When the statutes of the state in which an action at law in a
federal court is tried permit a third party to intervene
pro
interesse suo, as in equity, and on the trial a general
verdict is rendered and a general judgment entered against both the
intervenor and the losing party, the intervenor is not a necessary
party to the writ of error to this Court if his interest is clearly
separable and distinct.
Following the decisions of the Supreme Court of Texas, and also
agreeing with them, this Court holds that § 9 of the Act of
the Legislature of Texas of March 18, 1845, so far as it conferred
upon aliens a defeasible estate by inheritance from a citizen
notwithstanding the alienage, is not repealed by § 4 of the
Act of February 15, 1854, and that immediately after the passage of
the British Naturalization Act of 1870, defeasible titles of
British alien heirs to land in Texas became indefeasible.
The grantor in a deed and all the subscribing witnesses being
residents in a foreign country, proof of its execution by proof of
the handwriting of the subscribing witnesses
held
sufficient.
An unnoted erasure in a deed changing the name of the grantee
from Elizabeth to Eliza may be explained by proof that Elizabeth
Eliza are identical and the same person.
The general rule in Texas that property purchased during the
marriage, whether the conveyance be to husband or wife, is
prima facie community property holds only where the
purchase is made with community funds, and the presumption may be
rebutted by proof that the purchase was intended for the wife.
When a deed of land in Texas is made to a married woman for a
nominal consideration, the presumption is that it was intended to
vest the title in her as separate property.
The power of attorney through which intervenors claim
considered.
A covenant of general warranty in a deed of "all the right,
title, and interest" of the grantor in the premises described does
not estop him from asserting a subsequently acquired title
thereto.
Page 119 U. S. 158
MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Eliza M. O'Brien, since deceased, with Philip O'Brien, her
husband, and William Brady, citizens of New York, commenced their
action in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern
District of Texas, against Edward G. Hanrick, a citizen of Texas.
It was an action of trespass to try the title to
Page 119 U. S. 159
real estate in the County of Falls, in that state, described
generally as three tracts, one known as the "Antanacio de Le Serda"
eleven-league grant; the second as two parcels granted to Pedro
Zarza, and the third a part of the eleven-league tract granted to
Rafael de Aquire. The common source of title, as between these
parties, was Edward Hanrick, who died in 1865, in Montgomery
County, Alabama, intestate and without issue, never having married.
The plaintiffs below claim title as follows: Edward Hanrick left
surviving him as his next of kin and only heirs at the time of his
death, one sister, Elizabeth O'Brien, two brothers, named
respectively John and James Hanrick, and one nephew, Edward G.
Hanrick, the defendant, he being the son and only child of Philip
Hanrick, who died in 1852, and who was another brother of Edward
Hanrick. Elizabeth O'Brien resided in the County of Wexford,
Ireland, and is, and always was, an alien to the United States, and
a subject of Great Britain. John Hanrick died intestate and without
issue, never having married, in the year 1870, in the County of
Wexford, Ireland, an alien to the United States, and a subject of
Great Britain. The said James Hanrick left surviving him, as his
next of kin and only heirs, four daughters, named, respectively,
Elizabeth Clare, Catherine O'Neill, Annie (otherwise called
Honora), and Ellen Hanrick, and four grandchildren, the children of
a deceased daughter, named, respectively, Mary, Elizabeth, Bridget,
and Robert Whelan, and one son, Nicholas Hanrick. These descendants
of James Hanrick reside in Ireland, except Nicholas, Annie
(otherwise called Honora), and Ellen Hanrick, who reside in the
State of New York. By virtue of these facts, and of the laws of
Texas and Great Britain, as hereafter shown, it was claimed that
Eliza O'Brien, in 1878, was seized and possessed of an undivided
one-third interest in the said estate of Edward Hanrick in the said
lands, when it was claimed she conveyed to the plaintiff, Eliza M.
