No. 6181 | Tex. | May 14, 1889

Henry, Associate Justice.

The defendant in error instituted this suit to try title to a league and labor of land lying in Runnels County, patented to the heirs of Hiram Friley.

Plaintiff claimed title to the whole through Julia Childress as the sole heir of said Hiram Friley.

Defendant claimed under conveyances coming through two children of the said Hiram by a different wife.

The date of Hiram Friley’s emigration to Texas, as well as his death, is uncertain. It may be assumed with some certainty that he was here as early as 1828 and died before 1837.

The certificate by virtue of which the land was located was granted to the heirs of Hiram Friley by an act of the Legislature of this State passed February 7, 1853, upon the petition of Julia Childress, alleging that she was the only heir of the said Hiram.

The defendants introduced through deposition of an aged witness in Mississippi declarations of deceased relations of Hiram Friley to the effect that before coming to Texas he was'married to the mother of the two children under whom defendants claim; that they were his children by her; that the mother and one of the children came with him to Texas and subsequently returned to Mississippi, and that such wife died after her return, leaving surviving her said two children. Just when she died is not stated.

*44Plaintiff introduced evidence that Hiram Friley and the mother of Julia Childress were husband and wife in Texas, and that both died here, leaving her their only child.

The date or place of Friley’s marriage to either woman is not stated. Attached to the petition of Mrs. Childress to the Legislature were four affidavits with regard to Friley’s residence in Texas and his having a wife and one young child. Three of these witnesses do not identify Mrs. Childress as such child; the fourth one does.

The documentary evidence introduced shows that the certificate under which the land was located was granted by the Legislature by a special act to the heirs of Hiram Friley at the petition of Julia Childress, alleging that she was the only heir of Hiram Friley. The decisive question made by the evidence is whether the mother of Julia Childress or the mother of the vendors of the defendants was the wife of Hiram Friley.

Legitimate evidence was introduced by both parties which uncontradicted would ordinarily, standing by itself, be sufficient to sustain the case of each, without being conclusive or entirely satisfactory upon the part of either when disputed by the other. The jury having found for plaintiff on the theory that Mrs. Childress was the sole heir their verdict must stand unless errors that may have influenced that result are shown to have occurred during the trial.

The first four assignments of error insisted upon by appellants relate to the exclusion of evidence contained in depositions of defendant’s witnesses. The «excluded evidence was as sollows: Mrs. E. M. Boyd stated that she knew the land certificate was located by Soloman Friley through letters from him to her husband, and that her husband paid his share of the expense of locating said certificate; that she knew Hiram Friley had a headright claim for a league and labor of land in Texas, which was located about thirty years ago by his son Solomon Friley for the benefit of himself and her husband, Charles W. Boyd, sole heirs of said Hiram Friley; this she knew from general family history and correspondence between her husband and Solomon Friley and from her husband sending money to Solomon Friley to pay his part of the expenses.

Part of this evidence was properly excluded because it showed there was better evidence of the facts to which it related; other parts were ex-excluded because they were statements of the opinions or conclusions of the witness and not a detail of facts; and other parts are inadmissible hearsay testimony.

The facts about the grant and its location are incontro vertibly proved by other evidence in the record.

The payment by the husband and brother of the witness of the expense of locating the certificate does not establish or tend to establish that their mother was the wife of Hiram Friley or that they were his descendants, *45nor do they tend to prove that the mother of Mrs. Childress was not her father’s wife.

The court excluded the evidence of another witness by whom defendant offered to prove he had heard it generally reported that the mother of Mrs. Childress was not the wife -of Hiram Friley. Evidence of the same Avitness Avas offered to prove some things that he had frequently heard Solomon Friley say that his father said about Julia Childress Avith regard to her paternity, not at all affecting that or her legitimacy, and utterly irrelevant and unimportant.

It Avas proposed to prove by another witness that Solomon Friley claimed to have emigrated to Texas from Yazoo County, Mississippi, and also that he claimed a one-third interest in a league and labor of land located by virtue of- his father’s headlight. There is nothing in the case to make the county from which Solomon Friley emigrated to Texas material. If it was material and proof of that fact Avould establish or tend to establish his title to the land the fact could not even then be proved by his own statements to that effect. It is useless to say that his claiming a third interest in this land as being the headlight of his father can not be received as evidence of title in him.

