221 S.W. 254 | Tex. | 1920
This was an action of trespass to try the title to 640 acres of land in Lubbock County, in which appellees were plaintiffs and appellants were defendants.
The case was tried in the District Court without a jury and judgment was rendered for appellees. The Court of Civil Appeals reversed the judgment and remanded the cause for a new trial,
In order that our answers to the properly certified questions may be understood, we state the following facts from the certificate.
The land was patented by the State, on May 25, 1882, to John H. Gibson, who died on Oct. 28, 1877, and the heirs of John H. Gibson conveyed the land, on March 30, 1910, to appellant P.C. Gibson, who conveyed an undivided half interest in the land, on May 5, 1911, to appellants W.F. Schenck and N. Frank Faulk, in consideration of legal services rendered and to be rendered.
The land was located under a duplicate certificate, numbered 35/52, dated July 15, 1878, reciting that satisfactory evidence had been produced of the loss of land script certificate No. 16, issued to John H. Gibson on July 27, 1875, for 640 acres of land, and declaring that the duplicate would entitle the said John H. Gibson to all the benefits granted by the original certificate.
On May 23, 1879, a survey was made of the 640 acres of land in controversy by virtue of the duplicate certificate No. 35/52 "for J.S. Daugherty, C.A. Connell, and J.A. Ammermann."
By deed dated and acknowledged June 21, 1879, Stephen Albert, of Floyd County, Indiana, transferred and assigned to J.S. Daugherty duplicate certificate No. 35/52, and the deed recited that the certificate was a "duplicate of certificate No. 16, issued to the said John H. Gibson, by Commissioner of the General Land Office, on the 27th day of July, 1875, and transferred by said John H. Gibson to me, the said Stephen Albert." This deed was duly recorded on June 28, 1886.
Appellees have a regular chain of title, duly recorded, to the 640 acres of land, under J.S. Daugherty, the deed to appellees being dated August 14, 1905.
There was evidence, some of which tended to establish, and some of which tended to negative, acquiescence by the heirs of John H. Gibson in the claim to the 640 acres under Stephen Albert.
No possession of the land was shown, save that appellant Schenck had collected $32 per year as rent, for a period not stated. *477
The appellees were entitled to recover only in the event that they established an ancient transfer, or chain of ancient transfers, of original certificate No. 16, from John H. Gibson to Stephen Albert.
Appellees offered in evidence certified copies of written instruments, endorsed as filed in the General Land Office on the day on which the duplicate certificate was issued, as follows:
1st. An affidavit of Stephen Albert, made July 8, 1878, to the effect that when he delivered, at New Albany Indiana, to the Adams Express Company, Texas land script No. 166, the transfer of same to him was attached thereto, and that the script and transfer had been lost, and that affiant was the sole, exclusive and absolute owner of the certificate and had never transferred the same or any interest therein to any person.
2nd. An affidavit of W.E. Parry, made July 3, 1878, to the effect that when he sold and delivered to Edward White and Stephen Albert of New Albany, Ind., Texas land script No. 16, and eight other certificates whose numbers were stated, the transfers were properly made and acknowledged, and that affiant had no memoranda to refresh his memory as to the exact numbers of the certificates, yet, to the best of his recollection, knowledge and belief, the numbers given were correct.
3rd. An affidavit of J.L.A. Thomas, made July 12, 1878, to the effect that on February 22, 1878, he was a manager of the Texas Express Company, and that on that day he was attacked by armed and masked men and a number of valuables were taken from him, and among them was one package from New Albany, Ind., valued at $1400, addressed to S.W. Lomax at Ft. Worth, Texas.
Appellees also offered in evidence a copy, certified by the Commissioner of the General Land Office, of an affidavit of B.B. Paddock, made May 24, 1878, to the publication in the "Democrat" at Fort Worth, Texas, for sixty days, of a notice signed by "F.W. Conner, Agent, Texas Express Company," of the loss of nine land certificates, including certificate No. 16, issued to John H. Gibson, and that if not recovered or found within sixty days, application for duplicate would be made.
