Wilkerson v. Davis

264 S.W. 545, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 647
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 11, 1924
DocketNo. 6759.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 264 S.W. 545 (Wilkerson v. Davis) 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
Wilkerson v. Davis, 264 S.W. 545, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 647 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

BAUGH, J.

W. W. Wilkerson died in Mi-lam county, Tex., in January, 1915, leaving a will in which he devised to his surviving wife, Susan H. Wilkerson, a life estate in his property, and upon her death provided that all of same should go to their eight children, share and share alike. W. A. Wilkerson, a son, was named in his will as joint executor with his mother. Susan H. Wilkerson died intestate in May, 1921. But before she died an effort was made to partition amicably and out of court the entire estate, a part of which consisted of. 563% acres of land in Milam county, involved in this suit. This land was of irregular shape extending from Elm creek, which was its western boundary, almost due east a distance of approximately 4,250 varas. Its width, north and south, varied from about 350 varas at its narrowest point to about 1,050 vaz-as at its widest part. W. A. Wilkerson, acting with the consent and approval of several of the other children, employed surveyors and sought to divide this tract as nearly as possible . into eight portions of equal value. Portion No. 1 was on the east end of the tract, and was surveyed and platted to contain 78 acres. Portions Nos. 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 ran consecutively westward in cross-sections north and south, and were each surveyed and platted to contain 65 acres. Portion No. 8, because of its lesser value per acre, was surveyed and platted to contain 95% acres. In doing so it was assumed that Elm creek, constituting its western boundary, ran in a straight line.

Each of these portions were numbered, its number placed in an envelope, and each of the heirs drew one from a hat. In the drawing Mrs. I. D. Bryant drew portion No. 4, and I. M. Wilkerson, her brother, drew No. 8. At her special request, these two exchanged numbers, giving her portion No. 8. This drawing occurred some time in 1919, while Mrs. Susan H. Wilkerson was still alive; but due to the dissatisfaction of J. A. Wilkerson, who drew portion No. 1, this partition was not consummated. Being unable to procure a partition by deed, Maud Davis, one of the daughters, joined by her husband, filed suit for partition in the district court off Milam county, in August, 1921, shortly after their mother died. Thereupon W. A. Wilkerson, who drew portion No. 7, in order to effect a partition by deed, exchanged his number with J. A. Wilkerson, who drew No. 1, and all parties on September 15, 1921, executed partition deeds to each other, and all went into possession of their respective tracts. The original partition suit still re-máined on the docket, and upon motion granted, Mrs. Geneva Lankford and Mrs. I. D. Bryant, daughters, joined by their husbands, were subsequently made plaintiffs instead of defendants; and in March, 1923, in1 a fifth amended petition, in addition to seeking a partition of the remaining property or sale of such as was incapable of partition, these plaintiffs alleged certain errors in the original surveys on which the partition of the 563.% acres was made, and mutual mistake as to the amount of lands included in three portions as follows: That W. A. Wilkerson, in fact, got 80 acres instead of 78 acres as was intended, said 2 acres excess beirig valued at $320; that Dave Wilkerson got 68 acres instead of 65, as was intended, said 3 acres excess being valued at $520; that Mrs. I. D. Bryant got only 90.62 acres instead of 95% acres as was intended, her shortage being valued at $880. Plaintiffs further alleged that had they known of such inequalities in acreage at the time they would not have executed the partition deeds, and asked for an equitable adjustment out of the remaining undivided portion of the estate so as to equalize the respective interests.

The defendants in addition to exceptions and denials pleaded acceptance and recording of the partition deeds; that plaintiffs had gone into possession of the lands and had ratified the deeds; that the portion of Mrs. Bryant was worth $1,000 more than any other tract; that Maud Davis had accepted her tract, sold it, and appropriated the money; that Geneva Lankford, the other plaintiff, had likewise sold hers and appro *547 priated the money; and that both were therefore estopped to claim a repartition of these lands. It is not necessary for our purpose to set out here the extensive allegations made by all parties to the suit.

The case was submitted to the court without the intervention of a jury, and the court rendered a judgment partitioning all of the remainder of the property belonging to the estate and awarding a judgment in favor of Ida Dorcas Bryant against all of the parties to the suit in excess of her one-eighth distributive share of said property, the sum of $750, less an amount of $65 owed by her to the estate, and also rendered a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs against David Wilkerson for $450, in addition to $95 owed by him to the estate and charged his interest in the estate with $545; and also .rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs against William Anse Wilkerson for the sum of $200, to be deducted from his distributive share of the estate, and appointed a receiver to take charge of the property; to which judgment the plaintiffs in error duly excepted and gave notice of appeal.

Plaintiffs in error bring this case before us for review upon five assignments of error, the first four of which relate to findings of fact by the trial court upon which judgment was rendered. The first assignment asserts error of the trial court in finding that—

“The defendant W. A. Wilkerson had received two acres of land more than it was intended he should receive, and that the value of said excess was $200.”

This assignment is sustained. W. A. Wilkerson received tract No. 1, on the east end of the larger 563%-acre tract. In making the survey of this tract the surveyor followed for distance and direction the field notes in the old deed made in 1887 to W. W. Wilkerson. It is not disputed that the actual field notes set out in the partition deéd from the other seven heirs to W. A. Wilkerson includes only 78 acres of land. The evidence tended to show, however, that the old Wilkerson fence line on the east side had been for many years set over 23 varas further east then the old field notes called for, which included about 2 acres of land within the Wilkerson fence not included within the field notes of the old Wilkerson deed, nor in the partition deed to W. A. Wilkerson. Hence, if the W. W. Wilkerson estate owned this 2 acres, it had title only by limitation; and not having divested themselves of any title to the 2 acres excess claimed by plaintiffs to belong to W. A. Wilkerson, and the said W. A. Wilkerson having acquired no title to it in the partition deeds from the other heirs, the title thereto, if ever in the estate, still remained there after the partition deeds were executed. If W. A. Wilkerson did not get this 2 acres, it is immaterial as to its value. We think the court’s finding on this question was not supported by the evidence, but was contrary to the undisputed evidence, and that such findings of fact and the judgment based thereon were, as to W.' A. Wilkerson, erroneous.

Plaintiffs in error’s second assignment asserts error of the trial court in finding, and rendering judgment accordingly, that the defendant David Wilkerson “had received 3 acres of land more than he was entitled to receive in said agreement, and that the value of such excess is $450.”

It appears from the undisputed testimony that tract No.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Highlands Insurance Co. v. Lumbermen's Mutual Casualty Co.
794 S.W.2d 600 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1990)
Campbell v. Jefferson
453 S.W.2d 336 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
264 S.W. 545, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkerson-v-davis-texapp-1924.