200 S.W. 247 | Tex. App. | 1917
This is a suit filed by appellees in the district court of Hardin county, Tex., October 17, 1916, against appellants, in trespass to try title, claiming 80 acres of land, being the west half of tract of 160 acres in the Elijah Hunter league, known as the old Fairchild homestead, fully described by field notes. The facts show that in 1872, Mrs. S.W. Fairchild settled on the place with her five orphan children, and lived there continuously until the year 1884; that Mrs. Fairchild married one John Fowler in 1884, and was absent from the place about nine years, during which time, however, she occupied the place with her tenants; that she returned there, after being absent about nine years, and lived there continuously until 1908, when Mrs. Fairchild, who had married Fowler, died. In the fall of the same year John Fowler married the present appellant in this cause, and continued to live on the land until 1915, when John Fowler died, leaving the appellant on the place. The heirship of the appellees is admitted. The case was tried before the court without a jury, at the March term, 1917, and resulted in a judgment in favor of appellees.
The first three assignments of error will be considered together, as follows: (a) The court erred in rendering judgment for plaintiffs because the evidence was insufficient to support the ten-years' limitation. (b) The court erred in rendering judgment for plaintiffs because the possession relied on solely by plaintiffs to vest title was not begun and continued under a claim of right, but Mrs. Fairchild entered to pre-empt 160 acres of land, and it was never during the ten years shown to be adverse. (c) The court erred in rendering judgment for plaintiffs because the testimony of plaintiffs showed that the possession was not open, visible, and continuous for ten years.
Appellants' proposition is that to constitute adverse possession under the tenyear statute, there must be a claim of right, and cites the case of Stevens v. Pedregon,
"While the requirement that the appropriation of the land must be commenced and continued `under a claim of right inconsistent with and hostile to the claim of another' was first incorporated in the statute in 1879, at an early day this court announced that such claim was an essential element of adverse possession. Portis v. Hill,
Without further comment on this proposition, we agree with the Supreme Court.
The further proposition is advanced that the court was in error, because the testimony was insufficient. The above assignments are overruled.
The fourth assignment challenges the action of the lower court as error in rendering judgment for plaintiffs, because Emma Fowler was a minor and pleaded and proved her minority for the first five years of plaintiffs' pretended possession, to wit, from June, 1872, to June, 1877. It will be sufficient to say that at the time spoken of the appellant had no claim of any kind, by paper title or in any other way, to any of the land in controversy. The fact is that after Mrs. Fairchild, who married Fowler, died in 1908, the appellant married Fowler, and as it was shown, conclusively, that the land was the separate property of Mrs. Fairchild, and that Fowler had no title to the same, and was only living there with his former wife, and continued to occupy the same with his present wife until 1915. It Is impossible for this court to discover how the minority of the appellant could figure in the case, for the reason that even appellant's husband, by and through whom only she was in possession of the land, had not even intermarried with Mrs. Fairchild during the time and including the time between 1872 and 1884, at which time appellant seeks to plead her minority. In other words, it is impossible for this court to understand how the minority of the *249 appellant in this case would be pertinent to any issue in this case. The court rightly rendered judgment for appellees, and the assignment is overruled.
The fifth assignment is as follows:
"The court erred in admitting in evidence the federal court judgment as; see bill of exception No. ......"
It is not clear to this court for what reason the federal court judgment was introduced, presumably, however, to fix the location of the land or for purposes of description. In any case, there was no error in its admission, and the assignment is overruled.
The court, in our opinion, correctly tried the case, and gave to appellants all their rights, and, finding no error committed by that court, the judgment is in all things affirmed.