The first question certified is whether the trial court erred in admitting the foregoing affidavits in evidence, over the following objections: first, that the affidavits were not archives of the Land Office; second, that the affidavits were secondary and hearsay evidence; and third, that the matters shown by the affidavits were conclusions of the affiants.
The law in force when the duplicate certificate was issued was the same as in articles 3883, 3884, and 3885 of the Revised Statutes of 1879. It is evident that the affidavits were filed in an attempt to meet the provisions of the law. The Land Commissioner, in the exercise of his authority to determine the sufficiency of the affidavits, having approved same, and having issued thereon the duplicate *478
certificate, under which the land in controversy was patented, it cannot be said that the law did not authorize or permit the filing of the affidavits, and hence there is no doubt they became archives, and the certified copies were as admissible in evidence as would be the originals. Southwestern Surety Ins. Co. v. Anderson,
The law under which the duplicate certificate issued required that "when the assignee of the original grantee applies for such duplicate, the evidence of this title shall be filed in the general land office, if not already on file." Under this requirement, Albert filed, and the Commissioner approved, as the evidence of his title, proof that transfers into himself of the certificate had been executed, and that the certificate and transfers had been lost. With this affirmative showing that the duplicate issued, not on filed transfers but on proof of inability to file transfers, and with all parties claiming under the act of the Commissioner in accepting this proof, we do not think that any further showing was necessary that a search would be unavailing in the Land Office for better evidence of the missing links in appellees' chain of title, and hence the objection was not tenable that the affidavits were secondary evidence.
Since it is not consistent with human experience for one really owning property of value to assert no claim thereto, but to acquiesce for a long period of time in an unfounded, hostile claim, the rule is sound which permits the inference that an apparent owner has parted with his title from evidence, first, of a long asserted and open claim, adverse to that of the apparent owner; second, of nonclaim by the apparent owner; and third, of acquiescence, by the apparent owner, in the adverse claim.
The rule is essential to the ascertainment of the very truth of ancient transactions. Without it, numberless valid land titles could not be upheld. Its application becomes more and more important with the passing years, as it becomes more and more difficult to get living witnesses to that which long ago transpired.
As evidence of a claim of ownership, recitals in ancient instruments are admissible, over the objection that they are hearsay or self serving. Dunn v. Epperson,
The recitals here objected to are in ancient public archives, and were admissible as circumstances, because showing an open, unequivocal, and positive claim of ownership, to prove, in connection *479
with other evidence, a sale of the land certificate by John H. Gibson. Bounds v. Little,
We do not think that the fact that some of the averments of the affidavits were in the form of conclusions prevented their admission for the purpose we have stated; and, it may be noted that without certain of the statements objected to as conclusions, an affidavit to procure a duplicate of a lost certificate would not have complied with the law.
It is urged that in no event were the contents of Parry's affidavit admissible because he was alive. The parties interposing this objection introduced portions of Parry's deposition to the effect that he had sold as many as 500 land certificates, and had sold some to Stephen Albert, but that he could not remember the number of each certificate that was sold. Under these circumstances, we have no doubt that the recitals of this ancient affidavit were admissible in the enquiry as to the number of the certificates involved in the sale to Albert. Surely it could not be said that any different rule should be applied where it was shown that a declarant had lost his recollection of an occurrence in the remote past than would be applied where it was shown that he had died. Because of the effect of the long lapse of time on the average human memory, we would not, however, be inclined to hold that recitals in an ancient affidavit were rendered inadmissible by the fact that the affiant was yet alive.
Actual possession of the land by Stephen Albert or by his assigns was not essential to the establishment by circumstantial evidence of the alleged missing link or links in the title from John H. Gibson to Stephen Albert.
The court pointed out, in an opinion by Chief Justice Gaines, in Baldwin v. Goldfrank,
In harmony with this view, it was held in Brewer v. Cochran,supra, in passing on the admissibility of recitals in ancient deeds that "the recitals were not offered, nor admitted, as direct evidence of execution of the recited deeds, but only as a circumstance showing a claim by Roberts made as early as 1869, nearly 40 years ago, as explanatory of his claim of title in himself, that the Brewers had conveyed it to him. The claim of title and assertion of ownership, as evidenced by various acts of sale and conveyance, all made matter of public record, and by payment of taxes by his vendees, are admissible as circumstances,without actual possession, which is *480 not essential, especially in case of wild land such as this, of which there has never been actual possession by anybody."
