204 S.W. 792 | Tex. App. | 1918
This is a suit in trespass to try title, as well as for damages, by A. C. Allen. Guy Allen, L. M. Allen, B.R. Allen, Rhoda E. Allen, Jessie L. Sprague, joined by her husband, F. W. Sprague, Susie G. Wright, joined by her husband, W. B. Wright, E. Grace Laffoon, joined by her husband, W. I. Laffoon, and Nellie P. Geiser, joined by her husband, Clarence Geiser, against Henry Edds, Mrs. J. J. Draper, J. J. Draper, and his guardian, J. C. Draper. A jury returned an instructed verdict, upon which decree was rendered against appellant and in favor of all the appellees for the land claimed by them. Brought to this court on writ of error, but for convenience parties are styled appellants and appellees.
Originally B.R. Allen filed two separate suits, one against Henry Edds for 232 1/4 acres of land, particularly described by metes and bounds, the other against Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Draper and J. C. Draper, the guardian of J. J. Draper, for 126 3/5 acres of land, also particularly described by metes and bounds. In both original suits the defendants answered by pleas of not guilty, limitation by one, three, five, and ten years, estoppel and improvements and payment; specially alleged the portion claimed, and disclaimed as to balance, and impleaded their warrantors.
The following facts were established: Appellants own the award of survey No. 162. Henry Edds owned the award of survey No. 208. Francis Smith was his warrantor. The Drapers owned the patent to survey No. 207. By virtue of land certificate No. 89, legally issued to Howard Wade, survey No. 162 was surveyed, the survey properly and promptly filed in the county and in the general land office in 1877, by reason of which steps the 640 acres of land contained in survey No. 162 ceased to be unappropriated public domain, but became lands appropriated to the public school fund. This was in 1877. In 1879 land certificate No. 1/519 was issued to B. S. F. and was located on surveys 207 and 208; both were, as required by law, surveyed, and the surveys promptly filed in the county and in the general land office. Thus in 1879 survey No. 207 became appropriated land of which the assignee of the certificate B. S. F. No. 1/579 was entitled to own; and the alternate survey No. 208 became appropriated to the public school fund. School survey No. 162 was awarded to appellant's grantor in 1908. School survey No. 208 was awarded to Leon Martinez in 1906, which award Henry Edds owns. Survey 207 was patented in 1906, and is owned by the Drapers. The court by its decree has determined that the two parcels of land herein sued for *793 are located in survey No. 162, the 126 3/5, acres being also within the boundaries described in survey No. 207, and the 232 1/4 acres being within the boundaries described in survey No. 208. The evidence is sufficient to support this finding by the court. This proof was offered by appellant to sustain his contention. The question of the exact location of the land and the question of whether or not there is a conflict in the location of the three surveys is therefore eliminated. The only assignment is that the peremptory instruction to find for appellees is error.
The only contentions raised by appellant's propositions requiring consideration are the following: First, that appellant had the superior right to the disputed lands because survey No. 162 was surveyed prior to surveys No. 207 and No. 208, upon which prior survey the Constitution forbade the location of another certificate. Second, that appellees' inferior right did not become the superior right by three years' adverse possession because the award to purchase school survey No. 208 was not color of title from the sovereignty of the soil, and because the patent to No. 207, a later survey, was not the color of title required by the statute of three years limitation.
The first contention herein made, namely, that appellant's prior survey gave him the superior right does not seem; to be denied by appellees, and it has been often so decided by our appellate courts. The fact that survey No. 162 was surveyed and the survey filed in the county and in the general land office made the lands surveyed appropriated lands, which could not be covered by another certificate thereafter. Mills v. Needham,
Because the location of the surveys No. 207 and No. 208, made after survey No. 162, covered a portion of survey No. 162, to the extent of the conflict, they were void because forbidden by article
The second contention made, namely, that appellees did not show a superior right in themselves to the conflicting land by adverse possession for three years under color of title, presents a more serious question.
