This is аn action in trespass to try title instituted by plaintiff in error, the Federal Land Bank of Houston, against a number of defendants, their names being set out
Robert Hairston and wife, Ida Hairston, executed to plaintiff in error their prоmissory note and, as security therefor, executed and delivered to M. H. Gossett, trustee, a deed of trust conveying to such trustee 137½ acres of land out of the Thomas Smith headright survey in Shelby County, said land being one tract and being described as such in the deed of trust. Later by trustee’s deed the land was conveyed-to plaintiff in error and thereafter this suit was instituted to try title thereto. The land wаs described in the petition as one tract the same as in the deed of trust and trustee’s deed. After the deed of trust was executed Hairston and wife conveyed 66 acres of the land tо Stroud, Kelley and T. P. Todd and 71½ acres thereof to H. P. McLendon. The defendants below were Kelley, Todd and McLen-don, and all persons shown by the records to be claiming any interest in the property under them. Some of the defendants defaulted, others filed disclaimers and still others filed answers containing pleas of not guilty. The plaintiff in error introduced certain instruments, not necessary here to detail, for the purpose of establishing, (a) common source, and, (b) that from such source its title was superior to that of the defendants. It so happened that all of the defendants who filed pleas of not guilty, being hereinafter called defendants in error, were claiming under the Kelley and Todd deed to the 66 acre tract. So far as the record discloses, they had no interest in the 71½ acre tract. At the conclusion of the testimony the trial court rendered judgment awarding to plaintiff in error the 66 acre tract, but decreeing that it take nothing as to the 71½ acre tract as against the defendants in error, that is, those who filed pleas of not guilty.
The effect of the take nothing judgment was to vest title in said defendants to thе 71½ acre tract. Art. 7391, R. C.S. No evidence whatever was offered showing any character of title to the 71½ acre tract in the defendants in error. It thus would appear that plaintiff in errоr recovered from defendants in error the land claimed by them, but defendants in error recovered from plaintiff in error the land as to which there is no evidence that they had any claim. This strange situation resulted from the conclusion of the trial court, with which the Court of Civil Appeals concurred, that plaintiff in error proved common source as to the 66 acre tract, and, also proved title thereto superior to that of defendants in error, but that it did not prove common source as to the 71½ acre tract; and, since it did not undertake to еstablish title from the sovereignty of the soil, it failed to make out a case. It is evident that, had one of the defendants in error been claiming under a deed to the 71½ acres and the othеr defendant in error been claiming under a deed to the 66 acres, then the result in the trial court would have been that plaintiff in error would have lost all of its land to defendants in error. The one claiming under deed to the 66 acres would have recovered the 71½ acres and the one claiming under deed to the 71½ acres would have recovered the 66 acres, аll because each filed a plea of not guilty.
The judgments below were based upon the construction of what is known as the common source statute. That statute is article 7382, R.C.S.1925, and is аs follows : “It shall not be necessary for the plaintiff to deraign title beyond a common source. Proof of a common source may. be made by the plaintiff by certified copies of the deeds showing a chain of title to the defendant emanating from and under such common source. Before any such certified copies shall be read in evidence, they shall be filed with the papers of the suit three days before the trial, and the adverse party served with notice of such filing as in other cases. Such certified copies shall not be evidеnce of title in the defendant unless offered in evidence by him. The plaintiff may make any legal objection to such certified copies, or the originals thereof, when introduced by the defendant.”
The Court of Civil Appeals, one of the Justices dissenting, affirmed the judgment of the trial court. We do not agree with the trial court or with the majority opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals upon the construction of the statute.
In Simmons Hardware Co. v. Davis,
In Howard v. Masterson,
In Word v. Houston Oil Company, Tex.Civ.App.,
Many other decisions of like import are collatеd in 41 Tex.Jur. p. 510, sec, 42, note 16. When plaintiff in error introduced deeds showing that defendants in error claimed a portion of the tract of land described in its petition under a deed from Hairston it thеreby made- a prima facie case of common source. It will not be presumed that defendants in error were making claim to any other portion of that land. Under the holding in the court below, when a plaintiff sues more than one defendant in trespass to try title to a single tract of land, in order to make available the provisions of the common source statute above quoted, it devolves upon him to show that each defendant claims all of the land involved in the suit. Such a construction would nullify the statute in such cases. The statute is one of сonvenience and should not be given that construction unless same is required by its language. To our minds, such construction is not at all required.
As we understand the opinion of the majority below, it gives recognition to the rule of common source but holds that it cannot be availed of here because the 66 acre tract and the 71½ acre tract were two separate and distinct tracts of land. It appears to have been the conclusion of the majority that the 137½ acre tract involved in this suit cannot be regarded as one single tract. The grounds for that conclusion, as we understand them, are these: Plaintiff in error introduced in evidence a deed from W. L. McLendon (not the McLendon named above) conveying to Halirston the 137½ aсres of land. That deed described the land by two sets of field notes, the one describing a tract of 57½ acres and the other a tract of 80 acres. It seems clear that the two traсts constituted but one body of land. But, be that as it may, in the deed of trust executed by Hairston and wife it was described as one tract by one set of field notes. By the same field notes it was conveyed to plaintiff in error and was described b)' it in its petition herein. After Hairston and wife executed the deed of trust under which plaintiff in error derived title they executed two deeds to sepаrate portions of the land, as above shown, uii-dér which the defendants claimed. One of those deeds was to a tract of 66 acres and the other to a tract of 71½ acres. Thosе deeds could not be made to operate as against plaintiff in error, as a segregation of the 137½ acre tract of land into two separate tracts. So far as its rights are concerned, the tract is still a unit.
The judgments of the Court of Civil Appeals and the district court will both be reversed and judgment will be here rendered in favor of plaintiff in error for all of the land described in its petition.
Opinion adopted by the Supreme Court.