O'Brien, her daughter-in-law, for her separate use and benefit, all
her interest in the said estate and lands; William Brady, the other
plaintiff below, being entitled to one-half of the said undivided
one-third by virtue of a conveyance from Eliza M. O'Brien and her
husband, Philip O'Brien.
Page 119 U. S. 160
The defendant in possession, having pleaded not guilty of the
trespass complained of, asserted title in himself as the sole heir
at law of the said Edward Hanrick, deceased, on the ground that he
was the only descendant having inheritable blood, according to the
laws of Texas.
The suit was begun February 13, 1880, and issue was finally
joined on amended pleadings, by the filing of an answer by Edward
G. Hanrick on April 3, 1883. On the next day, Wharton Branch
appeared as an intervenor in the cause, and filed a pleading called
an original answer, in which he denies the sufficiency in law of
the plaintiff's petition; objects that on its face it is shown that
necessary parties have not been joined as plaintiffs; denies all
the allegations of the petition; pleads not guilty to the
trespasses alleged therein, and then sets up title in himself to an
undivided one-fourth of three-fourths of the estate under a
conveyance alleged to have been made to him on the fourteenth of
February, 1878, by Philip O'Brien, as attorney in fact acting under
a power of attorney alleged to have been made on the 16th of May,
1870, by Elizabeth O'Brien and James and John Hanrick. It is
alleged that by that power of attorney, Philip O'Brien was
authorized and empowered to sell and convey their interests in said
estate, and in pursuance of which he made the deed under which the
intervenor claims title. The consideration of that deed is stated
to have been money theretofore paid out, and expenses incurred and
legal advice and information furnished and rendered, by the
defendant to the said Philip O'Brien. The pleading concludes by
praying judgment for the defendant against all parties to the suit,
establishing his right, title, and interest in the estate, and that
the same be set apart to him in severalty, and for costs and
general relief.
On the same day, John B. Sargent also appeared as intervenor,
and filed an original answer on his behalf, similar in form to that
of Wharton Branch, and claiming title to an undivided one-half of
the interest of Elizabeth O'Brien and John and James Hanrick, under
a deed made to him conveying that interest on the fourteenth of
February, 1878, by Philip O'Brien, acting as their attorney in fact
under the same power
Page 119 U. S. 161
of attorney referred to in the answer of Wharton Branch, and
concluding with a prayer for a similar judgment in his own
behalf.
Thereupon the plaintiffs in the action filed pleadings, styled
an answer to the petition for leave to intervene, and plaintiffs'
first supplemental petition, in which they asked that the leave to
intervene on behalf of Branch and Sargent be denied, and their
petitions struck from the files, and specifically setting out the
grounds on which they claimed that the alleged conveyances made by
Philip O'Brien, as attorney in fact to them, respectively, should
be held to be null and void. Among those grounds were the
following: first, prior to the execution of the deeds under which
the intervenors claim title, two of the principals in the power of
attorney, James and John Hanrick, had died, thereby revoking the
authority; second, that the execution of the said deeds on the part
of said Philip O'Brien had been obtained by the said Branch and the
said Sargent by fraudulent representations, and that the same had
never in fact been delivered. The plaintiffs' supplemental petition
concludes with a prayer that they have and recover of the said
Wharton Branch and the said John B. Sargent, as well as the said
Edward G. Hanrick, an undivided one-third interest in the lands
described in their original complaint, and for all other relief,
general and special.
