W.T. Carter Bro. v. Holmes

85 S.W.2d 993, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 1301
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 3, 1935
DocketNo. 2784.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 85 S.W.2d 993 (W.T. Carter Bro. v. Holmes) 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
W.T. Carter Bro. v. Holmes, 85 S.W.2d 993, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 1301 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

WALKER, Chief Justice.

This was a suit in trespass to try title by appellee, C. C. Holmes, filed on the 22d day of February, 1934, against appellant, W. T. Carter & Bro., in the district court of Tyler county, to recover the title and possession of 100 acres of the Francis Kriner survey, with judgment in favor of appellee, based upon the affirmative answer of the jury to the following question, the only question submitted by the court’s charge: “Did the plaintiff, C. C. Holmes, have peaceable and adverse possession of any portion of the tract of land in controversy, cultivating, using or enjoying the same for ten years or more prior to the institution of this suit on the 17th day of January 1934?”

Appellant contends that the verdict of the jury was without support in the evidence. C. C. Holmes testified as follows, questions and answers reduced to narrative:

“I am the plaintiff in this case here. The 100 acres of land for which I am suing is located near the southwest corner of Tyler County on the Francis Kriner Survey. I know where it is located with reference to lines and corners. I have one acre and a quarter of that land in my possession; I have had it in my possession ever since 1922. I have a field there; I opened up and fenced that field in 1922. I built a rail fence around it. I have farmed it each and every year since then; raised different crops on it, up to and including 1934. I claim 100 acres there. I have been to all the lines and corners.
“I am forty-one years old; I was born in Tyler County on the Francis Kriner Survey. As far as I remember there are 640 acres in the Francis Kriner Survey. My father was J. M. Holmes. My father is living; he lives on this tract of land, on the Kriner Survey. It is between three and four hundred yards from his house to the line of this 100 acres of the Kriner Survey; he lives north of it. He has been living there about twenty-five years. I am living with him. I have been living there at that place ever since 1922; I have been living there with my father. Before that time I lived at Saratoga. My grandfather was W. F. Holmes; he lived on this 100 acres I’m talking about. I don’t know how long he lived there; if I was going to say how long it would be somewhere around thirty-five or forty years; maybe fifty. I was born on this survey back south of the 100 acres. As far back as I can remember this 100 acres was known as the old W. F. Holmes place. My grandfather was then living on it. His wife was Lettie Holmes. The home place, the old Holmes house was located near the southeast corner of the 100 acres. The little field I am talking about is located near the northwest corner of the 100 acres. There was at one time an old house at that place; my father lived in that house; he moved there in 1905 and lived there until in 1909. He had some land fenced and in cultivation at that time; I don’t know how much. My grandfather’s old house was about four or five hundred yards from this little field of mine. So far as I can *994 recollect my grandfather, W. F. Holmes, and my grandmother lived at this old place; I don’t know how much land they had in cultivation around there, there is quite a field though; the house is still standing. There is somebody living in it. A couple of my aunts are living in it. Their names are Clemmie and Eliza Holmes. I fenced this little field of mine in 1922 in the fall, I can’t remember what date it was; somewheres nearer September or October, something like that. When I went there to fence there it once had been an old field around there and it had growed up in saplings and I went there and cut them down; that was the old farm my father cultivated from 1905 to 1909. After he left there in 1909 nobody lived there in that house; it was moved. That land was cultivated'after 1909., My brothers cultivated it and I helped; I worked in it some myself; there was some of it worked up until 1921; it was cultivated each and every year from the time my father lived there in 1909 up until 1921; we were just tending it, no certain parties that we were tending it for; we were just tending it and making what we could off it. I was living with my father then. I am married. I have been married since 1921. Up to that time I did not live with my father all the time, I was off at work part of the time. My brothers Jesse and Alvie worked that place with me; they are younger than I am. When we worked that place we were living with our father; he was living north of the 100 acres then; he was up there where he is living at this time. I continued to live with him until I went to public works; I don’t remember the date when I went off. Jesse and Alvin continued to live with him until 1921. When I was working that place in 1909 I was working it for my father. My brothers continued to work it until 1921; it was thrown out then. It stayed out in 1921 and 1922; I went there in the fall of 1922 and cleared out this little patch. I don’t know how large that old field place was; it was twelve or fifteen acres I guess; where I opened my little patch was not exactly in the middle of the old field; it is all grown up around this little field. The trees that surround it, the place where the old field was, I suppose the biggest ones are ten or twelve inches through. When I fenced this patch I was living there with my father, where he is now, north of this 100 acres. I first made a crop there in 1923.
“ * * * In addition to this little patch I had other land I cultivated; through the winter during that time from 1922 to 1930 I worked at public works; it is not a fact that after I gathered my corn crop —say along about September — that cattle in the community just went in and out, the fences fell down and the cattle would run in there; they didn’t all the time; sometimes they broke in; I would go and fix up the fence and put them out.
“ * * * I have been living where my father is living from 1922 up until the time I filed suit. Once in a while I took my wife over there to that little patch and she would help me; maybe I would take one of the boys who happened to be around; maybe they would help me. Neither of my brothers helped me to clear it. That patch is somewhere between four and five hundred yards from where my two aunts live; they were raised there, out close to there.
"* * * From this little patch to the nearest public road is somewhere around three hundred yards I would say; it is the road known as the Village Mills-Livingston road; there is a road leading from that public road to my little field; it is a car and wagon road; it is more than a trail, there has been several cars in there; it aint no graded road but then it is a good, smooth road. I don’t know how close you have to get up to this little field before you can tell it is there, I never stepped it off, but at the present time you have to get tolerable close because them saplings have growed up all around. I know my father was one of the Holmes heirs who sold that land to Mr. Carter, W. T. Carter. It is not a fact that me and my brothers have at all times worked that, knowing that it either belonged to our father or that we were working it under him; in 1909 we were living there with him and he had us working it, we were working under him at that time; we didn’t pay him any rent; we worked it for the use of the whole family at that time; I did that up until 1922; I began working it for myself in 1922; in 1923 I made a crop on it. It laid out in 1921 and 1922. I told my father that I was going down there and claim the land that he had sold to Mr.

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Related

W. T. Carter & Brother v. Holmes
113 S.W.2d 1225 (Texas Supreme Court, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 S.W.2d 993, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 1301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wt-carter-bro-v-holmes-texapp-1935.