Young v. Gharis

170 S.W. 796, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 974
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 31, 1914
DocketNo. 7194.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 170 S.W. 796 (Young v. Gharis) 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
Young v. Gharis, 170 S.W. 796, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 974 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

This is an action of trespass to try title, in the ordinary form, brought by the appellant, James Young, against H. L. Gharis and wife, Quentin D. Corley, J. B. Godwin, G. M. Cole, and Mrs. M. M. Long, to recover a tract of land described in the petition as follows:

Being a part of the W. C. Grigsby survey in Dallas county, beginning at a point in the intersection of the northeast line of Grigsby avenue with Tenth street, which point is 1,285 feet south 45° east and 25 feet north 45° east from the south corner of Forest Park, as per map thereof of record in the records of Dallas county, Texas; thence north 45° east 300 feet to a point for corner; thence north 45° west 600 feet to a point for corner; thence south 45° west 300 feet to a point for corner; thence south 45° east 600 feet to the place of beginning.

The defendant J. B. Godwin answered by pleas of not guilty, the statutes of limitation of three, five, and ten years, and also pleaded improvements made in good faith. The defendants Gharis, Corley and Cole answered by pleas of not guilty, the statutes of limitation of three, five, and ten years, and charged, in effect, that the land- sued for by the plaintiff, Young, was included in a larger tract owned by them, described by metes and bounds, and as a part of Milos Bennett and Crawford Grigsby surveys situated about 4 miles northwest from the city of Dallas, in Dallas county. These defendants also in-terplead, as warrantors of their title to the land in controversy, W. A. Scott and wife and S. R. Owen and C. C. Weichsel. Of these last-named parties, C. C. Weichsel answered by pleas of not guilty, statutes of limitation of five and ten years, and specially adopted the defenses set out in the pleading of those claiming under his covenants of warranty, and made their pleading “and everything therein contained” his own. The defendants Scott and wife and S. R. Owen made default; and, the death of the defendant Mrs. M. M. Long being suggested, the suit was dismissed as to her. A trial of the case resulted in a judgment in favor of the defendants, and the plaintiff appealed.

Appellant’s first assignment of error complains of the court’s action in refusing to admit in evidence, as a link in the chain of his asserted title to the land in controversy, a deed from the Dallas Guaranty & Investment Company to the Manufacturers’ Record Company, of date October 8, 1891, filed for record in the office of the county clerk of Dallas county, Tex., October 9, 1891, and duly recorded in the deed records of said county. The deed excluded described the land therein conveyed as follows:

Being 4.13 acres of land out of the W. C. Grigsby 320-acre survey, situated about two (2) miles N. 40° W. from the courthouse in the city of Dallas, Dallas county, Texas, and being block No. thirty-five (35) of Dallas Guaranty & Investment Company’s Manufacturing Flat of North Dallas, and meted and bounded as follows : Beginning at the south corner of said block and being intersection of the northeast line of Grigsby avenue with the northwest line of Tenth street, which stand 1,285 feet S. 45° E. and 25 feet N. 45° E. from the south corner of Forest Park; thence N. 45° E. 300 feet; thence *798 N. 45° W. 600 feet; thence S. 45° W. 300 feet; thence S. 45° E., and parallel with southwest line of Grigsby survey, and 25 feet from said line, 600 feet to the beginning', containing 4.13 acres of land out of said W. O. Grigsby survey.”

And the objections to its introduction in evidence were: (1) That there is no such survey as the W. O. Grigsby survey in Dallas county, and hence a variance in the allegations of the petition with respect to the description of the land sued for and the description of the land conveyed by the deed; (2) that the description of the land by metes and bounds in the deed offered is wholly unintelligible to put anybody on notice; (3) that the land in said deed described is impossible of location; and (4) that counsel making the objections to the introduction of the deed had been advised by his associate counsel, who had examined the deed records of Dallas county, that there was no such street shown in any record as Grigsby avenue, nor as Tenth street, except in Oak Cliff, and that there is no map of record in Dallas county of Dallas Guaranty & Investment Company’s Manufacturing Plat of North Dallas, and therefore the description of the land in the proffered deed is insufficient to put any one on notice who afterward bought the same land from the Dallas Guaranty & Investment Company by deed which covered and described a larger tract of land embracing the property involved in this suit.

The bill of exceptions, reserved to the court’s ruling excluding the deed, also shows that, upon the foregoing objections being made, the trial judge said to counsel for appellant, in substance, that the deed in question was deficient in description, and that as a prerequisite to its admissibility and introduction he must show by extraneous evidence that there was such a survey in Dallas county as the W. O. Grigsby survey, that there was such a plat as the Dallas Guaranty & Investment Company’s Plat of North llallas of record in Dallas county, and that there were such streets as Grigsby avenue and Tenth street delineated upon such map. In compliance with this suggestion of the court appellant’s counsel introduced E. E. Luesley, who testified as follows:

That by occupation he was an abstractor of land titles, and had been engaged in that line of business for more than 25 years in Dallas county ; that he is now engaged with the Title Guaranty Company, and before that time he was with S. W. S. Duncan, abstractor, first, and afterward with Stewart Title Guaranty Company; that he commenced his employment with Duncan’s land title office about November 25, 1880, and from that time and during the time he was with Duncan’s office he was manager and owner of a part interest in the abstract business, and practically ran the plant 'and managed the office.

Whereupon plaintiff’s counsel offered in evidence a deed from Dallas Guaranty & Investment Company to the city of Dallas, dated August 7,1889, recorded in Book 116, page 40, Deed Records of Dallas County, Texas, conveying 250 acres of land out of the Miles Bennett survey in Dallas county, Tex., and in connection therewith offered the testimony of E. E. Luesley, who was still on the stand, stating that they expected to prove by the witness that the witness had been a long time a resident of Dallas, and that the land embraced in the deed from Dallas Guaranty & Investment Company to the city of Dallas was generally known in the community, from and after the date of said deed to the city of Dallas, as the Forest Park tract in the Miles Bennett survey, and that said deed from Dallas Guaranty & Investment Company, together with the offered testimony of the witness Luesley, were offered for the purpose of aiding the description in the deed from Dallas Guaranty & Investment Company to the Manufacturers’ Record Company, which plaintiff had previously tendered in evidence, and to show that the tract of land described in the deed to the Manufacturers’ Record Company lies 1,285 feet S. 45° E. and 25 feet N. 45° E. from the south corner of Forest Park.

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Bluebook (online)
170 S.W. 796, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-gharis-texapp-1914.