Masterson v. Pullen
Masterson v. Pullen
Opinion of the Court
L. M. Pullen sued Reba B. Masterson, E. R. Guenther, Adolph Wagner, and his wife, Amanda Wagner, to remove cloud from the title to 360 acres of land in Edwards county, described by metes and bounds, pleading specially title by limitation under the three and ten years’ statutes. The record contains no answer by Reba B. Masterson. The other defendants answered by plea of not guilty.
Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff.
Landa v. Heermann, 85 Tex. 1, 19 S. W. 885.
In the second assignment it is contended that the evidence does not sustain a finding that plaintiff’s possession was adverse for a period of 10 years. Plaintiff inclosed the land about 25 or 27 years before the date of the trial, and made application to purchase the same as vacant land; but the exact date thereof is not shown. He testified his papers were returned and he was notified that the land he was claiming conflicted with some other surveys, but he knew it did not. He also testified that some one notified him he had $14 “in the land office,” and asked him if he wanted him to collect it, and he *539 paid, no attention to the notice, his idea being that he expected to get the land “at some time or other”; that he was not trying to beat anybody out of it; that he left the money there for the purpose of paying the state for the title. He did not 'testify when this occurred, and when it was that he was not trying to beat anybody out of the land. In 1903 he received a letter from Hogan & Me-. Inerney, attorneys at Austin, stating that there was no vacancy, as the surveys of block J call to tie to the Southern Pacific surveys, and that the land office had so ruled on the 1900 files that were sought to be located on the supposed vacancy. He testified that from the time he received this letter he knew the owners of the surveys in block J owned the land in controversy; that from that time forward he had not claimed it was vacant; that he had claimed said land against the whole world during the 'entire time he had it fenced. He testified further that the last time he tried to get the commissioner to recognize a vacancy there was in 1903, and that “they claimed it was covered by 15”; that he had not frequently stated within the last few years that he believed it was vacant land; that he knew better than that; that he had known since 1903 that it was not state land, and had not claimed it since then as state land; that he had been claiming it adversely to Mr. Mas-terson ever since then. The evidence warrants a finding that plaintiff improved his fence on the land materially about 6 or 7 ¡years before the trial. His testimony was sought to be weakened by asking him whether he had not made statements to certain persons, tending to show that he still believed within a few years prior to the trial that there was a vacancy. He first denied making any such statements,' but finally said he had no recollection of having conversations such as were inquired about. Luther Roberts testified that about 3 years before the trial plaintiff told him he had no deed to the land, but had been trying to get a deed for a good while; that his money was at the land office, and he expected to get a deed; that plaintiff did not tell him until the spring of 1917 that he- was claiming the land; that he then said he was expecting to get a deed from the state or he was going to sue Masterson for a deed. Quincey Oraig testified that he had talked to plaintiff concerning this land, and while most of his testimony appears to relate to what plaintiff thought and claimed at the time he had a survey made on the theory that it was vacant land or school land, which must have been prior to 1903, he also said:
“I do not remember when was the last time he thought it was vacant land — I think within the last four or five years. I could not say whether or not it was within the last two or three years; it has been something like five years.”
While plaintiff testified he paid taxes on the land in controversy, the tax collector testified that from 1913 to date of trial the tax rolls showed no payment of taxes by plaintiff on said land. He testified his examination did not extend further back. It appears that the assessor’s record was offered in evidence, and that a copy was intended to be attached to the statement of facts; but it was not attached.
The court recited in his judgment, and the recital is sustained by the evidence, that the land in controversy is a part of survey No. 15, block J, which survey was shown to have been patented to Branch T. Masterson on October 23, 1882.
The judgment is affirmed.
tífc^>For other eases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes
<§=»For o&er cases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MASTERSON Et Al. v. PULLEN
- Cited By
- 10 cases
- Status
- Published