The claim by Stephen Albert was to an unlocated land certificate, which had not become realty. In Condit v. Galveston City Company,
None of the objections to the admission of the affidavits required their exclusion and the trial court did not err in overruling such objections and in admitting the affidavits.
The third question certified is whether the trial court erred in admitting in evidence the recital in the transfer of the duplicate certificate from Stephen Albert to J.S. Daugherty, dated June 21, 1879, that the certificate was a duplicate of one transferred by John H. Gibson to Stephen Albert, over the objection that such recital was secondary evidence of the transfer and was a conclusion.
The fourth question certified is whether certain proceedings in the District Court of Baylor County in 1884 and 1885, were admissible in evidence, for any purpose, such proceedings having been brought by J.S. Daugherty against J.H. Gibson and others, and containing recitals that the Gibson certificate had been transferred to Stephen Albert. The testimony showed that J.H. Gibson was dead at the date of the proceedings and failed to show that Daugherty was ever in actual possession of the land.
We answer that the recital in the ancient transfer from Albert to Daugherty and in the ancient pleadings in the District Court of Baylor County were admissible to show a claim of ownership of the land certificate and land by Stephen Albert and his assigns, and that the admissibility of such recitals did not depend on whether actual possession was shown of the certificate or land. Harrison v. Friar, 8 Texas Civ. App. 524[
Question numbered Second (a), asks whether the trial court erred in admitting in evidence that part of the answer of the witness W.E. Parry, wherein he deposed that he owned certificate No. 16, over the objection that same was an opinion and conclusion of the witness and was hearsay and secondary evidence.
Question numbered Second (b) asks whether the trial court erred in overruling the objection to the answer of the witness W.E. Parry that he sold certificate No. 16 to Stephen Albert in due course of trade and received from him the value thereof at the time and delivered same to him at his place of business, the objection being that the testimony was secondary and hearsay and was a conclusion of the witness. *481
In our opinion the trial court did not err in overruling all the objections recited in Question Second (a), and in Question Second (b), save the objection that the statement of the witness that he owned certificate No. 16 was a conclusion.
It is not every conclusion or inference of the ordinary witness which ought to be excluded. As said in Wharton's Law of Evidence, Vol. 1, section 510: "The true line of distinction is this: an inference necessarily involving certain facts may be stated without the facts, the inference being an equivalent to a specification of the facts; but when the facts are not necessarily involved in the inference (e.g., when the inference may be sustained upon either of several distinct phases of fact, neither of which it necessarily involves), then the facts must be stated. In other words, when the opinion is the mere short-hand rendering of the facts, then the opinion can be given, subject to cross-examination as to the facts on which it is based."
Since one may become the owner of a land certificate in a variety of ways, as by devise, or descent, or purchase, or limitation, the statement that one is owner cannot be properly said to necessarily involve any certain facts. So, the rule stated clearly forbade the admission of the statement of the witness that he owned the certificate, over the objection that he was stating his conclusion.
The following authorities also support our conclusion that the objection should have been sustained. Gilbert v. Odum,
When the rule is applied to the statement that the witness sold the certificate to a certain purchaser and received its value, and delivered the certificate to the purchaser, we think the court below rightly refused to exclude this statement. For, a sale, on a consideration received, of such an article as a land certificate consists of only two elements, first, the agreement to pass the title for the stipulated consideration, and second, a delivery of the property. Skirvin v. O'Brien,
To the fifth question we answer that it was incumbent on the plaintiffs, in this action of trespass to try title, to establish the missing links in the chain of title, under which they claimed the 640 acres of land, by the preponderance of the evidence, before they were entitled to recover.
We express no opinion on the questions certified as to the sufficiency of the evidence, excluding that not admissible, to support the trial court's judgment, since this court has uniformly held that *482
the statutes do not authorize the transfer of an entire case to this court nor intend to have this court, in answering certified questions, to substitute its jurisdiction for that of the Court of Civil Appeals. Falfurrias Immigration Company v. Spielhagen,