Bledsoe v. Haney
Bledsoe v. Haney
Opinion of the Court
Jasper N. Haney instituted this suit against W. E. Bledsoe to recover SO acres of land in Lubbock county, and from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff the defendant has appealed.
The principal defense urged by Bledsoe was an outstanding legal title evidenced by a deed from Chas. W. Lindley in favor of T. W. Campbell, dated and recorded in the records of deeds of Lubbock county in the year 1881, but the deed was not acknowledged in accordance with the requirements of the statutes then in force. The deed under which plaintiff claimed title was from Chas. W. Lindley, and was dated May 11, 1907. By an act of the Legislature passed in the year 1907 (see Acts 30th Leg. p. 308), and which became effective in August of the same year, it was provided that after a deed, defectively acknowledged, has been of record for a period of 10 years it shall be no *613 objection to the admission of the same as evidence, or a certified copy thereof, that the certificate of acknowledgment is not as required by the laws of the state, and that said instrument shall be given the same effect as if it were not defectively acknowledged, provided no claim adverse or inconsistent to the one evidenced by such instrument shall have been asserted during those 10 years.
On a former appeal of this case, the Court of Civil Appeals for the Third district held that the deed from Lindley to Campbell was admissible in evidence; that deed having been excluded by the trial court upon the first trial. See Bledsoe v. Haney, 122 S. W. 455. On the trial from which this appeal has been perfected, the deed was admitted in evidence, but the trial court held that as the deed was defectively acknowledged the record thereof was not notice to the plaintiff at the time he purchased the land, and that as the act became a law after the date of his deed it could not have a retroactive effect against him.
As noted already, it was shown'that, before Chas. W. Lindley executed the deed to plaintiff, he had already conveyed the land to T. W. Campbell; and, as plaintiff’s deed was executed more than 10 years after the record of the deed to Campbell, clearly a certified copy of the latter deed was admissible in evidence under the terms of the act referred to.
.Accordingly the judgment of the trial court is reversed, and judgment is here rendered in favor of appellant.- •
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