77 S.W. 266 | Tex. App. | 1903
Lead Opinion
This was an action of trespass to try title brought in the District Court of Hardin County by Helen Williamson against P.A. Work and others for the recovery of an undivided one-fourth interest in five tracts of land. The case was tried by the court without a jury and resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff for two of the tracts, and in favor of the defendants as to the other three. The plaintiff alone has appealed.
The land in controversy was patented by the Republic of Texas to Jonathan H. Lawrence and William B. Creecy, and the plaintiff showed by evidence her right to recover through heirship from William B. Creecy unless Creecy, in his lifetime, had conveyed the land. As tending to show this fact the court received in evidence a certified copy from the record of deeds of Hardin County certified March 27, 1903, of a copy recorded therein certified March 25, 1903, from the record of deeds *370 of Jefferson County of a deed recorded therein as shown by said copy March 17, 1849, executed by Jonathan Lawrence by J.F. Johnson, his attorney in fact, and William B. Creecy to B.L. Simpson, dated December 27, 1848. Hardin County was created in 1872, subsequent to the original record of the deed in Jefferson County, and the land lies in a portion of Hardin County taken from Jefferson County. The plaintiff filed an affidavit of forgery, attacking the genuineness of the deed, and objected to the admission in evidence of the copy from the record of deeds of Hardin County. The deed purported to be a notarial act executed in the city of New Orleans, and recited that William B. Creecy was "of St. Louis County, State of Missouri." There were some interlineations noted at the foot of the deed after the certificate of record made by the county clerk of Jefferson County, which are not deemed material. From the position of the note it would appear to have been made by the clerk and not the notary. It was shown by the evidence that Creecy lived in Vicksburg, Miss., and mysteriously disappeared from there in 1841, and that he was traced to New Orleans, where he was lost sight of and never heard of afterwards. The dates of the patents show that four of them were issued in 1845 and the other May 10, 1841. An affidavit of the loss of the original deed was filed by the defendants. It was made by only one of the defendants, W.A. Petty, and was to the effect that "The defendants nor either of them are or is able to produce the original of the following described deeds," etc. This affidavit was made March 29, 1897. The defendants put in evidence, for the purpose of showing acts of ownership and the assertion of claim of title under the deed from Lawrence and Creecy, an attempted deed from Clara Graves of the city of New York, shown by the certificate of acknowledgment to be the wife of W.H. Graves to James Moran and Charles A. Goff, also of the city of New York, for the said five surveys patented to Lawrence and Creecy containing the recitals, "Having been conveyed by the said patentees" (Lawrence and Creecy) "to the said Barnard L. Simpson, deceased, the former husband of the said party of the first part, by deed executed December 27, 1848, and recorded in the land records of Jefferson County, Texas, book G, pages 142, 143 and 144, on March 17, 1849, to which deed reference is hereby made for a full and complete description of the metes and bounds of said lands, as well as to the original patents which accompany this deed of conveyance. The party of the first part, Mrs. Clara Graves, inherited the said property under the laws of the State of Texas providing for the descent and distribution of the estates of intestates; the said lands being community property and there being no issue, she was entitled as survivor to all the real estate in Texas acquired during the term of her marriage with her said husband, the said Barnard L. Simpson."
This deed was dated and acknowledged November 23, 1875, and was recorded in the record of deeds for Hardin County December 15, 1875. It was received in evidence over the objections of the plaintiff. The defendants deraigned title from Goff and Moran down to themselves. *371 They were in possession of the original patents for the land issued to Lawrence and Creecy.
The affidavit of Petty was that the defendants could not procure the original deed from Lawrence and Creecy to Simpson. In form it was in compliance with the statute (Rev. Stats., art. 2312), and was a sufficient predicate for the introduction of a certified copy from the proper record. Butler v. Brown,
But the copy offered in evidence was not from any record authorized by law and was not competent evidence. Belcher v. Fox,
The deed from Clara Graves to Moran and Goff was void because the grantor's husband did not join in it and was inoperative to pass the title, but the original deed was admissible for the purpose of corroborating the evidence of the validity of the deed from Lawrence and Creecy to Simpson. Fordtran v. Perry, 60 S.W. Rep., 1000. For the error shown, the judgment of the court below will be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded. *372
Addendum
The appellees in their motion for a rehearing show that as a matter of fact a copy of the deed from Creecy to Simpson certified from the records of Jefferson County was put in evidence, and attach to their motion an agreement of counsel for appellant and a certificate of the trial judge to that effect. They also attach the certified copy from the records of Jefferson County, and show that copies from the records of both Jefferson and Hardin counties were before the court, and that in making up the statement of facts the copy from the records of Jefferson County was omitted, and counsel for appellant agrees that said copy attached to the motion "may be looked to by this court and considered as having been offered and admitted in evidence on the trial thereof, provided this court shall see fit to entertain a rehearing of said cause." A statement of facts filed after the time allowed by law, although agreed to by counsel for both parties and approved by the trial judge, will not be considered by this court. Wilcox v. League, 6 Texas Ct. Rep., 214. This court has no jurisdiction to correct the record of the trial court or to change it. Bogges v. Harris,
Overruled. *373