47 Tex. 529 | Tex. | 1877
This suit was commenced November 16, 1869, in the District Court of McLennan county, by J. D. & D. C. Giddings, against George Butler and others, to recover possession and quiet title to about one hundred and seventy-five acres of land, a part of a tract of eleven leagues of land granted by the State of Coahuila and Texas, in the year 1833, to Tomas De La Vega. Both the
On the 13th of August, 1872, Tomas De La Vega, said original grantee, intervened, and made himself a party, claiming title under his said grant, and also under a grant of one league, made March 15, 1835, to Peter Fleming, as a colonist, in the colonial enterprise of E. Sterling Eobertson, and denying, in his petition for intervention, that either the plaintiff or defendant had any title to the land in controversy, and asserting “that a certain purported power of attorney, §tyled a testimonio,” from said La Vega to Samuel May Williams, dated May 5,1832, under which plaintiffs and defendants claimed to have derived their alleged title, was a forgery. And on the 3d of April, 1873, John, Henry, and Alice McPhaul, minors, children of Heil A. McPhaul and his wife Sarah McPhaul, by their father Eeil A. McPhaul, as their next friend, &c., also intervened, claiming title under said La Vega, and also under said league-grant to said Fleming, their grandfather.
That the title of the intervenors, who are the plaintiffs in error, may be properly understood, it should he stated that the Fleming and La Vega grants conflict with each other, and both of said grants include the land here in controversy. And that La Vega, on the 24th of March, 1860, in consideration of the reconveyance to Mm of the one half thereof, conveyed all Ms right and interest in and to the land included within the boundaries of the Fleming grant to Sarah McPhaul, the mother of the minor intervenors, and Ann Eliza Tipton, the daughters, and, as is said, the sole heirs of said Fleming.
Evidently, however, they utterly failed to show any valid and subsisting right to this land in themselves or either of them, at the time of their intervention in this case, under either of these grants.
To maintain the conclusion here announced, and to which a careful examination of the record has led us, it is altogether unnecessary for us to follow counsel in their discussion of the vexed question as to the genuineness of the reputed power of attorney of May 5, 1832, from La Vega to Williams, under and through which the parties under whom tire defendants in error claim to have derived their title, and which, as is well known to the legal profession, has been the subject of litigation in the courts of this State and United States for the last twenty-five years, and which litigation has generally, if not invariably, resulted unfavorably to the present plaintiffs. For need we pause to inquire, if La Vega’s title was barred at the date of the alleged union of the titles of La Vega and the heirs of Fleming, whether the bar of the statute could be thus avoided, if the heirs of Fleming were not also barred; nor need we consider the effect of the deed from Peter Fleming and wife, offered by defendants in error, to show that there was no interest in the land in them father and mother, at the time of their death, to descend to or vest in them children.
The same result is reached if we leave out of view the La Vega title, and consider the right of the parties under the Fleming title. . Mrs. McPhaul was married in January, 1855, when the statute, of course, commenced to run against her; and more than five years had elapsed from that time before the interveners commenced their suit. Mrs. Tipton, now Mrs. Wright, the other heir, is not a party, and it is therefore unnecessary for us to inquire how the case might stand as to her, if she had joined in the intervention. We will only further remark that, although McPhaul moved upon the Fleming land in 1860, the evidence shows that he respected the possession of the parties claiming and holding the six hundred and forty acres purchased by Sutton.
There is no error in the judgment, and it is affirmed.
Affirmed.