65 Tex. 413 | Tex. | 1886
The petition, in connection with the papers which were referred to and made part of it, gave a sufficient description of the land sued for, and the court did not err in overruling demurrers which raised this question. The deed from David Brown, the original grantee of the land, which conveyed all of the grant unsold at the time he executed it, was admissible, as were the deeds executed by him before the execution of that deed, and, together, showed what passed by it.
The deeds through which appellee claims, show title in her to all of the headright league granted to David Brown, not sold by him prior
The appellee was not asserting rights through them, but, for the purpose of this action, was admitting their validity, thus limiting her right to recover what, but for the existence of those deeds, she would have the right to recover under the deeds from Brown to Hanks, and from Hanks to Cartwright, if not barred by limitation. The judgment gave to the appellee no lands which these deeds covered, and, if the appellant has any interest in the tracts described by these several deeds, that interest is not affected by the judgment in this case. Those lands were not involved in the suit, for the petition excluded them from the land sought to be recovered, and the deeds were only admitted to show the true boundaries of the land which the appellee sought to recover.
The pleadings of the appellant, asserting title only to so much as he may show himself entitled to under his plea of limitation of ten years, and disclaiming as to the residue of the land, it becomes unnecessary to consider many of the assignments of error. Those only will be considered which relate to the ruling of the court in the rejection of evidence offered by the appellant, under his plea of limitation of ten years, and to the charges of the court.
The evidence tends to show that one Lori made improvements and settled upon the land claimed by appellant, as early as the year 1856, and that he continued to occupy it with his family until his death, after which his widow occupied it until October 30, 1868, at which time she conveyed to Van Wormer, by deed, which described the property conveyed, as follows: “All of my right, interest and claim in and to my homestead place, situated in the county aforesaid, about two miles below the town of Beaumont, on the west side of the if eches river, together with all the improvements thereon. * * * I "warrant and defend the title to the same.”
This deed was objected to, on the ground that the description was insufficient and too vague to apprise the plaintiff of the land conveyed. This objection was sustained and the deed excluded. We are
The Van Wormers conveyed the “Lori place” to John Archer by deed of date April 20, 1871, and, as description of what they conveyed, the deed recited : “All our right, title and interest in and to the place now owned by us, known as the “Lori place,” situated in the aforesaid county, about two miles below the town of Beaumont, on the west side of the Eeches river, and of the headright of David Brown, together with the land thereunto pertaining, and all buildings, fences and other improvements thereon; and we warrant the title to the same.” Eva Schusler conveyed by metes and bounds a part of the land now claimed by appellant, to Sam Robertson, by deed of date June 26, 1870.
This property was contiguous to the “Lori place,” was known as the “Schusler place,” and had been improved and occupied by Schusler and his family from as early as 1864 until her husband’s death, and, by her, from that time until she conveyed to Bobertson. Bobertson conveyed the same land to John Archer by deed of date March 5, 1872.
On February 6, 1874, John Archer conveyed to Noltz both the “Lori” and Schusler places,” describing them generally andas a part of the David Brown headright; and to this general description he added the following words, “together with the land thereunto pertaining.” Eoltz and wife conveyed to the appellant all that Archer had conveyed to Eoltz; and in their deed assumed to convey six hundred and forty acres of land, which their deed recited was claimed by them “under the law of limitation of ten years.” This deed bore date February 21, 1883. Noltz lived on the land claimed by appellant, from March 24, 1873 to March 1, 1883.
There is evidence tending to show a continuous occupation of the land, by some of the persons through whom the appellant claims, from the time Lori first entered upon it until the institution of this suit,
“In this connection you are instructed, that, before you can find for the defendant under his plea of the statute of limitation of ten years, you must be satisfied that he and those under whom he claims, had actual, peaceable, adverse, and exclusive possession of the six hundred and forty acres of the land he claims, for the time above specified, to be computed as above directed, by which is meant actual occupation of said six hundred and forty acres of land under enclosure, or by cultivation, use or enjoyment thereof, not as a mere trespasser, but claiming to be the owner thereof, in so open and notorious a manner as would distinctly inform the legal owner of the land of the defendant’s possession, cultivation, use or enjoyment of said land, and of the extent and limits thereof.”
