Paxton v. Meyer
Paxton v. Meyer
Opinion of the Court
This is an action of trespass to try title, brought by appellants against appellee. Both parties claim under one Freeland, who was the original grantee of the land in controversy. Appellants set up a judgment against Free-land’s administrator, enforcing an attachment lien on the land and a sale by the administrator, under an order of the district court sitting in probate, made in pursuance of that judgment.
It is also assigned as error that the court permitted one Silas to testify, over the objection of appellants, that one Hill said that the title under which they claimed was not worth- two and a half cents. It, is true that, under ordinary circumstances, what Hill said about the title was not proper evidence in the case. But the facts testified to by the witness were that, after he went into possession of the land, under one Jo. Weaver, administrator of the estate of G-. W. Weaver (under whom and under whose heirs appellants claim), he went to the former to get a title to the land, and that he referred him to Hill; that the witness went to Hill, and afterwards returned to Weaver and told him that Hill had said he would not give two and a half cents for his title, and that thereupon Weaver offered to give him a quit claim to the land for ten dollars, which he declined to accept. As throwing light upon the transactions between Weaver and Silas, and the nature of the latter’s occupancy, and the question of the repudiation by the latter of his tenancy under the former, we think the evidence admissible to go to the jury for what it was worth.
It is also assigned as error that the court below erred in ■charging in substance that, if the jury found that Silas had repudiated his holding under appellants and those under whom they claim, and that they had notice of such repudiation, and that afterwards he went into possession under appellee and held for him for three years before the bringing of the suit, they would find for defendant. In our opinion, the defense of limitations was
If Freeland had himself conveyed to appellants (or those under whom they claim) before the date of his conveyance to the appellee, it is well settled that the latter could not claim the benefit of the statute of limitations of three years. (Brownson v. Scanlan, 59 Texas, 222; Long v. Brenneman, Id., 210, and cases there cited.) The principle in the case supposed and that before us would seem to be the same. We think the court erred in giving the instruction complained of.
On account of the errors pointed out in this opinion, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Opinion delivered December 7, 1886.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- W. G. Paxton v. Able Meyer
- Cited By
- 19 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Lis Pendens—Attachment—Purchase—A purchaser o£ property covered by an attachment lien created by a suit in which he whs not a party, who bought before the levy of the attachment, is not defeated by a sale under á judgment foreclosing that lien. But a purchaser after the levy of an attachment is a purchaser pendente lite; and in case the attachment lien be foreclosed by a judgment against an administrator which is-certified to the county court for observance, a sale under an order based upon that judgment and granted upon an application to which he was not a party, will conclude his right. 2. Same—Judgment Against Administrator—Practice.—Under the law of this State execution does not issue upon a judgment against an administrator, but it is certified to the county court for observance. The issues concluded by the judgment cannot be reopened in the county court, its duties being those in relation to classification and payment. Those proceedings are to be regarded as administrative, and a continuation of the original suit in which the judgment was rendered, so that purchasers after the institution of that suit are unnecessary and improper parties. 3. Evidence.—Ordinarily the statement of a stranger concerning the validity of a title, made to a witness in a suit involving that title, is improper evidence; but it may be admissible upon a point other than the validity of title. See opinion. 4. Limitation—Limitation of three years is not available to a purchaser by and subsequent to the levy of an attachment upon the land. A subse- • quent sale under judgment of foreclosure, relating back to the levy of the attachment, divests the title acquired through the deed, and leaves the purchaser unconnected with the sovereignty of the soil.