182 S.W. 1156 | Tex. App. | 1916
This is an action of trespass to try title, brought by Phelps against the appellee. J. W. Parker is the common source of title. On January 4, 1909, he conveyed the premises in controversy to M. L. Swinehart. This deed was not recorded. By deed dated May 6, 1910, recorded February 14, 1911, Swinehart conveyed the same to appellee. Appellee went into possession on or about March 1, 1910, and remained in continuous, peaceable, and adverse possession until the filing of this suit on May 21, 1914. By deed dated November 10, 1909, recorded November 10, 1909, Parker, for a valuable consideration, conveyed the premises to the Jesse French Piano Organ Company, who, in turn, conveyed same to Phelps by deed dated October 30. 1914, recorded November 4, 1914. This deed was executed in ratification of a prior ineffective deed of said company to Phelps, dated December 29, 1909, which was filed for record January 5, 1910. On November 10, 1909, and December 29, 1909, the Jesse French Piano Organ Company and Phelps had no notice, actual or constructive, of the deed from Parker to Swinehart, and the entry upon the land by the appellee on March 1, 1910, was the first notice Phelps had of its claim to the land. The only question presented is whether appellee acquired title under the three-year statute of limitation.
Article 6824, R.S., provides that all conveyances of land shall be void as to subsequent purchasers for a valuable consideration without notice unless they shall be acknowledged and filed for record as required by law; but the same, as between the parties and their heirs, and as to subsequent purchasers with notice thereof, or without valuable consideration, shall nevertheless be valid and binding. By article 5672 R.S., it is provided that every suit to recover real estate, as against one in peaceable and adverse possession thereof under title or color of title, must be brought within three years next after the cause of action shall have accrued. The point at issue between the parties resolves itself into this: Does an unrecorded deed constitute color of title within the meaning of articles 5672 and 5673, R.S.? If so, judgment was properly rendered for appellee.
Appellant calls to our attention the cases of Cox v. Bray,
In order to determine whether appellee's unrecorded deed constitutes color of title, it is only necessary to inquire whether it is intrinsically fair and honest. The deed is clearly valid as between Parker and Swinehart, and therefore neither void in the correct sense of the term, nor lacking in intrinsic fairness and honesty. The fact that it was unrecorded is what constitutes it color of title. Had the instrument been duly recorded, appellee would have had title to the premises notwithstanding appellant's subsequently acquired and subsequently recorded deed. It is apparent that Swinehart's failure to record his deed did not operate to make it void as between him and his grantor, nor did such failure affect the fairness and honesty of the transaction between them. While he undoubtedly would be estopped to assert title as against one holding under a subsequently acquired deed for value without notice, this does not render his deed "void" in the technical sense of that term nor make it lacking in intrinsic fairness and honesty. Article 5673, R.S., not only defines "color of title," but aptly illustrates it as follows:
"And by `color of title' is meant a consecutive chain of such transfer down to such person in possession, without being regular, as if one or more of the memorials or muniments be not registered, or not duly registered, or be only in writing, or such like defect as may not extend to or include the want of intrinsic fairness and honesty."
Chief Justice Stayton, speaking for our Supreme Court in Grigsby et al. v. May et al.,
"This definition doubtless was intended to give instances in which the chain of transfer would not be regular, within the meaning of the statute; but want of registration or of due registration in the chain giving color of title could have no operation in the matter of notice, and evidently was not intended to affect the right of a person holding under color of title; for, notwithstanding such irregularities may exist, the same protection is given as would be were the party holding under `title.'"
Continuing, and still discussing the definition as illustrated by the words of the statute, Judge Stayton says:
"The other illustration is where one or more of the muniments of title `be only in writing,' which evidently was intended to cover cases in which the evidence of right, though in writing, was not executed in the manner prescribed by law: and, under the statute, these are not defects which make the muniments wanting in `intrinsic fairness and honesty.' The statute, however, in effect, does declare that like defects in regularity will cause the claim to be only `color of title,' and does not deprive those of this effect unless they be wanting in intrinsic fairness and honesty." *1158
In the same case, the court refers to the case of Pearson v. Burditt,
"All the examples of irregularity given have relation to the muniment of right, and for this reason it was decided in Tearson v. IBurditt that `the term, "intrinsic fairness and honesty," embraced in the definition of color of title in our statute, relates to the means of proving the right of property in the land, so as to make the title equitably equal to a regular chain.' By `equitably equal to a regular chain' we understand to have been meant simply that, if the muniments in the chain of transfer were in fact freely executed by the persons whose acts they appear to be, then they are sufficient if, upon their faces, they show such right to land as a court of equity would enforce as between the parties to the instrument; and that this is what was intended is evident from the facts of the case then under consideration by this court."
As between Parker and Swinehart, the deed of January 4, 1909, was in all respects regular and binding upon both, and as a result possessed the intrinsic fairness and honesty which is demanded by the statute of all the links in a regular chain of transfer from and under the sovereignty. This deed, therefore, although unrecorded, is not in any sense void, as contended for by appellant, and proof of its execution, together with proof of three years' peaceable and adverse possession, was a complete bar to plaintiff's action. As is indicated above, an examination of the adversely cited authorities will show that in every instance, the instrument attacked was void in the strictest sense as between the parties thereto, and therefore lacking in intrinsic fairness and honesty. It has never been held, so far as we are advised, that a deed which is valid and binding between the parties is, because unrecorded, void in the strict sense of that term, or that it is so lacking in intrinsic fairness and honesty that it does not constitute color of title. Indeed, such a holding would be manifestly incongruous, in view of article 5673, which expressly defines color of title as a consecutive chain of transfer, down to the person in possession, without being regular, and instances such an irregularity as failure to register, or duly register, one or more of the muniments.
Affirmed.