“You are further instructed, that, if the evidence satisfies you that the defendant and those under whom he claims and occupies, cultivated and used, under enclosure, for ten years computed according to previous instructions, without any deed or memorandum in writing defining the limits of their possession, a less quantity than six hundred and forty acres of the land claimed by defendant, then such cultivation, use and occupation will only entitle the defendant to the quantity of land contained in such enclosure or enclosures, if more than one.”
“You are instructed that the defendant, and those under whom he claims, in order to make good the plea of the statute of limitation, must claim during the full period of ten years, computed as already directed, to "be the rightful owners of the land they claim; and if their claim was or is merely speculative, that is, if they were merely making claims to see if they could defeat or not the title of the plain tiff, then the plea of the statute of limitation is not good ; and if the evidence satisfies you that the claim of the defendant or of those under
These charges assume several conditions of fact and of intent to be necessary before a possessor can acquire title by ten years limitation.
1. That a trespasser cannot acquire title by limitation.
The correctness of a charge must be determined in view of the facts of the case in which it is given. One is a trespasser who enters upon the land of another and cuts down and carries away timber from time to time; and he does not cease to be such, and does not acquire any right, however long he may continue such acts. One who enters upon the land of another, without right, and erects houses and opens fields thereon, continuously occupying the houses and using the land for all such purposes as the land is adapted to, is equally a trespasser. But if this condition of affairs is permitted by the owner to continue for the period prescribed by the statute, without interruption by adverse suit to recover the land, this trespasser, this “ naked possessor,” under the law, loses that character, and becomes the owner of the thing possessed.
The act of February 5, 1841, P. D., 4624, declares that ten years of such peaceable possession and cultivation, use or enjoyment thereof, without any evidence of title, shall give to such naked possessor full property preclusive of all other claims in and to six hundred and forty acres of land, including his, her or their improvements. The change in this law made by the Revised Statutes will be considered in another connection. That part of the charge which we have considered ought not to have been given, under the facts of this case, and was calculated to mislead the jury.
2. The charge assumes, that the possession, cultivation, use or enjoyment must be, not only such as will give notice to the owner, if he exercises such care as the law presumes every owner to exercise, of the wrongful possession, biit also such as will inform the owner of the extent and limit to which he is disseized.
3. It assumes that if the possession be without deed or other written memorandum defining the possession, limitation will confer title, only to the extent of an actual enclosure. The law deems the owner of land to have constructive possession or seizin of all the land to which he has title, if there is no other person in possession. If, however, there is some other person in possession of a part, under color of title giving boundaries, such possession, though the possessor enters and holds under inferior title, will operate a disseizin of the holder of the superior title, to the extent of the inferior, unless the
A possession which operates a disseizin or dispossession of the true owner, if continued for the period and under the conditions prescribed by the statutes, confers upon the possessor title to the thing possessed. Is it requisite that notice of the limits to which the disseizor claims shall be given, otherwise than as this is done by an open, visible, and notorious possession, in order that limitation may run as to land not actually occupied? We think not, under the laws-of this state. Under the fifteenth and seventeenth sections of the act of February 5, 1841 (P. D., 4622, 4624), the holder of the inferior title might put his written muniments of title, or that which is generally understood to constitute color of title, in his pocket, never put them upon record or give notice of them otherwise than does his possession, and yet limitation would run in his favor to the full extent of the boundaries fixed by his written muniments of title.
So stands the law now under arts. 3191 and 3192 of the Revised Statutes. So stands the law now under arts. 3194 and 3195 of the Revised Statutes, except in cases in which the possessor seeks to hold more land than the law construes to be embraced within the holding of the naked possessor. When the possessor holds under written muniments of title, unless the law requires them to be registered, or notice otherwise given of them in some particular way, as a condition on which the holding will be held sufficient to sustain limitation, or limitation based on some particular period of possession, the fact of an open, visible, substantial possession, such as an owner, or one holding under him, is alone entitled to, must operate as notice to the owner of whatever claim the possessor asserts or may assert. The same must be true, in all cases in which the law prescribes the limits to which the holding of a naked possessor shall extend, as affecting the title of the real owner.
