120 S.W. 508 | Tex. App. | 1909
Appellant instituted this suit in January, 1908, for partition, claiming that he owned an undivided one-sixth interest in four tracts of land situated in Fannin County, aggregating 370 acres, and that the appellees owned the remainder. Appellees, among other defenses, pleaded a general denial and limitation of five and ten years. The land in controversy belonged to the community estate of Wm. Arledge and wife, both deceased. The appellees, defendants below, are the heirs and purchasers from the heirs of Wm. Arledge and wife. The appellant, who claims by inheritance through his deceased child, married a daughter of Arledge. Mrs. Arledge died about the year 1876, leaving her husband surviving and in possession of the community property. Also several children. The wife of appellant *298 died in 1881, leaving a child who survived her, according to his testimony, only a few days. Wm. Arledge died about the year 1894. After the death of his wife Arledge continued in the use and possession of the community property till the date of his death. This appears to have been done as the result of an agreement on the part of his children. The year after the death of Wm. Arledge his surviving children and grandchildren, by a proceeding instituted in the District Court of Fannin County, had a partition made of the Arledge estate among themselves. The appellant was not a party to this proceeding, and his claim of an interest in the estate was ignored by those heirs who were parties. After the partition was made the adult owners took immediate possession of their respective portions as allotted in the partition, made improvements and paid taxes thereon; and that set apart to the minors was taken possession of by their guardian, improved and taxes paid on the same. The testimony shows that the possession thus taken was continued either by the original owners or by their purchasers, without interruption till the institution of this suit, as to all of the land except 20 acres. After the death of his wife and child the appellant lived in different parts of the State, remaining at some places several years and at others only a few months, but did not in the interval between the death of his wife and the filing of this suit live in Fannin County. He testifies that he knew nothing of the death of Wm. Arledge till about two years before instituting this suit, and was until then ignorant of the fact that any division had been made of the estate. From a judgment awarding him a one-eighth interest in twenty acres of the land appellant has appealed.
The right of the appellant to recover any or all of the land sued for in the court below depended solely upon whether he was barred by the statute of limitation as pleaded by the defendants, and the court so instructed the jury. The manner in which the issue of limitation was submitted, and the failure and refusal of the court to submit what the appellant claims were proper instructions applicable to the claim of adverse possession by one tenant in common against another joint owner, formed the basis of the different assignments of error presented in the record. After instructing the jury concerning the periods of limitation pleaded, what was essential to constitute peaceable and adverse possession generally, and the necessity of continuity of possession by different owners claiming in privity with each other, the court then charged the jury as follows: "If you believe from the evidence that any or all the defendants and those under whom they claim took possession of the respective tract or tracts claimed by them respectively under the decree of partition offered in evidence, and had prior to January 22, 1908, had and held peaceable, adverse and continuous possession of such tract or tracts so claimed by them respectively, cultivating, using and enjoying same for a period of ten years, then plaintiff is barred from recovery by the ten years statute of limitation, and if you should so find you will return a verdict for defendants, or such of them as you find had such possession." This portion of the charge is assailed as erroneous because it ignores what the appellant terms the "trust theory of the relation" between him and the appellees W. L. *299 and A. J. Arledge, in this: The land was the community property of Wm. Arledge and wife. The interest claimed by the appellant was by inheritance through his wife before the death of her mother, the wife of Wm. Arledge. After the death of Mrs. Arledge it was agreed that Wm. Arledge should remain in possession holding the property during his lifetime, and no division should be made among the heirs till after his death. The evidence shows that at the time of the death of Wm. Arledge, W. L. and A. J. Arledge were occupying portions of the premises with their father, and presumptively by his permission. It is claimed that this status created a trust relation between W. L. and A. J. Arledge on the one part and the appellant on the other part with reference to the holding of the possession, and would prevent a void partition, as a matter of law, from operating to put in motion the statute of limitation against the appellant. The testimony shows that at the time, and for some years previous to the death of Wm. Arledge, A. J. Arledge was occupying the homestead with his father, keeping house for him and looking after his personal welfare. It is also in evidence that W. L. Arledge resided upon a part of the 200 acres which constituted the family homestead of Wm. Arledge. The agreement for Wm. Arledge to remain in possession seems to have been made about the time of the death of his wife, or shortly thereafter, and was strictly observed by all the heirs having an interest in the land. Wm. Arledge occupied the family homestead and used all the community property and lands, so far as the latter were used, up to the time of his death. We do not think this is sufficient to show a trust relation existing between the appellant on the one side and the appellees, W. L. and A. J. Arledge, upon the other, as to possession of the land. The trust, if any had been created, was a personal one undertaken by Wm. Arledge, and existed only during his lifetime. It expired with his death, by the very terms of the agreement. After that event the heirs-at-law had a right to a partition of the entire property, and no obligation rested upon W. L. and A. J. Arledge binding them to continue their father's possession with the same trust relation assumed by him. They had a perfect right to institute partition proceedings for the division of the common property, or to occupy it as joint owners. They did not assume any special trust by reason of being on the land by permission of their father at the time of his death. They were occupying that portion of the land which he had a right to hold regardless of any agreement — the family homestead. We do not think the charge is subject to the objection made. Neither do we think it is subject to the further objection that it was not warranted by the testimony. The evidence, we think, was ample to require the court to submit the issue of adverse possession by all the plaintiffs, as he did.
The appellant also complains that the court erred in refusing to give the following special charge: "One joint owner of a tract of land has a right to enter upon and possess the common property, and such act does not ordinarily make such possession adverse to the other owner. Nor would the fact that such joint owner in possession paid the taxes on the land, or improved it, render his possession adverse to the other joint owner. In order for such possession to be adverse, *300
such as would put the statute of limitation in operation, the tenant in possession must give actual notice to the other joint owner that such possession is held adversely; or the possession must have been of such a nature so notorious, and the surrounding circumstances must have been such as that the joint owner out of possession must be presumed to have known of the adverse holding. Therefore, before you can find that defendants W. L. Arledge, A. J. Arledge, W. H. Barnett and wife Hattie Barnett, or either of them, or other defendants claiming under them, have title by limitation against plaintiff, you must believe from the evidence that as far back as ten years prior to the institution of this suit his or their acts and possession were of such an adverse and notorious nature, and so hostile to plaintiff, that it must be presumed that plaintiff had notice of such hostile claim. In this connection you are further instructed that the doing of any acts by a cotenant which may be legitimately referred to and consistent with his right as a joint owner to do, will not be considered as a hostile act or as notice of an adverse possession to the other joint owner not in possession." The request for this special charge is based upon the contention that the court failed to instruct the jury concerning the rules of law applicable to claims by adverse possession when urged by one tenant in common against another. The partition of the estate of Wm. Arledge and wife among the surviving children and grandchildren upon his death, in which proceeding the appellant was ignored, is a fact about which there is no dispute in the record. This proceeding, by its publicity and nature, was so notorious and adverse that it was sufficient to constitute an ouster of the appellant; and the court had the right to assume as a matter of law that a disseizin was thereby accomplished, which, if followed by the necessary adverse holding, and for the statutory period, in the manner essential to constitute a bar, would ripen into a title by limitation. Cryer v. Andrews,
We think the court correctly refused the charge requested, and the judgment is accordingly affirmed.
Affirmed.
Writ of error refused.