The defendant, Edward G. Hanrick, after the filing of these
interventions, moved to dismiss the cause, on the ground, among
others, that he had no interest in the controversy as between the
plaintiffs on the one hand and Branch and Sargent on the other; but
all objections to the intervention were overruled or disregarded,
and the cause proceeded to trial on the issues as made between the
plaintiffs and the defendant, Edward G. Hanrick, and also on those
as between the plaintiffs and the said Branch and Sargent. The
cause having been submitted to the jury on the 10th of April, 1883,
a verdict was returned as follows: "We, the jury, find for the
plaintiff," and thereupon judgment was entered on the verdict as
follows:
"It is therefore ordered and adjudged by the court that the
plaintiffs, Eliza M. O'Brien and Philip O'Brien and William
Page 119 U. S. 162
Brady, have and recover of the defendant, Edward G. Hanrick, and
of the intervenors, Wharton Branch and John B. Sargent, an
undivided one-third interest in and to the following described
lands: . . . and it is further ordered that a writ of possession in
favor of said plaintiffs issue therefor, and that plaintiffs do
have and recover of such intervenors such costs by them incurred by
reason of such intervention, and of defendant all costs which were
incurred herein, not including any costs incurred by the said
intervention, for which let execution respectively issue."
To reverse this judgment, the defendant, Edward G. Hanrick, sued
out a writ of error on April 16, 1883, which was docketed in this
Court on the 16th of August of the same year. To reverse the
judgment as against them, the intervenors, Wharton Branch and John
B. Sargent, sued out their writ of error separately on September
26, 1884, which was docketed in this Court on the 24th of November
of the same year. The intervention of Branch and Sargent was
permitted in compliance with Article 4788 of the Revised Statutes
of 1879, laws of Texas, which provides that,
"When a party is sued for lands, the
real owner or
warrantor may make himself, or may be made, a party defendant in
the suit, and shall be entitled to make such defense as if he had
been the original defendant in the action."
Article 1188 prescribes that
"the pleadings of an intervenor shall conform to the
requirements of pleadings on the part of plaintiff and defendant,
respectively, so far as they may be applicable."
The defendants in error, the administrator of Eliza M. O'Brien,
Philip O'Brien, and William Brady, now move to dismiss the writ of
error sued out by Hanrick on the ground that the judgment was
jointly against him and the intervenors, Branch and Sargent, and
that all should have joined in the same writ. The same objection,
of course, applies to the writ of error sued out severally by the
intervenors, Branch and Sargent. This motion presents the first
question for consideration.
We assume, without so deciding, that the proceedings on the
Page 119 U. S. 163
part of the intervenors may be justified under the statutes of
Texas. It must also be admitted to be a general rule, well
established by the practice and in the decisions of this Court,
that when a judgment against defendants is joint, all the parties
affected thereby must join in the writ of error, or there must be a
summons and severance or its equivalent. The question here,
however, is whether this judgment, although so in form, is joint in
law as against the original defendant and the intervenors. The
verdict in favor of the plaintiffs against them, although single,
was rendered upon different and altogether distinct issues. The
intervenors defended as against the plaintiffs not on behalf of the
original defendant, but altogether in their own interest, claiming
title not only against the plaintiffs, but adverse to that of the
defendant. Indeed, the intervenors' title was derived through the
plaintiffs, and their claim was under them, and, as between them
and the original defendant, their interest was altogether with the
plaintiffs and against the defendant. The ground of their right of
recovery against the defendant was the very title asserted by the
plaintiffs, and their claim could be successfully prosecuted only
by establishing the right of the plaintiffs to recover. Their right
against the defendant was to recover against him if the plaintiffs
recovered, and their right against the plaintiffs was to recover
against the defendant only in the event that the plaintiffs first
succeeded in recovering against him. The situation as to them is
anomalous. The litigation was triangular. The judgment must he
regarded as joint only in form but severable in fact and in law. It
is to be read as if it were based upon a finding that the
plaintiffs recover as against the defendant for the title asserted
against him, and against the intervenors in respect to the title
asserted by them against the plaintiffs. The judgment for costs is
in fact separated; the costs of the intervention being regarded as
costs in a separate suit. In fact, there were two suits, one
interjected in the other, in which the parties are different, the
titles are different, the interests are different, and there could
be no joint judgment in both except in mere words. None of the
cases cited in support of the motion to dismiss are applicable
Page 119 U. S. 164
here, because they refer to judgments in common law actions,
where no such anomaly as is presented in this record could occur.
