Massingill v. Moody
Massingill v. Moody
Opinion of the Court
Appellant instituted this suit against appellees as an ordinary suit of trespass to try title, and for damages, and *266 appellees answered by general denial, plea of not guilty, and special pleas of limitation of three, five, and ten years, and for value of improvements made in good faith, and special pleas of estoppel. Upon trial of the case it resolved itself into a suit to determine the true location of the original south boundary line of the Evans Myrack survey of land. The case was tried before a jury, and was submitted upon special issues, under appropriate instructions, and upon the answers of the jury in response to such special issues appellees moved the court that judgment be rendered in their behalf, which was accordingly done; hence this appeal.
It is perhaps well, at the outset, to say that the appellant is complaining that after he perfected his appeal to this court and filed the statement of facts that the court papers became missing from the office of the clerk of the lower court, and that said clerk made a partial transcript, which was duly filed in this court, and a motion made by appellant for certiorari to complete this record, which was by this court granted; and it is further stated that the clerk being unable to locate the papers that therefore the record in this court is not complete, and therefore it was not possible to properly brief the case. Suffice it to say, with respect to the matter complained of, that appellant has shown no diligence in perfecting his appeal, and in having a complete record before this court.
The first assignment of error is as follows:
"The court committed error in his charge to the jury in the third paragraph in charging the jury ‘that if N. W. Gann, at the time he sold the land to Evans Myrack, had the land surveyed, or pointed out the lines to the same by himself or through his agent, the plaintiff would be bound by same,’ because there was no evidence upon which to base said charge, and the court presumed a fact not proven to the injury of appellant.”
The proposition under this assignment is:
“It is the duty of the court to instruct the jury on the issues made by the pleading and the evidence only.”
The coudter proposition, in reply, is:
“N. W. Gann, being the owner of both the Massingill and Holloway surveys of land at the time of his conveyance to Evans Myrack, conveyed .to the extent of the boundaries pointed out and described in said conveyance; therefore the charge of the court, ‘That if N. W. Gann, at the time he sold the land to Evans. My rack, had the land surveyed, or pointed out the lines-to the same by himself or through his agent, the plaintiff would be bound by the same,’ was and! is a correct charge and instruction.” • ,
If the facts are as stated by appellee that Gann was the owner of both the Massingill and Holloway surveys of land at the time of his conveyance to Evans Myrack, and conveyed to the extent of the boundaries pointed out and described in said conveyance when he sold the land to Evans Myrack, that the land so surveyed or pointed out to be the same, either by himself or through his agent, that the plaintiff would be bound by same, and that, therefore, the charge was a correct instruction.
“The court committed error in giving defendant’s special charge to the jury as is shown by appellant’s bill of exception No. 9, which charge was in substance as follows: ‘Gentlemen of the jury, if you find that W. J. Massingill could not recover, if he was the plaintiff in this case, then 3'0u are instructed that the plaintiff, G. W. Massingill, cannot recover, and you will return a verdict for the defendants.”
The proposition under this assignment is:
“The foregoing charge was virtually a charge to return a verdict for defendants. If we take the second clause of the charge, it is a peremptory instruction, pure and simple, and, take the charge as a whole, it is virtually an instruction to return a verdict for defendants for the reason that W. J. Massingill was not asserting any claim to the land, and under the evidence could not maintain a suit because he had not title to the property, having parted with the title.”
Appellees’ counter proposition is:
“G. W. Massingill having succeeded to the estate which he assorts to claim in the land by inheritance from his deceased mother and by the gift from liis father, W J. Massingill, could not recover unless the said W. J. Massingill could have recovered had he proceeded by suit prior to the deed of partition; the property having been community, and appellant having succeeded thereto by inheritance and gift from his mother and father.”
' We are unable to s-ee any error in tbia charge of the court.
“The court committed error in admitting in evidence the map or plat of the Evans Myrack land over the objections of plaintiff.”
The proposition under this assignment is that a map or written instrument is not admissible, unless proven up by competent evidence. It is'contended, on the other hand, that' appellees having offered the partition deed between the heirs of Evans Myrack, deceased, containing a map of the partition, *267 and the same having been received without objection, appellant cannot now be heard to complain of such reception.
The bill of exception upon 'which appellant bases his third assignment of error was approved by the court with the following qualification:
“Approved with the qualification that the statement of facts on this question are referred to.”
With reference to the introduction of said partition deed, the statement of facts recites the following:
“The defendant next offered in evidence a deed from Paralee Bradford et al. to E. Moody, dated the 19th day of November, 1913, conveying block No. 4, and recorded in Book 30, page 241, of the Deed Records of Angelina County, Tex. Here said deed was read to the jury by defendants’ counsel, and is as follows, to wit. * * * ”
The map or plat of which appellant is complaining was not offered independently of the deed, but was offered as part of the deed, and with the deed, being incorporated in and being a part of the deed, and‘was offered in evidence and received without objection, and was a recorded instrument, and by agreement between opposing counsel was read from the records. We see no error in the action of the court in the admission of this plat. Therefore the assignment is overruled.
“I have seen this map before, I think; I am sure I have. This map correctly shows my land here; it is this block here (witness showing on the map).”
Appellant’s attorney then made the following objection to this testimony:
“We object to him stating that it correctly shows his land or any other land, as that is but the opinion of the witness, if the court please.
“Witness: Well, I have been all around this land, and this map looks correct to me; I will say that much. 1 saw this map downstairs in the county clerk’s office before I bought this land. I saw the map this morning when it was offered in evidence, and I saw it on record before I bought the land, and it looks correct to me. I see this road here as shown on this map, and X remember that Squire Dong showed me that road when we were out there looking at the land, and I remember this corner here right close to this road.”
In our opinion, the testimony was admissible.
“I can’t tell any difference much; they looked very old then, and still look the same way.”
In our judgment, there has been no injustice which could accrue from the action of the court in admitting this testimony.
The seventh assignment of error is to the effect that the court erred in rendering judgment in favor of the defendants for any part of the G. W. Massingill survey. Having given the matter such care as a close inspection of the record before us is susceptible, we are unable to see where or in what particular there was error in the action of the lower court. It is strenuously contended in the argument on the whole ease by the appellant that the record is such, quoting the language of appellant, “that the court can hardly decide it intelligently, and therefore should reverse the case in order that appellant should be enabled to have the honorable Court of Civil Appeals to intelligently decide it,” and for the reason that, “if appellees are allowed to profit by an incomplete record, unscrupulous appellees will take advantage and the clerks of the district and county courts will be unable to find the papers to make the records complete as in the case at bar,” and further using the language of appellant, “If we should undertake to substitute the missing' records in this case, we could not do so-for the reason that it is 'impossible to make an intelligent substitution of the court’s charge and of the special charge of the defendants, and in fact all of the missing records, excei>t the appellant’s original petition,, which was merely a petition in trespass to try title, and is sufficiently set out in plaintiff’s first supplemental petition.” “Therefore,” it is claimed by appellant, “the appellant should have an opportunity to get the *268 same intelligently before tbe honorable Court of Civil Appeals.”
It is so ordered.
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Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.