All of the evidence Avas correctly excluded.

The court permitted Julia Childress and another witness to testify that she “obtained the land by a relief bill of the Legislature granted upon her petition to that body.” This evidence was objected to by defendant, and its admission is assigned as error. The same facts were proved by uncontroverted record evidence, and if this testimony was improper it can not be considered as having tended to improperly influence the result. We think, however, it Avas properly admitted, if for no other purpose to identify her as the person who made the petition to the Legislature. While it was not necessary in the absence of a dispute over her identity to do that there Avas no harm in it.

The sixth assignment complains that “the court erred in not submitting in his charge to the jury the right of Solomon Friley to inherit as a child of the half-blood of the community estate of Hiram Friley and wife.” There is nothing in the record for such a charge to properly apply to. If the charge had been proper and the court had omitted it the proper thing for appellant to have done would then have been to request it. If the court gives an improper charge error may be assigned on it. Error can not be assigned on the omission to give even a proper charge. That can be reached only by calling the court’s attention to the omission by requesting a proper charge, which it is presumed will be given when requested, or if it is not the refusal will properly be assigned as error.

The seventh assignment is as follows: “The court erred in section 6 of his charge to the jury wherein he instructs them as follows: 'The burden of proof is on the plaintiff to establish by a preponderance of evi*46dence the fact that Julia Childress was a legitimate child of Hiram Friley, and when he has done so it devolves upon defendant to prove also by a preponderance of evidence that Solomon and Elizabeth, one or both, were also his legitimate children, and in the case of Elizabeth also that the Boyds, who made the deed to defendant, were her heirs and that she is dead/”

The objection urged to this charge is that the evidence shows that Hiram Friley was married to Elizabeth Smith before his emigration to Texas; that the law presumes marital relations once established to continue and children of such marriage to be legitimate, and that the burden of proof was on appellee by a preponderance of evidence to prove the discontinuance of said married relation and the illegitimacy of Solomon and Elizabeth Friley. If the fact of such marriage was admitted or established there is uo doubt about the correctness of the presumptions contended for. The burden of proof was on the plaintiff and never shifted.

But while plaintiff, to recover the whole of the land as he did, was required to prove that Julia Childress was the legitimate child and only heir of her father, he was not required to negatively show by evidence directly applicable to Solomon Friley and his sister Elizabeth that they were not born of a lawful previous marriage of their father.

If plaintiff in making out his own case had introduced sufficient evidence of the sole heirship of Julia Childress to establish his case, without mentioning other children or a former marriage, then in order to defeat the case so made it was incumbent on defendants to introduce evidence of a prior marriage and children born of it, and on that issue the evidence of the existence of such former marriage and children ought to outweigh the evidence against it.

The charge relates to two questions only, and does not refer to or ohange the burden of proof on the whole case.

In another part of the charge the jury were directed to return a verdict for plaintiff for the whole of the land if the evidence showed that Julia Childress was the legitimate child and sole heir of Hiram Friley. The effect of this was to place on him the burden of proof of the whole case.' The rule that the burden of proof rests on the plaintiff relates to the entire case but not to every contention in it.

The eighth assignment is as follows: The verdict of the jury is contrary to the evidence, insomuch that it finds that Elizabeth Boyd and Solomon Friley were not the sole heirs of Hiram Friley, and insomuch as it finds in favor of plaintiff against defendant.”

As we have said, the proof on each side was of much the same character and not necessarily conclusive. It was in the nature of the issue for •either side to have produced more direct and more comincing evidence than was tendered. At least such ordinarily would be expected. The fifty years that had elapsed at the date of the trial since the events in*47quired about had occurred had cast so much obscurity over the facts that probably no weigntier evidence was obtainable. While the other evidence was sufficient to sustain the verdict of the jury, we think the facts that more than thirty years before this trial, and twenty years nearer the occurrence of the events, when many witnesses since dead must have been living, it was Mrs. Childress who sought and obtained the certificate upon her open and public assertion that she was her father’s only heir, ought not to be without weight now. The judgment is affirmed.

Affirmed.

Delivered May 14, 1889.

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