Wichita Land & Cattle Co. v. Ward

21 S.W. 128, 1 Tex. Civ. App. 307, 1892 Tex. App. LEXIS 58
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 15, 1892
DocketNo. 23.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 21 S.W. 128 (Wichita Land & Cattle Co. v. Ward) 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
Wichita Land & Cattle Co. v. Ward, 21 S.W. 128, 1 Tex. Civ. App. 307, 1892 Tex. App. LEXIS 58 (Tex. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

HEAD, Associate Justice.

This case was tried before the court without a jury, and the facts are correctly set forth in the special findings filed in the court below, as follows:

The Board of Land Commissioners of Shelby County issued certificate No. 472 to H. Corzine as assignee of John Ransom, for one league and labor of land, dated May 19, 1838, and transferred on May 23, 1838, to F. M. Weatherred by said Corzine, by written transfer upon the back .thereof. This certificate was cancelled by the Commissioner of the Gen *309 eral Land Office on April 23, 1853. Certificate No. 2817-2918, for one league and labor of land, was issued to F. M. Weatherred as assignee of H. Corzine, in accordance with an act of the Legislature of Texas, approved February 7, 1853, granting to H. Corzine, his heirs or assigns, a league and labor of land; said special act of the Legislature providing that no certificate should issue if a certificate for a like quantity of land had been previously issued.

On July 3, 1854, certificate No. 3561-3662 (for unlocated balance of said certificate No. 2817-2918) for 17,553,925 square varas of land, was issued to Francis M. Weatherred, assignee of H. Corzine, said certificate being that by virtue of which the land in controversy was located. The land in controversy was patented to W. R D. Ward, assignee of H. Cor-zine, May 10, 1855.

H. Corzine was a married man, and died without issue in June, 1840-Ilis father was dead at the time of taking Elizabeth White’s deposition, August 8, 1888, but there is no proof as to the date of his father’s death. Ilis mother died in 1869. H. Corzine’s wife was dead August 8, 1888,. but the date of her death is not shown by the evidence. His only brother is S. S. Corzine, and his sisters were N. A. Lockhart, Elizabeth White,. S. J. Saulsbury. and Mary Green. Intervenor Elizabeth White was married to Thomas A. White in March, 1854, and he died in 1884. N. A. and L. G. Lockhart were married in 1846, since which time N. A. Lock-hart has been a married woman.

W. E. D. Ward, the patentee of the land in controversy, died in 1868. Virgil Ward, the father of plaintiff, was one of the children of W. E. D. .Ward, who had five children in all. Virgil Ward died September 21, 1864. Virgil Ward had one child, the plaintiff in this suit, who was born September 29, 1864.

Administration was opened on the estate of W. E. D. Ward in Harrison County, in 1868, and A. G. Ward and A. G. Turney were duly appointed administrators of his estate, and were duly qualified as such.

Upon the application of A. G. Ward, one of the administrators, the Probate Court of Harrison County, at its January Term, 1877, appointed commissioners to partition the lands belonging to W. E. D. Ward’s estate, who reported to the following March Term of said court that the land in controversy, together with other lands of said estate, was not susceptible of partition, and the court thereupon ordered a sale of the same. The land in controversy was sold by the administrator to T. C. Haggart, as guardian of the person and estate of plaintiff, and the sale reported to the court, and the court duly approved said sale at the May Term, 1877.

The said administrators executed and delivered the original deed to T. C. Haggart, as guardian of plaintiff’s estate, to the land in controversy, introduced in evidence, in pursuance of said order of court. A part of the purchase price for said land was paid in cash out of the estate of *310 plaintiff, and T. C. Haggart, describing himself as guardian of the person and estate of said minor, executed a note for the balance of the purchase money, payable to said administrators, who brought suit upon said note, and to foreclose the vendor’s lien, in the District Court of Archer County, in October, 1881, joining with said I-Iaggart the plaintiff herein as defendant therein. In that suit Haggart answered as guardian of plaintiff, December. 12, 1881. Plaintiff did not answer, and the judgment introduced in evidence was rendered April 17, 1882. This judgment was for $395.35, and foreclosed the vendor’s lien on all the land in controversy. Sale was made under the order of sale issued upon said judgment introduced in evidence, on the-day of June, 1882, to Perry Webster, for the sum of $427.42. At the date of the institution of said suit the plaintiff herein was a minor, and guardianship was pending on his estate in the Probate Court of Galveston County, and Fannie A. Haggart was the guardian of his person and estate, duly appointed by said court, and T. C. Haggart was not then, and was not at any time, the guardian of the person or estate of plaintiff. T. C. Haggart had been the husband of Fannie A. Haggart, but had been divorced before the institution of said suit.

The land in controversy at the date of sale was worth $6000. ■ Perry Webster and Anna Webster transferred the land in controversy to John H. Stone for $3109.50, with covenant of warranty of title only as to Perry Webster, by deed dated July 22, 1882.

John H. Stone transferred the land in controversy to the Wichita Land and Cattle Company by deed dated August 14, 1882.

Defendant Wichita Land and Cattle Company went into possession of the land in controversy in August, 1882, and has remained in possession, using and occupying the same, ever since.

The amount of the lien on the land in controversy paid off and discharged by Perry Webster at the date of his purchase at sheriff’s sale is $427.42, which, with interest to date, amounts to the sum of $658.14, and the value of the use and occupancy by the defendant Of the land in controversy since two years before the institution of suit is $658.14.

Defendant claims title to the land in controversy under administrators’ deed of A. G. Ward and A. G. Turney, and under sheriff’s deed introduced in evidence.

The intervenors, N. A. Lockhart and Elizabeth White, claim as heirs of Herschel Corzine. It will be seen from the conclusions of fact that the certificate was issued to F. M. Weatherred as assignee of Corzine, on the 23d of April, 1853, thereby placing the legal title thereto in him. The ¡latent to the land in controversy was issued to Ward, assignee of Corzine, on May 10, 1855, thereby placing the legal title to this particular tract of land in Ward on that date. Looking to the face of the papers alone, it is therefore plain that the claim of these intervenors was a stale *311 demand long before the filing of their plea of intervention. Wimberly v. Pabst, 55 Texas, 591; League v. Rogan, 59 Texas, 427; Montgomery v. Noyes, 73 Texas, 204. The intervenors, however, undertake to excuse this long delay in the assertion of their equitable claim, by showing that Mrs. Lockhart has been a feme covert since 1846, and that Mrs. White was a feme covert from March, 1854, to 1884, and that they were ignorant of this land being claimed by any one as the assignee of Cor-zine; also, that Archer County, where the land was situated, was a wild, uninhabited region, and that from 1874 to 1879 it was not attached to any county for judicial purposes, and there was no place where suit could be brought; and no actual possession adverse to intervenors’ was had until 1883.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 S.W. 128, 1 Tex. Civ. App. 307, 1892 Tex. App. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wichita-land-cattle-co-v-ward-texapp-1892.