In equity, where interventions
pro interesse suo have been
permitted to those affected by the proceeding, but not parties to
the original controversy, or where the original parties have
distinct and separable interests, the same general rule as to
appeals applies to joint decrees; but it has always been held that
where the decree is final and separate or separable, those not
affected by it are not necessary parties to the appeal.
Forgay v.
Conrad, 6 How. 201.
The same principle must govern judgments at law rendered in
actions according to the forms of procedure prescribed by the
statutes of the states in which they are tried, where interventions
such as the present are permitted, and the same rule must be
adopted in reference to them.
The motions to dismiss are therefore denied.
The principal question in the original action arises upon the
defense that the plaintiffs below were aliens at the time of
descent cast by the death of Edward Hanrick, in 1865, and, under
the laws of Texas, therefore not capable of acquiring title by
inheritance, it being claimed that the defendant, Edward G.
Hanrick, a citizen of Texas, was the sole heir at law.
The Constitution of the Republic of Texas -- continued in that
of the state -- contained the following provision:
"No alien shall hold land in Texas, except by titles emanating
directly from the government of this republic. But if any citizen
of this republic shall die intestate or otherwise, his children or
heirs shall inherit his estate, and aliens shall have a reasonable
time to take possession of and dispose of the same in a manner
hereafter to be pointed out by law."
In pursuance of this provision, an act defining what a
reasonable time should be, was passed on January 28, 1840,
Hartley's Digest, Art. 585, and reenacted March 18, 1848, Paschal's
Digest, Art. 44, in § 9 of an act entitled "An act to regulate
the descent and distribution of intestates' estates," as
follows:
"Section 9. In making title to land by descent, it shall be no
bar to a party that any ancestor through whom he derives
Page 119 U. S. 165
his descent from the intestate is or has been an alien, and
every alien to whom any land may be devised or may descend shall
have nine years to become a citizen of the republic, and take
possession of such land, or shall have nine years to sell the same,
before it shall be declared to be forfeited, or before it shall
escheat to the government."
An act was passed February 13, 1854, entitled "An act to define
the civil rights of aliens," which is as follows:
"SECTION 1. Be it enacted, etc., that any alien, being a free
white person, shall have and enjoy in the State of Texas such
rights as are or shall be accorded to American citizens by the laws
of the nation to which such alien shall belong, or by treaties of
such nation with the United States."
"SEC. 2. That aliens may take and hold any property, real or
personal, in this state by devise or descent from any alien or
citizen, in the same manner in which citizens of the United States
may take and hold real or personal estate by devise or descent
within the country of such alien."
"SEC. 3. That any alien, being a free white person, who shall
become a resident of this state and shall, in conformity with the
naturalization laws of the United States, have declared his
intention to become a citizen of the United States, shall have the
right to acquire and hold real estate in this state, in the same
manner as if he were a citizen of the United States."
"SEC. 4. That the ninth section of an act entitled 'An act to
regulate the descent and distribution of intestates' estates,'
approved March 18, 1848, is hereby repealed so far as the same may
be inconsistent with this act, and this act shall take effect and
be in force from and after its passage."
This act was in force in 1865, when Edward Hanrick died. At that
time, the common law was in force in England, whereby, as was held
by this Court, in
Orr v.
Hodgson, 4 Wheat. 453, an alien might take an
estate by the act of the parties, as by purchase, but could not
take by the act of the law, as by descent, for want of inheritable
blood.
"Where a person dies leaving issue who are aliens, the latter
are not deemed his
Page 119 U. S. 166
heirs at law, for they have no inheritable blood, and the estate
descends to the next of kin who have inheritable blood in the same
manner as if no such alien issue were in existence."
