13 Tex. 298 | Tex. | 1855
Whatever question there may formerly have been respecting the right of an infant to sue by his next friend, that question was settled by the decision of this Court in the case of Cannon v. Hemphill. (7 Tex. R. 184.)
The principal, and the only questions in the case, which are of sufficient difficulty or importance to require notice, relate to the rights claimed by the defendant under his tax titles; and 1st. Whether it devolved on the defendant claiming under those deeds to prove a compliance with the legal prerequisites of the power to sell for taxes, and 2nd. Whether a defendant who has acquired and holds possession by purchase from one who had not the authority or power to sell, can he a possessor in good faith.
In the case of Yenda v. Wheeler (9 Tex. R. 408) the dis
The defendant having failed to make the required proof his fax deed was rightly held not to confer on him a valid title to the land in controversy. Was the possession acquired under it a possession in good faith ? We think clearly not. He cannot be a possessor in good faith, who acquires the possession from one who had no power to give it, if he either knew, or by the use of proper diligence, might have known the want of power in his vendor. He who assumes the authority to sell the land of another must produce his power of attorney, and he who
Judgment affirmed.