202 F. 714 | 5th Cir. | 1913
Lead Opinion
(after stating the facts as above). The facts bearing upon the Duff and Gerlach & Bro. claims make it appropriate to consider these two cases together.
Possession of part of the 160 acres, 80 of which was cláimed by Duff and 80 of which was claimed by Gerlaeh & Bro., may be traced back as early as 1890 to those under whom both claimants deraign their claim of title. Plowever, the record shows no claim on the part of those; who occupied such parts of the Gunderman survey and with whom the two claimants connect their possession and claim, to any specific 160 acres of that survey which, in the aggregate, consisted of 640 acres, until after November 19, 1895, when one C. K. Withers had the 160 acres surveyed. From that date the evidence tends to show a claim on the part of Withers and his successors to the specific 160 acres which he had caused to be run out and which is the same 160 acres which is specifically described by metes and bounds in the two answers of the claimants. The actual occupancy by inclosure and cultivation, as concerns all' the previous occupants and claimants, was
Upon the authority of the cases of Lewis v. Dillingham, 167 Fed. 779, 93 C. C. A. 267, Houston Oil Co. v. Jenkins, 182 Fed. 489, 104 C. C. A. 595, Houston Oil Co. v. Farr, 182 Fed. 491, 104 C. C. A. 597, Bracken v. Jones, 63 Tex. 184, and Giddings v. Fischer, 97 Tex. 184, 77 S. W. 209, construing articles 3343, 3344, 3347, 3348, and 3349 of the Revised Statutes of Texas, 1895, we think the appellee C. J. Gerlach & Bro. failed to establish title to the 80 acres described in their answer by evidence showing that they and their predecessors had been in possession of that 160 acres described in their answer, of which the two forties claimed were a part, claiming the specific lands so described for a period of 10 years adversely to the true owner, and that the court erred in awarding it to them upon this theory, which was the only one presented on their behalf on the trial of the cause in the court below, either by pleading or proof.
In reaching this conclusion, we have not overlooked the construction given to the sections of the Texas Revised Statutes by a line of cases (Davis v. Houston Oil Co., 50 Tex. Civ. App. 597, 111 S. W. 219, and other cases), which hold that the occupancy of a small area, in connection with a claim to an undefined 160 acres of a larger survey, may entitle the occupant to the entire 160 acres, where the land is described in the pleadings and is asked to be awarded the occupant, not upon the idea that he has claimed that specific tract during the required period of limitation, but upon the idea that, though claiming without boundaries during the period of limitation, the statute entitles him to a location of the 160 acres in the larger survey in an equitable manner. This presents an issue as to whether the location contended for by the occupant is in fact an equitable one. The holder of th'e legal title and the adverse occupant are upon this theory considered to be quasi tenants in common, and each is entitled to be heard upon the question of what constitutes an equitable partition as between them. In the cases of Lewis v. Dillingham and Houston Oil Company v. Jenkins and Farr, supra, the pleadings presented no such issue, and they are to be distinguished from the line of cases last mentioned in this respect and were correctly ruled for that reason.
If the occupant, in his pleadings, relies exclusively upon a showing of adverse possession of 10 years under claim of a specific tract identified by metes and bounds, no issue as to tenancy in common of the entire survey as between him and the owner of the legal title is presented. If the parties, in spite of this condition of the pleadings, actually litigate this issue upon the trial, and the court allots the occupant his 160 acres after a hearing of the issue as to what is an equitable partition as between the parties, no injury could result therefrom. In this case the issue, as to what was a proper partition, was not only not presented by the pleadings, but was not entered upon by the parties or considered by the court upon the trial, and the land could only have been awarded appellees upon the other theory that a claim to the specific land described in the answers by boundaries during the entire
Coming to the claim of Frank Dowden, we encounter the same difficulty in affirming the decree. Until the Withers survey, it is clear that Holmes, Dowden’s predecessor in possession, claimed only an indefinite 160 acres in the southeast corner of the Gunderman survey of 640 acres. His house was in the adjoining Francis Kriner survey. The field, through the inclosure and cultivation of which he is said to have claimed 160 acres in the Gunderman survey, occupied partly the Kriner survey, partly the Texas & New Orleans section No. 1, partly the Gunderman survey, and encroached over Duff’s east line as laid off by the Withers survey. Holmes claimed no. specific 160 acres certainly before that survey. After it, the evidence tends to show that he claimed the east line of the Duff tract, as run by the Withers survey, as his west line, and Village creek as his south line. He never claimed under any definite north and east boundaries. The Withers line did not extend as far north as the Richardson tract, to which the Dowden tract was laid off by the decree in this case. The Withers survey, consequently, established only a part of Dowden’s west line. We are unable to see from the evidence that even after the Withers survey Holmes claimed any specific 160 acres by definite boundaries— certainly not the land described in his answer, which was only 90 acres and was not in the southeast corner of the survey. As it turned out, there was no such quantity óf land to be found subject to his claim in the Gunderman survey, and the court, accordingly, allowed him only 90 acres in a strip, across the east side of the survey, instead of 160 acres in the southeast corner. As in the case of Gerlach & Bro., we think Dowden failed to establish from the evidence that he and his predecessors claimed a specific 160 acres, during the statutory period, as distinguished from a floating 160 acres out of the larger survey. As in the’ Gerlach case, no issue was presented' or litigated in the court below as to the right of Dowden to have partitioned to him an undefined 160 acres or any part of it. We think the appellants were entitled to be heard upon the equitable character of any partition made between it and Dowden, and, it not appearing from the record that it was given an opportunity to be heard upon that issue, we cannot assume that the allotment made to Dowden was equitable between him and the appellánt, or that no injury resulted to appellant from being' deprived of the chance to be heard upon the partition which resulted in the allotment to Dowden of the land de
As to L. S. Duff and wife, the decree is affirmed, with costs. As to C. J. Gerlach & Bro., the decree is reversed, and the appellee taxed with the costs of the appeal, and the cause remanded, with directions that a decree be entered in favor of the intervener for the two forties described in the answer of the claimant, unless the answer is amended, upon leave granted, so as to present properly the issue based upon an undefined claim to 160 acres, and, in that event, that further proceedings be had in conformity with this opinion. As to Frank Dow-den and S. A. Dowden, the decree is also reversed and appellees taxed with the costs of appeal, and the cause remanded, with directions that a decree be entered in favor of Frank Dowden and S. A. Dowden for that portion of the land allotted to them by the former decree which was inclosed under fence and in the actual possession of claimants when the. suit was commenced, unless the answer of claimants is amended, upon leave granted, so- as to properly present the issue based upon an undefined claim to 160 acres, and, in that event, that further proceedings be had in conformity with this opinion. The costs on appeal are to be taxed equally between the Houston Oil Company, appellant, C. J. Gerlach & Bro., appellees, and Frank Dowden and S. A. Dowden, appellees.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting in part). I concur in the af-firmance of the decree in favor of L- S. Duff and wife. I dissent from the reversal of the decree in favor of C. J. Gerlach & Bro., and I dissent from the reversal of the decree in favor of Frank Dowden and S. A. Dowden. I think the record shows that, if the pleadings had been framed as suggested in the opinion of the majority, the result should have been the same. The parties, in my opinion, according to the evidence in the record, are entitled to the lands allotted to them respectively, and I find nothing inequitable in the decrees. I am of the opinion that they should all be affirmed.