Adels v. Joseph
Adels v. Joseph
Opinion of the Court
Suit of trespass to try title, brought by Mrs. Rebecca Joseph against L. E. Adels to recover a tract of 1.37 acres of land, which the defendant Adels had entered upon and inclosed out of a tract of about 90 acres claimed by the plaintiff at that time. During the pendency of the suit plaintiff, Mrs. Rebecca Joseph, sold the 90-acre tract to F. W. Vaughn and L. H. Dunn, who in turn sold it to the Vaundun Company, a corporation, and before the trial Vaughn, Dunn, and the Vaundun Company intervened in the suit as partys plaintiff. The case was tried before a jury and-resulted in an instructed verdict in favor of the Vaundun Company, upon which a judgment was accordingly entered for it for the land in controversy. From this judgment the defendant, Adels, has appealed.
It appears that Rebecca Joseph bought the 90 acres, of which the 1.37 acres is a part, from S. S. Ashe by deed dated May 29, 1895, apd recorded in the deed records of Harris county June 11, 1895. On January 24, 1910, during the pendency of the suit, Rebecca Joseph, by deed of said date, sold and conveyed the land to F. W. Vaughn and L. H. Dunn, who in turn, on February 25, 1910, by deed of said date, sold and conveyed the same to Vaundun Company, a corporation.
*1155 On tile Issue of plaintiff’s prior possession, tlie evidence in the record shows: That in 1895 or 1896 J. M. Smith leased the 90 acres in question from Rebecca Joseph and used the same for a pasture for about two years. That he was succeeded by R. B. Hall, who, as Mrs. Joseph’s tenant, used the property about one year, and he was then succeeded by the said J. M. Smith', who, as Mrs. Joseph’s tenant, held possession of and used the land for five or six years, also using it as a pasture. He was succeeded by J. M. Damon, who, as Mrs. Joseph’s tenant, held possession of the land and used it for a pasture for several years, and until he yielded the possession of the same to T. 0. Dunn, and Dunn, also as Mrs. Joseph’s tenant, held possession of and used the land, through his subtenant, J. H. Davis, until the land was sold by Mrs. Joseph to Yaughan and Dunn during the pendency of the suit. That during the continuous use and possession of the land by the parties named as Mrs. Joseph’s tenants the land was inclosed by fences on three of its sides, and the fences were kept in reasonably good repair, and on the side not fenced was Bray’s bayou, which acted as a barrier on that side, and that the land was thus inclosed sufficiently to keep cattle in and out. About the middle of the year 1909 defendant Adels entered upon the 90-aere tract and fenced 1.37 acres in controversy. This fence was torn down and thrown in the bayou by T. 0. Dunn, who, at said time, was in possession of the land as Mrs. Joseph’s tenant, and was given notice by Dunn not to put it up again.
These facts were practically undisputed, and, in the' absence of evidence to show in’ defendant a superior right to the land, clearly warranted the court in instructing a verdict for plaintiff Vaundun Company on the issue of prior possession. Burroughs v. Farmer, 45 S. W. 846; House v. Reavis, 89 Tex. 630, 35 S. W. 1063; Duren v. Strong, 53 Tex. 381; Caplen v. Drew, 54 Tex. 495; Watkins v. Smith, 91 Tex. 591, 45 S. W. 560; Saxton v. Corbett, 122 S. W. 76.
It will be noted that the possession of Tom Harris and wife began about 42 years before the trial and continued about 18 dr 20 years and was then abandoned. There was no active assertion of ownership under their claim after the land was abandoned until the appellant erected a fence on the land, and this was not done until 1909, about 20 years after the property had been abandoned by Charity Harris. It has been held by this court, and we think it is sufficient answer to appellant’s claim, that the evidence of prior possession of Tom Harris and wife was sufficient to defeat the possession held and asserted by plaintiffs in this suit; that, where such a possession has been abandoned for a long time, it ceases to be sufficient evidence of a title against the subsequent possessor. Burroughs v. Farmer, 45 S. W. 847.
Charity (R. S. art. 1696), and upon her death vested in her heirs. As the title of Tom Harris, if he had any, passed upon his death to his wife, Tobe Hayes acquired none by reason of his relationship to Tom Harris, and therefore his deed to appellant did not connect the latter with such title.
What we have said in disposing of the first assignment necessarily disposes of the second assignment of error presented by appellant adversely to his contention.
There is no merit in the third assignment, and it is overruled without further comment.
The judgment of the court below is affirmed.
Affirmed.
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