Appellees Adoue & Lobit,. plaintiffs in the court below, brought this suit on June 30, 1910, against Ella Smith, and Libby and Pearl Smith, children of Ella Smith and W. M. Smith, to recover the title and possession of blocks numbered 55, 58,. 75, and 78 of Flake’s subdivision of a part of the W. H. Jack league in Galveston county near the town of Hitchcock, and known as the Bautsch place. The defendants Libby and Pearl Smith disclaimed, and defendant Ella Smith, who at the time the suit was filed was a feme sole, pleaded not guilty and the statute of limitations of 10 years. A trial before a jury resulted in a verdict and. judgment for plaintiffs, from which judgment the defendant, after her motion for a new trial had been overruled, has appealed.
E. J. Biering is the common source of title. On April 25, 1899, E J. Biering, to secure-to Adoue & Lobit the payment of a loan of $1,000 then made, executed to J. A. La Bar-the, as trustee, a deed of trust upon the land in controversy. December 3, 1900, Bier-ing was adjudged a bankrupt, and J. R. Cheek was appointed and qualified as trustee. Cheek as trustee sold the land to Adoue & Lobit in satisfaction of their mortgage debt,, and on April 27, 1903, this sale was confirmed by the United States District Court in. which the bankruptcy proceedings were pending, and pursuant to the directions of said, court, Cheek, trustee, on May 27, 1903, executed his deed conveying the land in controversy to Adoue & Lobit.
Ella Smith deraigns title as follows: (1)-Dee'd dated August 1, 1910, from E. J. Bier-ing to Chas. Hughes, conveying the land in. controversy. This deed contains the following recital: “Whereas, the above-described, tract of land was by me sold and conveyed *259 and. possession delivered to Chas. Hughes, by deed dated and eseeuted by me on or about the first day of February, 1898, and said deed having been lost and never placed upon record, which has created a missing link in the record title of said land, I have received full and satisfactory payment therefor, this deed is executed to take the place of and supply the deed so lost and unrecorded.” This deed does not appear by the record in this case to have been filed or recorded in the county clerk’s office of Galveston county. (2) The following receipt: “Hitchcock, Texas, April 9, 1901. Rec’d from Mrs. Ella Smith ($500.00) five hundred dollars for payment in full for blocks numbered fifty-five (55), fifty-eight (58), seventy-five (75), seventy-eight (78), in A. Flake’s subdivision of a part of the M. H. Jack league, said subdivision being known as Flake’s addition to Hitchcock, being ten (10) acres of land more or less and the improvements thereon situated. [Signed] Charlie Hughes.” It does not appear that Charles Hughes ever executed a deed to Ella Smith conveying the title of the land to her, and so far as the record shows such title as the said Hughes had is still in him.
On the issue of 10 years’ limitations, the defendant Ella Smith testified (that, more' than 10 years before the filing of the suit and prior to the purchase of the land by her from Hughes, her husband abandoned her, and that they never lived together again; that two or three years before the storm of September 8, 1900, she moved on the land in question and lived there until the storm blew her house to pieces; that the year following the storm she allowed a Mr. Seidler to live upon and cultivate the land; that she then returned to and has lived u£on the land ever since; and that her possession and occupancy were under a claim of right. This testimony was sharply controverted by witnesses introduced by plaintiffs, by whose testimony it was shown that one Torrey, a relative of Ella Smith, rented the land from Biering some two or three years before the storm, and that Ella Smith lived with him, keeping a part of her furniture and her sewing machine in the house on the land rented by Torrey, and the balance in a house across the railroad; that Torrey continued to live on and cultivate the land as tenant of Bier-ing until the storm; that Seidler and his wife then lived on the place as tenants of Biering from the time of the storm in 1900 until the year 1903; that they cultivated the land in 1904; and that it was after this that Ella Smith moved on the land and claimed the same by virtue of her purchase from Hughes. Plaintiffs proved, in this connection, that on June 1, 1909, W. M. Smith, the husband of Ella Smith, leased the land in controversy from Adoue & Lobit. To offset the effect of this evidence, defendant undertook to prove that on that date Ella and W. M. Smith were not living together as husband and wife, and that W. M. Smith had abandoned her more than 10 years before obtaining the lease, and that they never lived together after' their first separation. This was testified to by several witnesses. On the other hand, it was shown by the testimony of several witnesses that Ella Smith and her husband had not separated, but continued to live together, and that upon the date of the lease they were still living together as husband and wife, and so continued until W. M. Smith died.
We find no reversible error in the record, and the judgment of the court below is affirmed.
Affirmed.