But on the 12th of May, 1870, the British Parliament passed an
act entitled "An act to amend the law relating to the legal
condition of aliens and British subjects, styled the Naturalization
Act of 1870." By § 2, it prescribed the status of aliens in
the United Kingdom as follows:
"Real and personal property of every description may be taken,
acquired, held, and disposed of by an alien in the same manner in
all respects as by a natural-born British subject, and the title to
real and personal property of every description may be derived
through, from, or in succession to an alien in the same manner in
all respects as through, from, or in succession to a natural-born
British subject,
provided (1) that this section shall not
confer any right on an alien to hold real property situate out of
the United Kingdom, and shall not qualify an alien for any office,
or for any municipal, Parliamentary, or other franchise; (2) that
this section shall not entitle an alien to any right or privilege
as a British subject, except such rights and privileges in respect
of property as are hereby expressly given to him; (3) that this
section shall not affect any estate or interest in real or personal
property to which any person has or may become entitled, either
mediately or immediately, in possession or expectancy in pursuance
of any disposition made before the passing of this act, or in
pursuance of any devolution by law on the death of any person dying
before the passing of this act."
It is conceded that if Edward Harrick, the ancestor, had died
after the enactment of this British statute, the plaintiffs below
would have been entitled, under the Texas statute of 1854, to claim
as his heirs at law their proportion and interest in his real
estate. It is contended, however, on the part of the defendant,
that inasmuch as at the time of the descent cast in 1865, there was
no such British statute as that contemplated by the Texas act of
1854, the plaintiffs were under such a disability of alienage at
that time that they were cut off from the inheritance, which,
becoming at that instant
Page 119 U. S. 167
vested by law in the defendant, Edward G. Hanrick, the
subsequent passage of the British statute could not be permitted,
by any retroactive effect, to divest that interest in favor of the
plaintiffs. On the other hand, it is contended by the plaintiffs
that under the ninth section of the Act of March 18, 1848, which
they claim was still in force in 1865, Elizabeth O'Brien, as sister
of Edward Hanrick, although an alien, was entitled as his heir at
law to a defeasible estate as such, which she was entitled to make
indefeasible within nine years after descent cast, by becoming a
citizen of the state, and taking possession of the land, with the
right to sell the same in the alternative before it should be
declared to be forfeited, or before it should escheat to the
government, and which subsequently became indefeasible by the
operation of the act of 1854, in consequence of the passage of the
British statute of 1870.
This contention on the part of the plaintiffs below is met again
by the defendant with the proposition that § 9 of the Act of
March 18, 1848, was repealed by § 4 of the Act of February 13,
1854.
This very question, in another litigation involving the same
title, came up directly for adjudication in the Supreme Court of
Texas in the case of
Hanrick v. Hanrick, 54 Tex. 101. The
following is an extract from the opinion of the court in that
case:
"The statute of 1854 is an affirmative one, and by long
established rules of construction must be considered as additional
to the then existing § 9, act of 1848, upon the same subject
matter, and that the latter is not repealed by it, unless this is
done in express terms or by necessary implication. Potter's Dwarris
on Statutes 189; 1 Bishop Crim.Law, 1st ed., pars. 175, 194. The
statute of 1854 does not in express terms repeal § 9, act of
1848, for it is affirmatively provided that it is repealed so far
as inconsistent with the act of 1854, thus clearly evincing the
legislative intent that the latter act would be the rule only in
certain cases. Neither, it is believed, was this section 9 repealed
by the statute of 1854 by implication under old and well
established rules of construction governing such cases."
The court then proceeds to point out, from the history of
Page 119 U. S. 168
the legislation of Texas on the subject, the policy of the
state, and adds as follows:
"In pursuance of this policy and to meet in a proper spirit the
modern liberal international legislation upon the subject of
alienage, the act of 1854 was passed, not, it is believed, in a
spirit of retaliation and to withdraw from citizens of those
countries which may not have passed such reciprocal laws as
contemplated by that act the benefits of our previous legislation,
but simply to make our legislation conform in the particular case
with that of those countries which may also have legislated upon
the subject. The act of 1854 did not in terms limit the rights of
aliens generally which previously had been granted by § 9, act
of 1848, by restricting them to such rights, and those only, as
were or might be granted to citizens of the United States by their
government. On the contrary, it was an affirmative and enlarging
statute, and intended to give to aliens such rights and privileges,
in addition to those granted by § 9, act of 1848, as had been
or should be given by their government to citizens of the United
States."
