Jack v. Cassin

28 S.W. 832 | Tex. App. | 1894

A certificate for two-thirds of a league and labor of land was issued to Patrick C. Jack. Jacob De Cordova located the certificate in one survey, paid the expenses, and procured the patent, under an oral agreement with the administrator of Jack's estate, Thomas F. McKinney. In 1851 De Cordova filed his petition to the County Court of Brazoria County, alleging the verbal contract between himself and the administrator by which he had undertaken to locate the certificate, describing the land so located by him from the patent he had obtained, and claiming that he was entitled to one-third of the land under his agreement with the administrator, asking that a certain one-third, defining the same by metes and bounds, be given him, and prayed that the court order the administrator to make title to him to such one-third.

The decree of the County Court upon this application, in January, 1851, recites, that the case came on for hearing, and R.J. Towns had accepted service for the administrator and waived citation, and the court having heard the petition and considered the matters, "it is *230 ordered, adjudged, and decreed, that Thomas F. McKinney, administrator of the estate of the said Patrick C. Jack, do make and execute to the said J. De Cordova a title in accordance with the prayer of his petition and agreement, as stated."

In June, 1851, the said administrator executed to Jacob De Cordova a deed to the 1043 acres as described in said order, and in pursuance thereof.

For this, the northern one-third of the survey, plaintiffs, claiming to be the heirs of Patrick C. Jack, sue defendants in possession. Defendants had a chain of title under De Cordova, the merits of which will be discussed in the opinion, if found to be necessary. From the view we take of this case, it is not necessary that we should inquire into whether or not the plaintiffs succeeded in proving their heirship. The district judge found that they had not done so, and based his judgment on this finding as well as on the finding of title in De Cordova through said action of the County Court.

Opinion. — That an administrator had the power to make the contract alleged by the locator is a settled question in this State. 2 Sayles' Early Laws, sec. 69, p. 200; Wren v. Harris,78 Tex. 351. The decree of the Probate Court was an approval of the arrangement made by the administrator.

The petition, properly construed, was an assertion of title by De Cordova to an undivided interest of one-third in the survey by reason of the facts stated, asking that his interest be partitioned to him in a certain manner.

That the court had jurisdiction to decree partition between the estate and a cotenant under statutes then in force, is also not open to question. Nor were the heirs necessary parties to a proceeding of that kind. 2 Sayles' Early Laws, sec. 106, p. 191; Guilford v. Love, 49 Tex. 733; Lawson v. Kelley,82 Tex. 457.

It results from these principles, that the decree is practically a partition decree, was one the court had jurisdiction to render, and that it is not susceptible of impeachment in a collateral proceeding for mere irregularities of procedure.

The defects in this proceeding advanced by counsel, or occurring to us, are:

1. That the statute allowed specific performance of contracts to be enforced in the County Courts only when in writing. This provision is clearly wanting in applicability here, for it was not a case of a contract with the deceased.

2. That all persons having an interest in the property (the heirs) were not parties to the proceeding. This has been ruled against in cases above cited.

3. That the administrator was not cited, nor did he enter his appearance, the acceptance and waiver being by one acting as his attorney. This is untenable, particularly in view of the fact that the *231 administrator in person carried into effect the provisions of the decree, and the conclusion is irresistible that the attorney acted by his authority.

4. A defect that is obvious, viz., that the partition was effected directly by a decree of the court, without observing the provision relative to commissioners. The omission of this feature which could be relied on in direct proceedings to vacate the partition, in our judgment, discloses no more than an irregular exercise of the court's power to effect partition. The appointment of commissioners was not the basis of the jurisdiction, the statute did not so prescribe, and there is no just reason at this day, on that ground or on any other, so far as we see, to allow the heirs to enter objections to the decree.

The land was the property of the estate, and was patented to Patrick C. Jack, his heirs and assigns. The decree is evidence of De Cordova's title to one-third thereof, and of a partition by a proper court conclusive on the heirs, whereby the title to the land in controversy became vested in De Cordova. This title was a legal title, and therefore, assuming that plaintiffs showed themselves to be the heirs of Jack, this outstanding title to the land was of itself sufficient to authorize the judgment rendered.

It is urged, however, that the deed from the administrator was not properly in evidence. A certified copy of this deed from the record of Uvalde County was used, and it must be conceded that the authentication was not sufficient. The original was not produced. There was an agreement in the case, one section of which we copy:

"2. Plaintiffs waive notice of the filing herewith of a certified copy from the records of Uvalde County of a deed from Thomas F. McKinney, administrator of Patrick C. Jack's estate, to Jacob De Cordova, said deed bearing date June 2, 1851, and that the original of said deed was filed for record by J.M. McCormack, then county clerk of Uvalde County, Texas, and recorded in the deed records of Uvalde County on the 31st day of July, 1857."

The objections to said copy, not disposed of by what has been said, are, that the absence of the original was not sufficiently accounted for; that the deed was not recorded in the proper county, and that the certified copy, on account of its improper registration, was not competent evidence for any purpose.

It seems to us that there was no necessity, in view of what said agreement contains, of any proof respecting the loss or contents of the original deed. The agreement contains a distinct admission that there was a deed from Thomas F. McKinney, administrator of Patrick C. Jack, to Jacob De Cordova, bearing date June 2, 1851. This, together with the preceding decree ordering the administrator to execute a deed to Jacob De Cordova for the land in controversy, would certainly after this lapse of time, and in the absence of contrary testimony, afford presumptive evidence that it was for the land ordered to be conveyed. This presumption would be eminently proper where the *232 original is shown to be lost, as the testimony that was given in this case reasonably establishes.

According to these views, the other questions raised are without significance. Plaintiffs may have proved their heirship, and defendants may not have shown regular chain of title to themselves from De Cordova, yet plaintiff should not have recovered when it appeared that the title to the land had passed out of the estate.

The judgment is affirmed.

Affirmed.