Wright v. Giles

129 S.W. 1163, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 550, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 581
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 30, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 129 S.W. 1163 (Wright v. Giles) 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
Wright v. Giles, 129 S.W. 1163, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 550, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 581 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

RAIHEY, Ci-iiee Justice.

This is an action of trespass to try title, brought by B. M. Giles against G. G. Wright, John Berry, Tom Berry, C. F. Gordon, H. E. and W. E. Henry, and the Henry Lumber Company, to recover the James Hamblin survey of land patented to Robert W. Caldwell, as assignee, situated in Wood County, Texas, alleged to contain 1,065 acres. All the defendants except John Berry filed disclaimers, and set up that their acts of possession were under and through the Little Sandy Hunting & Fishing Club. Said club made itself a partjr, alleging that it was a private corporation under a charter from the State of Missouri, and claiming all of said land except thirty-four acres claimed by John Berry, which it disclaimed, and plead not guilty. John Beyy claimed thirty-four acres of said land and disclaimed as to the balance.

The said club filed petition and bond for removal of the cause to the Hnited States Court, which was granted, but the Hnited States Court remanded same to the State Court, where the cause was tried by the district judge without a jury, and judgment rendered in favor of W. S. Giles upon his paying the sum of $200 into court for the benefit of the said club. From this judgment the Little Sandy Fishing & Hunting Club and John Berry only gave notice of appeal, but all the defendants filed an appeal bond.

The trial court filed its conclusions of facts as follows:

“Plaintiff, W. S. Giles, Addie Beckham, Lula Giles, R. L. Giles, B. P. Giles and J. D. Giles, are children of B. M. Giles—W. S. Giles by his first wife, who died prior to 1860; all the other plaintiffs are children by a second marriage of said B. M. Giles, which wife survived B. M. Giles, and died March 28, 1907, B. M. Giles having died January, 1881. J. C. Giles, a son by the first marriage and whole brother of W. S. Giles, is not a party to this suit.
“The land herein was patented to Robert W. Caldwell, as assignee of Jas. Hamblin, on May 31, 1855.
“The land in controversy was sold and deeded by the tax collector in Wood County, in 1861 or 1862, to B. M. Giles for delinquent taxes upon said land, which deed was recorded in the deed records in Wood County, Texas, prior to 1876. The deed records of Wood County were destroyed by fire December 11, 1878, and this deed was lost in 1867, *555 or thereabouts. In 1876 B. M. Giles and his son, W. S. Giles, had a tie contract for the T. & P. By. Co., and under the said tax deed entered upon said land, built tie camps and cut timber suitable to be made into ties for same. One O. J. Forceman, a tie-maker under B. M. and W. S. Giles, built a log house on the said land and lived in the same from about 1878 until about 1883. This was the most permanent of the structures built by the tie-makers. Forceman dug a well, cleared one or two acres of land, and cultivated the same for the years he occupied the house. At this improvement, as well as other cabins used by the tie-makers, were corrals for the teams that hauled the ties; this house was never occupied after Forceman and his family moved out.
“In 1881, a negro named Jones entered upon and took possession of 100 acres of this land, lying east of Little Sandy Creek, under a contract of purchase from Mrs. B. M. Giles; his title was never ripened into a perfect title. In 1883 John Berry, defendant, moved on this one hundred acres as J ones-’ tenant, and continued to occupy this land as his tenant until —■—, when he repudiated the tenancy, and Jones sued him in trespass to try title for the 100 acres of land, which suit resulted in a judgment in favor of Jones against Berry in the District Court of Wood County on the -, recovering the land, under which judgment a writ of possession was executed by the sheriff of Wood County, Texas, against said Berry.
“On April 13, 1878, B. M. Giles deeded all the James Hamblin survey here in controversy to W. S. Giles, said deed containing the following conditions: ‘That the above described land remain in pas-' session of the said B. M. Giles, and the proceeds of said land to be used by him for the defraying of all expenses of said land and support of himself and wife and children during their natural lifetime, and at their death said land to become the property of said W. S. Giles in fee simple/
“Said deed was delivered by B. M. Giles to W. S. Giles, and duly recorded on April 19, 1878, in the deed records of Wood County, Texas, and again recorded May 3, 1907. On December 36, 1888, Abigail Thompson deeded to H. Munzenheimer the land in controversy, and it passed from H. Munzenheimer through mesne conveyances down to defendants herein, the Little Sandy Hunting & Fishing Club and John Berry. The defendants claim the land through B. M. Giles as common source.
“At the April term, 1906, of District Court of Wood County, Texas, the State of Texas recovered judgment against G. Munzenheimer, A. H. Seinsheimer and unknown owners of the land in controversy—delinquent taxes for the years 1898 and 1899—under which judgment there was regularly issued an order of sale on May 17, 1907, and said land was sold on July 3, 1907, by the sheriff of Wood County, Texas, to G. G. Wright, and deed duly executed.
“.Neither plaintiffs nor defendants have held peaceable and adverse possession of the land in controversy and pajdng taxes on same for as much as five consecutive years, except as to the 100 acres lying east of Little Sandy Creek and particularly described in judgment of Jones v. Berry, hereinbefore referred to. Said Jones held same as the *556 agent of Mrs. B. M. Giles for more than ten years, peaceably and adversely, cultivating, using and enjoying the same.
“That J. C. Giles and Jeff Giles, acting with Mrs. B. M. Giles, on December 26, 1888, procured Abigail Thompson to execute the deed to H. Munzenheimer, and thereby deceived H. Munzenlieimer into the belief that she owned the land.
“Abigail Thompson was a feme sole sister of Mrs. B. M. Giles, and lived with B. M. Giles years before his death, and lived with Mrs. B. M. Giles until her, Abigail Thompson’s, death.
“Of the land in controversy, defendants herein have covered about three hundred and fifty acres with water and destroyed - timber. This occurred after the deed from the sheriff under the tax judgment on July 2, 1907.”

We adopt the trial court’s findings of fact, except as may be hereinafter indicated in this opinion.

The first assignment of error presented is: “The court erred by refusing the application of the defendant, Little Sandy Hunting & Fishing Club, for the removal of said cause to the United States Circuit Court for the Eastern District of Texas, and in assuming and exercising jurisdiction of said cause after said defendant had filed and presented its petition and bond for the removal of said cause in the manner prescribed by the statutes of the United States in such cases provided.” The cause was removed to the Federal Court on defendant’s petition, but a motion to remand to the State courts was granted by the Federal Court, and the trial judge did not err in taking jurisdiction of and trying the cause.

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Bluebook (online)
129 S.W. 1163, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 550, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-giles-texapp-1910.