Baldwin v. McCullough
Baldwin v. McCullough
Opinion of the Court
This is an action of trespass to try title brought by the appellee, J. W. McCullough, against the appellants to recover the east one-third of the J. H. Knapp survey situated in Fannin county. It is the second appeal in the same litigation, but the facts are in some respects different from what the record disclosed upon the first appeal. See White et al. v. McCullough, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 383, 120 S. W. 1093. The common source relied upon is the issuance of a headright certificate to J. H. Knapp in 1838.
After the usual form of an ordinary action of trespass to try title, the appellee pleaded his title specially in substance as follows: That the original certificate by virtue of which the land in controversy was located was acquired from the government of Texas by J. H. Knapp in 1838, who during the same year, by a verbal agreement, sold and delivered it to W. H. McCullough; that Wm. H. McCullough in 1840 verbally sold and delivered the certificate to John McCullough; that during the year 1840 Wm. H. McCullough died, leaving as his only heir his brother John McCullough; that, after acquiring the certificate, John McCullough caused it to be located on the land in' controversy, and a patent to be issued to J. H. Knapp July 7, 1855. The title of the appellee is then deraigned from John McCullough by setting out in detail the various transfers down to himself.
The appellants, defendants below, relied upon pleas of not guilty and the various statutes of limitation based upon adverse possession and improvements in good faith. Some of them also pleaded specially a title acquired through an heir of J. H. Knapp, the original owner of the certificate by virtue of which the land was located. After the institution of the suit, Sam D. Hawkins, a resident of Hunt county, intervened, alleging that his deceased wife was a daughter of J. H. Knapp, and claimed an interest in the land. The case was submitted to the jury on special issues. The issues of fact upon which Hawkins relied to support his claim were decided against him, and no complaint is here made upon his part.
With reference to the remaining issues, the jury found as follows: (1) That the Wm. Knapp under whom the appellants claimed title was not the son of J. H. Knapp; (2) that Wm. Knapp did not execute a deed conveying the property to Robert Hanna, through whom the appellants claim; (3) that J. H. Knapp never transferred the original certificate to one W. M. Cook; (4) that John McCullough, under whom the appellee claims, acquired title to the land certificate through W. H. McCullough, from J. H. Knapp, as alleged by the plaintiff in his' petition; (5) that this title was acquired by a verbal transfer and prior to October 17, 1845; (6) that none of the claimants of the land in controversy had held adverse possession a sufficient length of time prior to the filmo- of this suit to invest them with title by limitation. Upon these findings the court enured up a judgment in favor of J. W. McCullough, the appellee, for the land. It is urged that the court erred in so doing, because of the insufficiency of the evidence.
The testimony showed that the original certificate was issued to J. H. Knapp in 1838, and was located upon the one-third of a league of land, of which the land in controversy is a part, on January 10, 1844. The survey was made October 24, 1845, and the certificate of the surveyor appended to the field notes showed that it was made for J. 1-1. Knapp as the quantum of land to which he was entitled by virtue of the certificate. The field notes were returned and filed in the Land Office on May 23, 1853. In addition to the Land Office indorsements on the certificate, it bore the following: “McCullough As-snee. J. EL Knapp. No. 100,1/3 League. Dr. Roberts applied for these three numbers 100, 1/3 league; 2866, 640 acres; 291, 640 acres, to be surveyed so as to join B. Flaharty’s * * * on the mission * * * as may be. B Book 48, March 17, 1839.” J. J. Terrell, Commissioner of the Land Office, testified that he had examined the indorsements on the back of the original certificate, and that those *205 above quoted appear to baye been made in a different bandwriting from tbe Land Office indorsements, and at an earlier date. There was no other evidence as to when those in-dorsements were made, or by whom. The records of the Land Office also showed that a patent was issued to J. H. Knapp, his heirs and assigns, July 7, 1855, and that on the 10th day of the same month this patent was delivered to one P. de Cordova, by whom the patent fee was paid. This patent was after-wards delivered by the widow of John McCullough to one of her relatives for use in a partition suit in the year 1875. W. H. McCullough, to whom it is claimed Knapp transferred the certificate, died in 1840, about two years after its issuance. He left three brothers and three sisters as his only surviving heirs, among whom was the John McCullough before mentioned. J. H. Knapp died some time in 1855 or 1856; the exact date not being fixed. John McCullough died in 1870,. leaving a widow and nine children, under whom the appellee now claims.
The appellee also introduced in evidence a deed from John McCullough to W. M. Cook, in which a consideration of $3,000 paid by Cook, of the county of Calhoun, state of Texas, is recited, and in which John McCullough conveys to Cook an undivided two-thirds interest in the land located by virtue of the Knapp certificate. The deed, after describing the certificate, contains the following recital: “Which certificate was conveyed to Wm. H. McCullough, deceased, by the said J. H. Knapp.” Then follows a special warranty of the title against any person claiming under either the grantor or Wm. H. McCullough. On the same day Cook made a similar deed to John McCullough, in which, for a recited consideration of $1,500, he conveyed an undivided one-third interest in the same tract of land. After referring to the certificate, his deed' contains this recital: “Which certificate was located and conveyed to me by said J. H. Knapp.” Appellee’s evidence also showed that, after the deeds to each other executed by Cook and John McCullough, Cook conveyed the entire tract in trust to Samuel D. Roberts for the purpose of securing an indebtedness to R. H. Lane; that through some foreclosure proceedings Lane afterward obtained a fee-simple conveyance to all of the land. Lane and wife thereafter conveyed the entire survey to their two sons, R. H. and Jas. N. Lane, except a portion which, it seems, had previously been sold to another party. In 1876 a judgment was rendered in the district court of Fannin county, in which the Knapp survey was partitioned between R. H. and Jas. N. Lane and the widow and children of John McCullough. The west two-thirds was awarded to the Lanes, and the east one-third (the land involved in this suit) was awarded to the widow and children. Over the objection of the appellants, the appellee was permitted to introduce in evidence various deeds and powers of attorney relating exclusively to conveyances of portions of the west two-thirds, and the payment of taxes thereon by those claiming the same. He was also permitted to prove, over similar objections, that prior to and after the partition suit before mentioned there were actual settlements on portions of the Knapp survey not included in the part here in controversy. The only objection urged to this testimony is that it was irrelevant and immaterial, in that it did not tend to establish any transaction upon which the appellee relied to show title.
In one group of their assignments the appellants insist that the evidence was insufficient to authorize the judgment. Before passing upon the sufficiency of the evidence, it would be proper to first consider those assignments attacking the ruling of the court in admitting the testimony above referred to over the objections made.
We think the court erred in excluding it, and because of that error the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Addendum
I do not agree that the deeds conveying portions of the west two-thirds of the Knapp survey, made after the partition thereof, and the testimony showing that parties claiming under those deeds had possession of and paid taxes on portions of said west two-thirds were admissible as evidence of title in appellee to the east one-third of said survey. I think those deeds and that testimony were inadmissible, and should have been excluded by the trial court. I concur in all the other rulings made by this court.
Addendum
On Motion for Rehearing.
In reversing this case we did not discuss and specifically pass upon each one of the different assignments of error presented in appellant’s brief. We intended, however, to be understood as overruling all the assignments except those expressly sustained. The one which is referred to and insisted upon in this motion for a rehearing as grounds for rendering .the judgment in appellants’ favor involves a principle of law which we do not think is applicable to the facts of this case.
The motion is overruled.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- BALDWIN Et Al. v. McCULLOUGH
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