39 S.W. 282 | Tex. | 1897
This suit was brought by the defendants in error, as heirs of their father, J. B. Likens, and their mother, Salina A. Likens, to recover of the plaintiff in error and James McNee and N.C. Abbott an undivided interest in a tract of land, a part of the Pleasant W. Rose survey. The plaintiffs recovered a judgment in the trial court, from which defendant Herman alone appealed — making his appeal bond payable to the plaintiffs only. In the Court of Civil Appeals the appellees moved to dismiss the appeal, for want of proper parties, and the motion to dismiss was submitted and taken with the case. Without expressly ruling upon the motion, that court disposed of the case upon its merits, and affirmed the judgment. The appellees, now the defendants in error, again move to dismiss, on the ground that *451 the appeal bond was insufficient to give the Appellate Court jurisdiction of the appeal.
The land in controversy at one time belonged to J.B. Likens, the ancestor of defendants in error, and to D.P. Shepherd, each holding an undivided one-half interest therein. J.B. Likens having died, his interest was sold by his administrator under an order of the Probate Court, and the plaintiff in error succeeded by regular conveyances to whatever title, if any, passed by that sale. Subsequently plaintiff in error and Shepherd executed deeds of partition, by which Shepherd conveyed to plaintiff in error the one-half of the tract now claimed by the latter in this suit, and plaintiff in error conveyed to Shepherd the other half. McNee and Abbott, two of defendants in the trial court, claimed each a separate parcel of the half so conveyed to Shepherd under regular chains of conveyances proceeding from him. In their answers McNee and Abbott alleged that the land was of equal value, and prayed that, in the event the plaintiffs recovered, the tracts respectively claimed by them should be set apart to them in the partition. Replying to their answers, in a supplemental petition, the plaintiffs (as we understand their pleading) joined in this prayer; and, by consent of parties as the record shows, the judgment was entered accordingly.
There was no dispute as to the fact, that McNee and Abbott owned the Shepherd interest in the tract in controversy. The only question affecting them which could arise is: Was that an undivided interest in the whole, or title in severalty to the parcels respectively claimed by them? As between plaintiff in error and them, this question could not arise. He was bound by the partition between Shepherd and himself, and claimed only the half conveyed to him in that partition. Hermann being bound by the partition, and the plaintiff having acquiesced in the prayer of McNee and Abbott for the ratification of that partition, in the event they recovered against Hermann, it is apparent that there was no real controversy between McNee and Abbott and any other party to the suit; and that all possible controversy was settled by the agreed judgment of partition. Their rights as against all parties to the suit then became fixed; and the plaintiffs, if entitled to anything at all, became entitled to the half of the land claimed by Hermann, and not to an undivided half of the whole. Hermann claimed nothing as against his co-defendants.
This court has held that one suit to try title to land brought against more than one defendant, may, in its progress, so resolve itself into separate issues between the plaintiff and each of the defendants as to create, in legal effect, separate suits, which may be tried at different terms, and may admit of separate appeals. (Boone v. Hulsey,
This brings us to the merits of the case. As to the half interest in the land, in controversy between the plaintiff in error and defendants in error, J.B. Likens was the common source of title. The plaintiff in error claimed under a sale of the land made by the administrator of Likens, and the defendants in error claimed title as his heirs. The question is: Was the sale valid? This depends upon the description of the land given in the proceedings of the County Court, and in the administrator's deed. Defendants in error insist that it is vague and uncertain, and therefore insufficient to pass the title.
In Hurley v. Barnard,
It is evident from these proceedings that the land which was ordered to be sold, and which was sold and conveyed by the administrator was not vaguely an undivided interest in 893 acres of the P.W. Rose survey. It was the interest of the estate of J.B. Likens, deceased, in a certain tract of 893 acres, a part of the Rose survey, of which he owned an undivided one-half.
If the Rose survey contained only 893 acres, there would have been less difficulty about the description; but it embraces a league and labor of land. Is this description sufficient to pass the title by virtue of a probate sale? That it would be sufficient in a voluntary conveyance, we think there can be no doubt. Smith v. Westall,
The description in the present case is in substance a half interest in the property of the estate of the intestate in 893 acres of land, a part of the P.W. Rose survey in Harris County, Texas. This does not indicate, as in Wofford v. McKinna,
The court, upon the evidence adduced, should have instructed a verdict for the defendant. The judgments of the District Court and the Court of Civil Appeals are therefore reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded. *456