71 Tex. 597 | Tex. | 1888
This was a suit of trespass to try title by the appellants against the appellees. The plaintiffs below, Coker and wife, offered a patent issued to Coker as a preemptor of the one hundred and sixty acres of land in controversy, and rested. Defendants claimed under a deed from Coker and wife to one Anderson Knight, of date the thirteenth day of January, 1880; deed from Knight to R. Lee dated the thirteenth day of December, 1880, and a deed from Lee to defendant below, T. M. Roberts. Plaintiffs attacked their deed to Knight upon the grounds, first, that it was intended as a mortgage to secure seventy-five dollars Knight had agreed to pay the officers of court for Coker, for a fine and costs against the latter; and second, that the deed is void for want of description.
How, from the foregoing it is clear that if this controversy were between Coker and wife and Lee, the former would be entitled to recover the premises, because Lee purchased with notice that Knight was not in fact the owner of the land; there being no pretense that Coker’s wife was in any sense a party to the sale to Lee. Coker directed Knight to make'the deed to Lee, because he was advised that the legal title was in Knight, and such a course would dispense with deed from him and his wife, and save him the necessity of returning to Grayson county for his wife’s acknowledgment. It results that the sale of the homestead to Lee was by Coker alone, that the deed was made by Knight under Coker’s direction, and that the wife did not join in the sale at all. Lee having notice of all these facts, he could not be protected under the doctrine of estoppel
If the court’s finding that plaintiffs knew they had signed a deed be true, then Roberts should be protected in his purchase, as otherwise plaintiffs would be allowed to defraud him by executing an apparently valid deed, though false in fact.
The second objection to the deed of Coker and wife is that it is void for want of certainty in the description of the land. The description is as follows: "All that certain tract of land lying on Jones creek, and bounded as follows, viz.: on the west by Isaac Garner’s survey, and on the north by Jefferson
The ambiguity is patent and can not be aided by averment or proof. The rule is that a deed, to be valid, must describe the land by its terms, or give data from which the description may be found and made certain. There is nothing referred to in the deed that could help the description, and in such case parol evidence is not admissible to show what land was intended to be conveyed. The deed is void upon its face for want of certainty in description. (Norris v. Hunt and authorities there cited, 51 Texas, 612; Cleveland v. Sims, 69 Texas, 154; Bitner v. Land Co., 67 Texas, 342; Terrell v. Martin, 64 Texas, 125.)
It is true this deed was between private parties in which every presumption should be indulged that some interest should pass; but when a deed between individuals is utterly devoid of any matter of identity whatever, and devoid of any reference from which the specific law intended to be conveyed can be identified, it must be held to be void. The fact that Coker, after this deed was executed, and some time before his sale to-Lee, pointed out to Lee the lines and corner of his one hundred and sixty acres, and that he afterwards directed Knight to make deed to his land to Lee, which was done, can not be made-available to aid the description in the deed to Knight. That transaction must stand upon its own merits; it was a sale of the homestead by the husband alone under circumstances, that if the husband alone had the power to make the sale, would have estopped him from afterwards denying the right of Knight, to sell the particular land described in the deed; but it being the homestead he could not, by any act of sale or ratification, or by pointing out the land, supply the want of description in a deed to which his wife was a necessary party, and whose consent, in the required forms of the statute, is still, at the time-
There was no evidence but that of Coker and wife upon the subject of abandonment, and from that there can be but the one conclusion, that at the time of the deed of Knight to Lee, and, it seems, up to the time of trial, the property was the homestead. However, we only decide upon the facts and proposition before us, and hold that at' the time of the transaction resulting in Lee’s purchase, the property was a homestead, and that such transaction did not bind Coker’s wife. (Wheatley v. Griffin, 60 Texas, 209; Jacobs v. Hawkins, 63 Texas, 1.)
There was proof of valuable improvements made in good faith by defendant which the court would probably have allowed if his decision had been for the plaintiffs.
■ In this view we conclude it would be right to reverse and remand the case rather than to reverse and render. Roberts’s-title has failed because of the want of description in the deed to Knight, and he can not recover the land as the case is now. presented. We therefore report the case to be reversed and remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Opinion adopted October 30, 1888.
Stayton,
Chief Justice.