Court Opinion

ID: 3972068
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:30:35.711019+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:17:52.074963
License: Public Domain

It appeared from testimony heard at the trial that Phil Jones and Susan Duncan were married August 10, 1875, and that appellee Sarah Williams, their only child, was born June 15, 1877. It further appeared that Phil and Susan separated after they had lived together a few years, and that, while they were never divorced, they never afterwards lived together. It further appeared that before he died (in or about 1893) Phil and a woman named Martha lived on the land as husband and wife, that they were living thereon when he died, and that Martha afterwards continued to live thereon until she died in February, 1916. Appellee Sarah Williams testified that in a conversation she had with Martha a short time after Phil died Martha claimed a right to occupy and use the land while she lived, and that she (Sarah) agreed she might do so.
Appellant's contention in support of his claim of title by virtue of the 10-year statute of limitations was that Phil had several children by another woman in Smith county before he married Susan Duncan; that a few days after the time when Phil died those children appeared in Harrison county and claimed to own the land; that Martha recognized their claim as superior to any she had, and that said children and Martha then agreed that Martha should continue to reside on and use the land as their tenant so long as she lived. As supporting his contention, appellant offered to prove by his witness Turner Bell, among other things, the following: That when on his deathbed, the day or day before he died, Phil, having sent for the witness, said to him:
"I have some children at Tyler by the name of Lucas. Their mother is dead. * * * You write to Polly Lucas and tell her * * * to tell my children I bought 50 acres of land here and want them to have it."
That he, the witness, wrote as requested, and that "they," quoting from the bill of exceptions —
"came in five or six days to old lady Martha's house and then to my [witness] house and said they were Phil's children. I told them [the witness would have further testified] that their father said he wanted them to have the 50 acres of land over there, and wanted Martha to live on it until her death. Me and my wife went back over there with them, and he said: `Ma, can you get a living out of this place?' She said: `Yes!' He said: `I have a home where I am, and can get a living out of it. We will leave it here with you. You keep the taxes paid up and keep the place up, and we will not interfere with you until your death, but at your death the property will fall to us.' She said: `All right; I will do that.' And he turned to me and said, `Mr. Bell, you hear that?' and I said I did. `Now will you keep in touch with us of what is going on?' and I said, `I will.' Aunt Martha got up and went and got the deed and tax receipt and gave them some of Phil's best clothes. They stayed there about two days. Phil told me the mother of the children was dead, and he gave them to a white lady Mrs. Irving. That was the first I ever heard or knew of these children."
The action of the court in excluding the proposed testimony, on appellees' objection thereto that it was hearsay, is the basis of appellant's complaint in his first assignment of error. It may be that parts of the testimony excluded (for instance, the part thereof with reference to an agreement between Martha and persons claiming to be Phil's children) were not subject to the objection urged to it; but we think other parts thereof (for instance, the declaration by the parties who came to the witness' house in response to a letter he wrote that they "were Phil's children") were subject to it. The rule being that a party has no right to complain because the court excludes all of it, when part of testimony offered as a whole is subject to an objection urged to it (Railway Co. v. Washburn, 184 S.W. 580; McBride v. Kaulback, 207 S.W. 576; Tel. Co. v. McCormick, 219 S.W. 273; Cole v. Horton, 61 S.W. 503; Magee v. Paul, 159 S.W. 325; Railway Co. v. Burk, 146 S.W. 600; Nevill v. Railway Co., 187 S.W. 388), the assignment must be overruled.
The other assignments are predicated on the refusal of the trial court to give certain special charges requested by appellant.
One of those charges, had it been given, would have instructed the jury to find for appellant if they believed he and those under whom he claimed had "and held," quoting
"peaceable, adverse and continuous possession of the property in controversy for a period of 10 years, using, occupying, and enjoying the same, next before the commencement of this suit, uninterrupted by any adverse holding."
It was not error to refuse the charge, for at least two reasons: First, because it appeared that the suit was commenced by a petition filed November 24, 1919, did not appear that appellant himself ever had actual *Page 61 
possession of the land before January 26, 1917, and did not appear from any evidence before the court that he was entitled to claim anything on account of the possession thereof held by the woman Martha, hereinbefore mentioned. Second, because, the case having been submitted to the jury on special issues, appellant did not have a right to have the jury instructed to return a general verdict in his favor if they found for him on a particular issue. Tel. Co. v. McCormick, 219 S.W. 270; Worden v. Kroeger (Tex.Com.App.) 219 S.W. 1094.
Another one of the refused charges, had it been given, would have told the jury that appellant "would be entitled to recover the reasonable value" of improvements he placed on the land if he held the property "under a deed duly executed and for a valuable consideration under a belief after investigation that he had a good title" thereto. Assuming that the charge as framed was not erroneous because calculated, had it been given, to mislead the jury by inducing them to believe appellant, under the circumstances specified, was entitled to recover for all the improvements he placed on the land, notwithstanding they also believed he did not act in good faith when he placed same there, or believed that a part of same was not "permanent" within the meaning of the statute (Vernon's Statutes, arts. 7760, 7701; Parrish v. Jackson, 69 Tex. 614,7 S.W. 486; House v. Stone, 64 Tex. 677), we think it nevertheless was not reversible error to refuse the charge, because it was not pertinent to any Issue submitted to the jury, and by itself, had it been given and determined in appellant's favor, would not have been a sufficient basis for granting him any relief.
The other charges refused, had they been given, would have told the jury not to consider a deed made by the woman Martha to appellees in determining whether they had acquired title to the land or not. We think it was not error to refuse the charges; but, if it was error, that it was harmless. That appellee Sarah Williams was the child and only child and heir of Phil and Susan Jones, who owned the land, was not seriously disputed in the testimony heard.
The judgment is affirmed.