Appellant has never received a patent to school survey No. 162, but has only an award coupled with proof of occupancy, payment of a part of the purchase money, interest, and taxes. This is such a right as can be destroyed by adverse possession, notwithstanding the fact that the legal title is in and will remain in the state until it executes and delivers the patent therefor. Paterson v. Rector,
It is admitted by appellees and the evidence shows that there was no adverse possession held by appellees sufficient to sustain the one, five, or ten years limitation. The issue is therefore reduced to the three-year statute of limitation. Appellee Henry Edds did not have a patent to school survey No. 208, but only an award, coupled with proof of occupancy, payment of a part of the purchase price, interest, and taxes. He had precisely the same evidence of right to school survey No. 208 as appellant had to school survey No. 162. It has been held, we believe uniformly and consistently, that an award is not color of title from the sovereignty of the soil, which the statute requires to give a superior right by the three years' adverse possession. Pohle v. Robertson,
Appellees, the said Drapers, claimed the 126 3/5 acres as a part of survey No. 207, but actually located on survey No. 162, under a regular patent from the state. This patent did not convey to him the paramount title to the part of the land in conflict with survey No. 162, because of the priority of the survey of No. 162; but the patent is color of title from the sovereignty of the soil and is sufficient to enable the Drapers, the appellees, by three years' adverse possession of the conflict land, to secure to themselves a right thereto superior to the right of appellant Allen, though of course the Drapers, by this three years' limitation, cannot affect the right of the state to forfeiture for nonpayment. Gullett v. O'Connor,
There are several decisions by Texas Courts of Appeals that might be construed to hold that a patent to land appropriated by a survey made prior to the survey for which the patent issued is void, because forbidden by the Constitution, and being void such patent is not the color of title from the *794
sovereignty required by the three-year statute of limitation. But these decisions do not seem to have been approved by the Texas Supreme Court, and seem to overlook the purpose of the statutes of repose. 2 C.J. 169, 170, § 41. Some of these cases are: Kieth v. Cuedry, 114 S.W. 92, reversed by the Supreme Court,
The assignment of error is sustained. Appellees Draper should recover on their plea of three years' limitation all of the 126 3/5 acres described in appellant's petition against them, and should also recover all costs incurred by them in this behalf. Appellant Allen should recover from Henry Edds all of the 232 1/4 acres alleged by appellant to be claimed by Edds and described in said petition, together with all costs of this suit except the costs incurred by appellees the Drapers, which are adjudged against appellant.
Upon the issue of improvements and rents pleaded by Edds and appellant, it is suggested by appellant that they be offset. An examination of the statement of facts fails to reveal that the 232 1/4 acres was increased in value by reason of the two lines of fence built by Edds, though it seems it would cost from $130 to $150 a mile to build new fences like them. If the improvement did not increase the value of the property, there can be no recovery for improvements. Herndon v. Reed,
Henry Edds impleaded his warrantor, Francis Smith, and alleged a payment of $2,500 cash on December 29, 1910, for 640 acres of land in survey No. 208, alleging that the deed contained a covenant of express warranty. Francis Smith admits the sale and warranty in his answer. The evidence contained in the synopsis of the deed introduced at the trial shows that Edds paid $5 an acre for the land bought from Francis Smith, and bought 640 acres. Edds cannot recover an amount in excess of that pleaded, even though a greater price was proven. 640 acres at $2,500 is $3.90 for each acre. $3.90 per acre for 232 1/4 acres is $905.75. We therefore adjudge that Henry Edds do recover from Francis Smith, the warrantor, the sum of $905.75, together with interest at the rate of 6 per cent. per annum from December 29, 1910, until November 21, 1916, date on which the decree was rendered herein, and shall recover interest at 6 per cent. per annum from November 21, 1916, on said amount of principal and interest due on said date. As to all other appellees not hereinabove disposed of the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Affirmed in part; reversed and rendered in part.