20 Tex. 45 | Tex. | 1857
The plaintiff in error, defendant below, insists in her brief on but one point, viz : the alleged error in rejecting the parol testimony offered to prove the execution by one of the plaintiffs and her intestate (by an authorized agent) of the deed of 1847; its surrender (on account of there being no covenants of warranty) to the same agent in 1850; and his execution, as agent, of another deed in lieu of the first. The objection to the evidence was sustained on the ground that the defendant claimed under the deed of 1850, and therefore could not be allowed to go behind that deed and show by parol that there was a prior deed executed for said lot, viz : lot 1, in block 42. Without comment on the law of this proposition, it will suffice to say that it does not appear from the pleadings (unless these are greatly misapprehended) that the plaintiff in error relied exclusively on the deed of 1850. She was sued for several lots besides this one of lot 1, in block 42; and in her answer she claimed to be the legal owner and to hold possession of said lots by virtue of deeds of conveyance from plaintiff’s intestate and from Drucilla M. Templeton, one of the plaintiffs; and among these deeds was one from the said plaintiff and her intestate, bearing date about July, 1847, for lot Ho. 1, in block 42 ; that she went into possession of said lot, under said deed, and continued in said possession up to the first of February, 1850 ; that the intestate, with the said Drucilla in connection with others, by their said agent and attorney, then took up their said first deed of conveyance for this lot, owing to the defect of there being no general warranty, and executed another conveyance to the defendant for the said lot, which said last deed was given for and in lieu of the first, and that she has continued in actual peaceable possession up to the present time.
From these averments it appears that the defendant claims under the whole transaction; under both deeds. If she claims under any one particularly it is under the deed of 1847, under which she declares that she entered and continued in peaceable
The testimony rejected was most important to the defendant. The jury, by their verdict, found for all 'the defendants who claimed under deeds executed by Good prior to April, 1849, the date of Patterson’s death, and for the plaintiffs in all cases in which defendant claimed under deeds executed subsequent to the month of April, 1849.
There is no statement of facts, but the verdict shows that there could have- been no evidence equivalent to that ruled out; and that being excluded, and the defendant being required to rely exclusively on the deed of 1850, the verdict must have been,
The judgment as to the plaintiff in error is reversed and cause remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.