40 S.W.2d 977 | Tex. App. | 1931
It is concluded that the appellants' first proposition relating to the refusal to peremptorily instruct a verdict should be overruled because the acts and circumstances in evidence are fairly sufficient to carry to the jury the issue of whether or not the appellee's possession became adverse to the appellants as cotenants. The appellee, who was a stranger to the title in the first instance, purchased the entire tract from the mother of the appellants, in the information and upon the belief that the mother owned the full title, and took immediate possession and visibly used and exclusively claimed as his own all the land from December, 1915, to the date of the trial in 1929. He also paid all the taxes on the land. The appellee's open and visible use and claim of ownership of all the land was apparently of a notoriety in the community such as would, as the jury might find, have enabled appellants, by diligence on their part, to have learned of the adverse claim and its active assertion. Where the grantee is, as here, a stranger to the title and enters into visible possession of all the property, although not recording his deed, and claims title thereto, acts of ownership and use may, according to the facts of the particular case, present a question for the jury's consideration of disseisin of the other cotenants wherever the acts of ownership and possession go to show inconsistency with the joint title. The general rule is stated in Long v. McCoy (Tex.Civ.App.)
The second proposition is based upon a refusal to give special charges. It is thought the court did not err in refusing the charges. Acts which affirmatively show adverse possession, and are not otherwise so explained as to show a consistency with the joint title, will have the same effect as against cotenants as in other cases. And adverse possession was sufficiently explained in the main instruction of the court.
The third proposition is based upon the refusal to sustain the claim of Jewel Coleman that he was under 21 years old and that the bar of limitation was not complete against him. Jewel Coleman, a defendant in the suit, and claiming an interest in the land and a partition, pleaded, as against limitation, that he was a minor. His brothers and sisters were not examined as to his age, although they were witnesses testifying in the case. He, and no other witness, testified in support of his plea, as to his age, that he was "thirty-one years old on April 19, 1930." Minority and proof thereof legally constitute a complete ground of defense. That ground of defense was not submitted nor requested to be submitted to the jury. Under Ormsby v. Ratcliffe,
There are some exceptions, as may be seen in the particular facts of cases, as to the parties in the suit to whom this general rule is made applicable. The mere fact alone of being a party is not always sufficient. But in this case the party was well within the general rule because of the fact that he was a party to the suit having an actual legal existing pecuniary interest in the issue and the litigation. 1 Greenleaf on Evid. p. 882, § 386; 4 Jones on Evid. § 726.
The judgment is affirmed.