50 S.W.2d 443 | Tex. App. | 1932
The appellant J. B. Blanchard presents the same points, based on the same assignments in the brief, as has the appellant M. C. De Guerin, and, for the same reasons given above, the points and assignments are likewise overruled. The trial court having correctly construed the instrument in evidence, his conclusion, it is thought, should be sustained, and the decree as entered, as respects the appellants De Guerin and Blanchard should be in all things affirmed, with the modification of such decree and additional terms of adjudication so far as respects the appellant M. C. De Guerin, that Johnnie Jackson do have and further recover, as prayed for, of M. C. De Guerin the sum of $37,500, the value, as found by the jury, of the lease executed by M. C. De Guerin to J. C. Falvey and J. S. Rushing on October 4, 1930.
The appellants J. C. Falvey and J. S. Rushing present the points that (1) Johnnie Jackson authorized M. C. De Guerin to execute the lease to them, and (2) Johnnie Jackson is estopped to question the validity of the lease, and (3) they are innocent purchasers for value without notice, as shown in the circumstances.
The verdict of the jury, upon conflicting evidence, was a finding adverse to the contention made by, and in legal effect conclusively determines, the points first mentioned.
As respects the third point, it was established by the evidence that the record title to the 50-acre tract reposed, as it had since February, 1930, in M. C. De Guerin on October 4, 1930, the time he executed the lease to the appellants Falvey and Rushing. The agreement of M. C. De Guerin of December 19, 1929, to convey the land to Johnnie Jackson was an unrecorded instrument. There is no pretense in the evidence that these appellants had actual notice of any claim to the land or rights therein of Johnnie Jackson. The possession of the land on the part of the appellant Johnnie Jackson is relied upon as being sufficient to serve the purpose of notice to appellants as against the legal record title in M. C. De Guerin. These circumstances of possession are without conflict. It was proven that following the execution of the agreement of December 19, 1929, Johnnie Jackson, in the view of planting a cotton crop on the land, cleaned up the hedges and underbrush on about 10 acres, reconstructed a part of the old dilapidated fence on the west side of the tract, and plowed and put into cultivation about 30 acres in cotton. He had planted and cultivated some part of the land in 1929 after his grandmother Cole died in 1928, and before the deed was made by the heirs to De Guerin. Three sides of the land were not fenced, and there was no house nor any character of improvements on the land. Johnnie Jackson and his family resided on the Mayfield farm, and his residence was located "about one quarter of a mile from *448
this land." The Mayfield farm is a distinct tract of land from the 50 acres in suit, although it adjoins the D. Shaw survey in which the 50 acres is located. He was living on this Mayfield farm with his family as a tenant before his grandmother died in 1928, and has continuously lived thereon since that time. Johnnie Jackson made no tender of the purchase money to M. C. De Guerin until November, 1930, after the execution of the lease on October 4, 1930. The only evidence or mark of possession of the land by Johnnie Jackson on October 4, 1930, was the bare fact of a growing cotton crop on 30 acres which he planted and raised during the year 1930. In the circumstances, was there sufficiency of acts of actual possession of the land to affect a bona fide purchaser with notice of the title or interest of Johnnie Jackson? The question must be determined as a matter of pure law, for otherwise the verdict of the jury would be decisive as a question resting in pure fact. The doctrine of constructive or implied notice effected through possession of land rests upon the theory, not of constructive possession, but of actual possession of the land. All the authorities agree that possession, in order to constitute notice, must be actual possession of the party, or his agent or tenant, consisting of acts of occupancy which are open, visible, and unequivocal, and in nature sufficient upon the observation of a subsequent purchaser to put him on inquiry as to the rights of the possessor. Blankenship v. Douglas,
The judgment, as respects the appellants Falvey and Rushing, should be and is reversed and here rendered as to deny the plaintiff Johnnie Jackson a cancellation of the lease to J. S. Rushing and J. C. Falvey executed by M. C. De Guerin on October 4, 1930, but vest in J. S. Rushing and J. C. Falvey the rights provided therein by its terms and conditions to explore for gas, oil, and other minerals, and absolutely vest in Johnnie Jackson all rights therein provided of one-eighth royalties, rentals, and other emoluments, against J. S. Rushing, J. C. Falvey, M. C. De Guerin, and J. B. Blanchard.
The costs of appeal will be taxed one-half against M. C. De Guerin and J. B. Blanchard, jointly and severally, and one-half against Johnnie Jackson.
*449Judgment affirmed in part, and reversed and rendered in part.