231 S.W. 491 | Tex. App. | 1921
Mollie J. Brabson and others brought this suit against M. V. Brownfield to recover the E. 1/2 of survey 39, block A-1, certificate 1445, E. L. R. R. R. R. Co., in Terry county, Tex. The petition was in the regular form of trespass to try title, and in addition thereto contained what plaintiffs style a "special plea," which set out the chain of title from T. C. Reade, the patentee, down to J. M. Brabson; the plaintiffs being the surviving wife and heirs of the said Brabson. It was alleged that the deed from the patentee, Reade, to Geo. T. Keith, under whom the plaintiffs claim, had been lost or destroyed; but that the plaintiffs and those under whom they claim, had claimed and asserted ownership of said land for more than 35 years, paying taxes thereon, and that such claim was made with the acquiescence of the said Reade and his heirs, so that there should be a presumption of a conveyance from the said Reade to the said Keith. The defendant answered by plea of not guilty and plea of five years' limitation; also by cross-action he sought a recovery of the land under title acquired by the five-years limitation. The appeal is from a judgment for the plaintiffs entered on a verdict return in their favor under peremptory instructions from the trial judge.
The survey, containing 640 acres of land, was patented to T. C. Reade on February 7, 1881. Geo. T. Keith conveyed the E. 1/2 of the survey, the land in controversy, to E. S. Rogers, on November 3, 1883. E. S. Rogers paid the taxes on 320 acres of land out of the section for the year of 1891. The taxes for the years 1882 to 1896 on 320 acres of land out of the section were paid by J. S. Daugherty after delinquency. Rogers conveyed the land to J. M. Brabson by deed dated November 17, 1896. Brabson paid taxes on the land for the years 1897 to 1911, inclusive, except for the years 1904, 1907, and 1909. The taxes for some of the years were paid before delinquency and occasionally after the taxes for one or more years had become delinquent The plaintiffs introduced in evidence a quitclaim deed from one of the heirs of T. C. Reade, who had acquired the interest of the other heirs, whereby the grantor quitclaimed to the plaintiffs her interest in said land. This deed was executed April 20, 1915. All of the deeds referred to were properly recorded. J. M. Brabson died in 1912, and the plaintiff Mollie J. Brabson is his surviving wife and the other plaintiffs are his heirs. This suit was filed on the 18th day of October, 1916.
The defendant's plea of five years' limitation was based on a deed executed by N.M. Viser, dated November 3, 1903, and recorded In September, 1904. This deed was in the terms of a general warranty deed and the said Viser thereby conveyed to the defendant "all that certain tract or parcel of land lying and being situated in Terry county, Texas, the same being my 3/4 interest in section 39, block A-1, certificate No. 1445, E. L. R R. R. R. Co. survey." It appears that another person, with whom Viser had no privity of title, owned the northwest quarter of the section at this time. One W. M. Viser had acquired title to the southwest quarter of the section in the year 1887, but no privity of title is shown between the said W. M. Viser and N.M. Viser. The said Brownfield paid, or attempted to pay, taxes on 480 acres of land out of the section, from 1905 to 1915. During some of these years, however, the taxes were paid on a wrong description, and some of them were paid after delinquency. We will make a fuller statement of such matters when we come to discuss the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the plea of limitations.
The disposition of the appeal under the assignments presented requires a decision of the following questions: (1) Whether the evidence is sufficient to warrant a conclusive *493 presumption of the existence of a deed of conveyance from the patentee, Reade, to Geo. T. Keith. (2) If not, could the plaintiffs, having specially pleaded their title, rely on a conveyance from the heirs of T. C. Reade, which was not pleaded? (3) Is the conveyance from Viser to Brownfield such a deed as will support the plea of five years' limitation? (4) Does the evidence show such payment of taxes as will sustain the plea? We will dispose of these questions in the order stated.
(1) There was never any possession taken under claim of deed from Reade to Keith. The only tangible claim of title made by plaintiffs and those under whom they hold was in the registration of the deeds from Keith down to Brabson and payment of taxes by those holding under such deeds. These payments were not made regularly, and, so far as the evidence discloses, were not conclusively shown to have been paid for any five consecutive years; so that, even if possession had been taken under these deeds, the evidence would not conclusively sustain a plea of five years' limitation. Possession is not an indispensable prerequisite to the presumption of the existence of a deed, but it is essential that the claim of title be made in some tangible form calculated to bring notice to those who are adversely affected thereby, so as to create a presumption of acquiescence in such claim by the adverse parties. The circumstances of and consideration for the execution of the quitclaim deed by the heirs of Reade are not shown. So that such fact has little probative Force in establishing an acquiescence on the part of such heirs in the claim of Brabson. So far as the evidence shows, the heirs of Brabson may have paid a full consideration for the rights acquired under the quitclaim, and, if such were the fact, the execution of the quitclaim deed would not tend to show any acquiescence at all on the part of the heirs of Reade. The principles of law applicable to the matter of presumptions in favor of the existence of a conveyance have been well settled by the decisions of this state, and have been recently discussed by us at some length, and we refer to a few of these authorities in lieu of a further discussion of the question here. Taylor v. Watkins,
(2) "It is well settled that, except as to title by limitation, where the plaintiff elects to plead his title specially he is confined to the proof of the title so pleaded." Molino v. Benavides,
(3) As to the third question for decision, the appellee contends that the deed from Viser to Brownfield did not purport to convey the land itself, but only the grantor's interest therein, and will not support a plea of five years' limitation. We have not thought it necessary to determine whether or not the first part of the proposition is well taken (see Roseborough v. Cook,
"The words first used — `all my interest' — taken in connection with what follows, are evidently intended to define the quantity of her [the grantor's] interest, and not to limit the conveyance to such interest as she might hold in an undivided half of the lands. The grantor practically asserts that she holds an undivided one-half interest in the lands, and that she conveys that interest. It does not purport merely to release her interest in the land, whatever that interest may be."
We think this statement is properly applicable to the language of the deed under consideration. But the troublesome question *494
in considering the sufficiency of the deed to support the statute of limitations is whether the deed, on its face, is to be construed as conveying an undivided interest, or whether by the use of the words "my three-fourths interest" it invites the introduction of parol evidence as to the surrounding circumstances to ascertain whether an undivided three-fourths interest in the entire tract is intended to be conveyed or some particular three-fourths of the section. It is the law that a deed, to support this plea of limitation, must contain sufficient description as that it will appear from its terms, or reference to other instruments of record in the chain of title, that it conveys the very land in controversy so that its registration will put the adverse party on notice that the land is thus being claimed. Kilpatrick v. Sisneros,
(4) The defendant's deed was registered on September 7, 1904, and limitations would begin to run from such time (Harvey v. Cummings,
We are of the opinion, therefore, that the plaintiffs were not entitled to the peremptory instruction given in their favor; neither was the defendant entitled to a peremptory instruction on his plea of limitations, either as a defense or as supporting his cross-action. Even if the evidence was insufficient to make an issue in plaintiff's favor as to the existence of a deed from the patentee Reade to Geo. T. Keith, the justice of the case requires that we remand the cause rather than reverse and render judgment here.
The judgment of the trial court will accordingly be reversed and the cause remanded.