In conclusion on this point, the court said:
"We are of opinion, therefore, that the statute of 1854, neither
by its express terms nor by a proper construction of its provisions
and intention, did so repeal § 9, act of 1848, as to prevent,
if they are otherwise entitled, the alien heirs of Edward Hanrick
from deriving title by descent under it to real estate in
Texas."
The Supreme Court of Texas thereupon proceeded to consider the
further question whether, if a title did so descend and vest in
such alien heirs, they can, being still aliens and subjects of
Great Britain, maintain a suit for the recovery of their interests
after nine years have elapsed since descent was cast in 1865. In
answer to that question, they said:
"Notwithstanding the tendency of the earlier decisions of this
court to the contrary, under its more recent decisions and those of
the Supreme Court of the United States, the effect of the provision
of the constitution of the republic, and the statutes of 1840 and
1848, upon the subject of alienage, before quoted, was to vest a
defeasible title to real estate in Texas into the alien children
and heirs of a citizen of the United States who may have died
Page 119 U. S. 169
intestate leaving such property, which title was valid both
against individuals and also the state, not only for the period of
nine years, but for such further time until the state, by some
proper proceedings in the nature of office found, had declared a
forfeiture.
Sabriego v. White, 30 Tex. 576;
Settegast
v. Schrimpf, 35 Tex. 323;
Andrews v. Spear, 48 Tex.
567;
Osterman v. Baldwin 6 Wall.
116;
Airhart v. Massieu, 98 U. S. 491;
Phillips v.
Moore, 100 U. S. 208. No proceeding has
been taken in this case to declare the land forfeited. From the
date of the death of Edward Hanrick in 1865 to the passage of the
above act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain
and Ireland in 1870, nine years have not elapsed. Immediately upon
the passage of this act, the defeasible title in the alien heirs of
Edward Hanrick was, by the provisions of the act of 1854, changed
into an indefeasible title, the same vesting into his heirs
according to our statute of descent and distribution in force at
the time of descent cast."
This decision of the Supreme Court of Texas is directly in
point, and was repeated in the case of
Hanrick v. Hanrick,
61 Tex. 596, and also in the case of
Hanrick v. Hanrick,
63 Tex. 618.
In the case of
Airhart v. Massieu, 98 U. S.
491, some of these provisions of the law of Texas in one
aspect were carefully reviewed, and it was there said that
"The Act of January, 1840, declared that in making title by
descent, it should be no bar to a party that any ancestors through
whom he derives his descent from the intestate is or hath been an
alien. This law would seem to be the legitimate result of the
status of aliens with regard to title to lands in Texas, the
prohibition to hold lands being provisional only, not operative
unless they failed to become citizens or dispose of their land
within nine years, and not even then until regular proceedings
should be provided for, and should be had to annul the title. The
later cases in Texas have fully established this doctrine,"
referring to the cases of
Sabriego v. White, 30 Tex.
576;
Settegast v. Schrimpf, 35 Tex. 323, and
Andrews
v. Spear, 48 Tex. 567.
Great weight, if not conclusive effect, in our opinion, is to
be
Page 119 U. S. 170
given to these decisions of the Supreme Court of Texas upon the
question of the construction of the statutes of the state as
affecting titles to real estate within its territory, and upon the
authority of those decisions alone we are quite willing to rest the
conclusion that the ninth section of the act of 1848, so far as it
conferred upon the plaintiffs below a defeasible estate by
inheritance from Edward Hanrick notwithstanding their alienage, is
not repealed by the subsequent provisions of the act of 1854.
Middleton v.
