Court Opinion

ID: 9834301
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-01 23:28:12.626955+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:44:13.645819
License: Public Domain

WILLSON, C. J.
(after stating the facts as above). [1] The sufficiency of the evidence to support the finding of the jury and judgment of the court is not challenged by any of the assignments in appellant’s brief. Those assignments, except one of them in which complaint is made of the form of the question submitted to the jury, all relate to the action of the court in overruling objections made by appellant to the admission of testimony offered by appellees. This court, therefore if it might do so, is not called upon to review the evidence and determine the question as to its sufficiency presented by the oral argument of the parties when the cause was submitted. Rules 24 and 29 for Courts of Civil Appeals (142 S. W. xii); Vernon’s Statutes, art. 1612.
It appeared that a survey containing 1,968 acres of land, situated east of Boston, in Bowie county, was patented to C. M. Akin in 1844, and another survey, containing 2,637 acres, situated west of Boston, in said county, was patented to said Akin in 1855. The records of Bowie county were destroyed in January, 1889. Before they were destroyed the Texarkana Abstract Company made abstracts of deeds recorded therein affecting the title to said surveys and parts thereof. At the trial it was agreed between the parties that said abstract company had complied with the provisions of article 3703, Vernon’s Statutes, and that the abstracts made by it of deeds, etc,, affecting the title to the 440 acres of the 2,637 acres survey in controversy should be admitted as evidence, and as ‘‘prima facie true,” subject to such objections as might ‘‘apply to the original instruments referred to by such abstracts.” It appeared from the abstracts that on December 12, 1877, I. M. Ball and B. T. Estes owned a tract of 640 acres in the 2,637-aere survey and a tract of 640 acres in the 1,968-acre survey, and that said Ball and said Estes by their deed of that date conveyed to one J. D. Mason land described in said deed, according to the abstract thereof, as follows:
“All our interest in 640 acres of the H. R. S. of O. M. Akin. Reference to deed from G. M. Akin to L. M. Rice and H. D. Mason.”
[2] This abstract, except the second of the two sentences thereof quoted above, was offered in evidence by appellees and admitted by the court over appellant’s objection thereto on the ground that the land described in'it was not the land in controversy, but was land in the Akin 1,968-acre survey. The action of the court in admitting the abstract indicated is the basis of appellant’s first assignment of error. As it appears from the record that after said abstract, with the exception stated, was admitted over his objection, appellant himself offered and the court admitted the whole of the abstract as evidence in his (appellant’s) behalf, it is not necessary to determine whether the part offered by appellees was admissible in their behalf or not. If it was not, appellant could not be heard to complain of the error in admitting it after he himself introduced the entire abstract in evidence. Eastland v. Maney, 81 S. W. 574, 36 Tex. Civ. App. 147; Canal Co. v. Miller, 40 Tex. Civ. App. 460, 90 S. W. 206.
Appellees claimed that the reference in the abstract of the deed from Ball and Estes to J. D. Mason to a deed from Akin to L. M. Rice and H. D. Mason, which was made in 1846, and conveyed 640 acres in the Akin *1851,968-acre survey, was a mistake of the compiler of the abstract, and that the reference should have been, instead, to a deed from said Akin to L. M. Rice alone, made in 1859, which conveyed the 640 acres in the 2,637-acre survey. They undertook to prove their contention by circumstances and to show that the land Ball and Estes in fact conveyed to J. D. Mason by their'deed of December 12, 1877, was the 640 acres, including the 440 acres in controversy, in said Akin 2,637-acre survey.
[3] As a circumstance tending to support their contention, appellees offered, and the court over appellant’s objection, on the ground that it was irrelevant and immaterial and liable to mislead the jury, permitted appellees to prove that after 1877 neither Ball nor Estes rendered any of the land in controversy for taxes. When it is remembered that “a conveyance of land may be established by circumstantial evidence” (Gaines, C. J., in Thompson v. Dutton, 71 S. W. 544, 96 Tex. 205), we think it is plain that, while.the testimony may have been inadmissible because a proper predicate for its admission had not been laid (Bounds v. Little, 75 Tex. 316, 12 S. W. 1109), it was not subject to the objection urged to it (Walker v. Pittman, 18 Tex. Civ. App. 519, 46 S. W. 117; Herndon v. Burnett, 21 Tex. Civ. App. 25, 50 S. W. 581; Lumber Co. v. Gwin, 52 S. W. 110; Lumber co. v. Bonner, 56 Tex. Civ. App. 208, 120 S. W. 577; McMahon v. McDonald, 51 Tex. Civ. App. 613, 113 S. W. 322; Surghenor v. Ducey, 139 S. W. 23).
[4] Therefore the second assignment is overruled, as is the third, for the same reason, and also because it does not appear from anything in the record that the testimony of the witnesses S. O. Ball and W. L. Estes was objected to when same was offered by appel-lees.
[5] The question submitted by the court to the jury was as follows:
“Do you find that the evidence showed by a preponderance thereof that on the 12th day of December, 1877, I. M. Ball and B. T. Estes conveyed to J. D. Mason 640 acres of land out of the C. M. Akin headlight survey, containing' 2,637 'acres, being patent S95 and abstract No. 1, and situated on the line of Bowie and Red River counties, being the 640 acres of which the 440 acres in controversy is a part?”
Appellant insists that the question was on the weight of the evidence, in that ’ “the court assumed that the land described in the deed from O. M. Akin to L. M. Rice and H. D. Mason was a part of the O. M. Akin west survey, patent No. 895,” and was further objectionable because “it delegated to the jury the right to pass upon the legality of the evidence.” It is clear, we think, that the question is not subject to either of the objections urged to it.
Appellant having failed to show error requiring a reversal of the judgment, it is affirmed.

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