In the one case he must take notice óf the law, and cannot plead ignorance of the effect which it gives to a possession continued for a given time; as must he in the other take notice of the muniments of title, to which the law gives a certain effect under the same period of holding. In either case, he is bound to know what will be the effect of a given possession upon his rights. The former law, in effect, declared that the possession of the naked possessor, if undisturbed by suit for the period of ten years, should have such effect upon six hundred and forty acres of land, including the improvements thereon, as to divest title out of the former owner and vest it in even a wrongdoer ; in him who, until the expiration of the full period of limitation,
The Revised Statutes, while lessening the quantity of land which the naked possessor for ten years may hold, and somewhat changing the wording of the law, practically incorporates, as a part of the law, the very construction placed upon the former law in the case above cited. It provides, that “the peaceable and adverse possession contemplated in the preceding article, as against the person having right of action shall be construed to embrace not more than one hundred and sixty acres, including the improvemennts, or the number of acres actually enclosed should the same exceed one hundred and sixty acres; but when such possession is taken and held under some written memorandum of title, other than a deed, which fixes the boundaries of the possessor’s claim and is duly registered, such peaceable possession shall be construed to be co-extensive with the boundaries specified in such instrument.” R. S., 3195.
Under the former law, such peaceable, naked possession was construed to extend to six hundred and forty acres, though only a part of that was actually occupied, while under the present law it is not construed to embrace more than one hundred and sixty acres. Under both laws, the possessor may hold what he had actually enclosed, though it exceeds the area to which his possession would be construed to extend from an occupation of only a part of the area named in the statutes. The present' law, as did not the former, makes registration of written memorandum .of title other than a deed necessary to enable the holder to have his possession construed to be coextensive with the boundaries specified in .his memorandum of title.
The following cases recognize the right of a possessor for ten years, where entire occupation is of a part of a larger tract, to hold to the extent of six hundred and forty acres, or one hundred and sixty acres, as his occupation may have been under the former or present law, by actual occupancy of only a part of that which he may so hold. Ward v. Drouthett, 44 Tex. 369; Pearson v. Boyd, 62 Tex. 541; Smith v. Garza; 15 Tex. 150; Moody v. Holcomb, 26 Tex. 419; Melton v. Tur
4. The charge assumes that, if the defendant and those through whom he claims were in possession, making claim with intent to acquire title by limitation, if they could, then their claims were “merely speculative,” and limitation would not run in their favor. Such speculative trespassers would have the characteristics of adverse possessors, and if left to work their will, undisturbed by suit, will accomplish their purposes by possession for the requisite time.
Sufficient time did not elapse prior to the union of all the possessory rights in John Archer to bar the right of the appellee. All these rights were transmitted, as appears from the evidence, by Archer to Holtz, and by Holtz to the appellant. Since the conveyances to Archer, one possession has extended to all the places formerly possessed by several, and embraced all the improvements which were in close proximity; hence, no separate claim can now be maintained by the appellant based on the separate conveyances through which Archer held. The possessions became one before the maturity of a title could have occurred, and upon one claim, under the statute, the appellant must stand. The extent of his right, if any he has, must depend upon the law in force at the time his possession gave title. It is claimed that limitation ceased to run in 1872 or 1873, as to all land not in the actual possession of the defendant or those through whom he claims; for that, after about that time, the appellee had a tenant in possession of the land for which she sues. It appears, however, that the possession of this tenant, and his right to possession, were restricted to land which he had enclosed, and it does not appear that such possession extended to any of the land claimed by the appellant under his plea of limitation.
This being true, his possession would not interrupt the running of the statute of limitation in favor of the appellant in any respect. Texas Land Co. v. Williams, 51 Tex. 61; Read v. Allen, 63 Tex. 158; Allen v. McKelvain, decided at present term.
For the errors mentioned, the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and Remanded.
[Opinion delivered February 5, 1886.]