. Acting on this-agreement, Chessher went into possession, and made improvements to the value of the amount found in his favor by the verdict of the jury. The land was surveyed under-Sloan’s direction after the agreement was-made, and Sloan at all times knew that Chessher was in possession and was erecting improvements, and at no time did he raise objection thereto. Chessher at all times honestly believed that Sloan had authority to sell the land, and knew of at least two instances in which he had contracted for the *979 sale of Carlisle & Co.’s land, and that after-wards deeds had been made by the latter in conformity to the contract, and be believed that be would receive a deed as soon as the suit referred to bad been settled, and did not think otherwise until the agreement of Sloan was repudiated by the appellant, West Lumber Company, after it had purchased the lands of Carlisle & Co.

[2, 3] In January, 1010, appellees Garrison leased the 5.55 acres from Cbessber for the purpose of erecting a sawmill thereon, believing in good faith that it was a part of Chessher’s homestead of 40 acres, the title to which is unquestioned, and at once proceeded to erect, and did erect, improvements thereon of the value of the amount found by the verdict of the jury. Prior to this time, however, the West Lumber Company, appellant, had purchased all the lands of Carlisle & Co., including the 5.55 acres in question. While Garrison & Co. were erecting their sawmill and other improvements, J. M.

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Bluebook (online)
146 S.W. 976, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-lumber-co-v-chessher-texapp-1912.