McGrew, 23 How. 45. We are, however, also of the
opinion that the decisions of the Supreme Court of Texas on that
point are well sustained by the reasons on which they proceed. It
follows, therefore, that the defense put forward by Edward G.
Hanrick as against the plaintiffs, based on the alienage of
Elizabeth O'Brien, cannot be sustained.
We proceed in the next place to consider and dispose of certain
assignments of error predicated on the rulings of the court as to
the admission in evidence and effect of a deed produced by the
plaintiffs, and read to the jury, dated May 11, 1878, purporting to
be signed by Eliza O'Brien, to Eliza M. O'Brien, one of the
plaintiffs. This deed appears to have been made between Eliza
O'Brien, in the County of Wexford, Ireland, as grantor, and Eliza
Mercy O'Brien, the wife of Philip O'Brien, as grantee. It is
expressed to be in consideration of the sum of one dollar. It
grants all the right, title, and interest of the grantor in and to
certain tracts of land therein described, which belonged to Edward
Hanrick, deceased, including that in controversy. It professes to
have been signed, sealed, and delivered in the presence of two
witnesses, of whom one was Francis Rutledge, a justice of the peace
of the County of Wexford, who certifies that Elizabeth O'Brien,
personally known to him to be the individual described in, and who
executed, the deed, personally came before him and acknowledged its
execution. Martin O'Brien, the other subscribing witness, makes an
affidavit that he knew Eliza O'Brien, the individual described in
the document, and that he was present, and saw her sign, seal, and
deliver it as her act and deed, which is certified on the deed by
the consul of the United States for Dublin. It also appears from
the endorsement on
Page 119 U. S. 171
the deed that it has been duly recorded in the various counties
in which the land lies.
It is stated in the bill of exceptions that
"upon the face of said deed, it appeared that wherever the name
of the grantor was mentioned in the body of said deed, the name, as
originally written, was Elizabeth O'Brien, and that a portion of
said name had been scratched or erased so as to read Eliza O'Brien,
of which changes no note of explanation or emendation appeared in
said deed."
When the deed was offered, the defendant objected to its
introduction in evidence for the following reasons: 1st, because it
had been impeached as a forgery by the affidavit of Wharton Branch,
one of the intervenors, who filed his affidavit to that effect on
the fourth of April, 1883; 2d, because the deed did not purport to
be the deed of Elizabeth O'Brien, nor to vest title in the grantee,
Eliza M. O'Brien, to hold as her separate property; 3d, because of
the unexplained changes apparent on the face of the deed. The court
overruled the objections, but, before the deed was read in evidence
to the jury, the plaintiffs offered preliminary proof to the court
to prove the execution of the instrument as at common law, and a
witness was called and sworn who testified to the court that
"the grantor in said deed and the subscribing witnesses all
reside in Ireland; that he was acquainted with the handwriting of
Francis Rutledge, one of the subscribing witnesses to said deed,
and that he believed the said Francis Rutledge to have signed the
same as subscribing witness thereto."
Evidence was also given to the court tending to rebut said
statement, and, in the further progress of the case before the
jury, evidence was introduced by the plaintiffs tending to show
that Elizabeth O'Brien and Eliza O'Brien were one and the same
person. Evidence was also introduced tending to rebut the alleged
fact. Plaintiffs then proposed to prove, by the deposition of
Philip O'Brien, that no consideration was paid for said conveyance,
and that the same was intended as a gift to his wife, Eliza M.
O'Brien. To the admission of this testimony the defendant objected,
because the deed, being upon its face a deed for valuable
consideration
Page 119 U. S. 172
made to a married woman during coverture, was in law a deed to
the community, and subject to the sole control and disposition of
the husband, and a trust in favor of a separate right could not at
law be engrafted upon it by parol testimony. These objections were
overruled by the court, and the testimony was admitted.
We are of opinion that these rulings of the court were correct
on the supposition that the plaintiffs were properly put upon proof
of the genuineness of the deed, irrespective of the certificate
from the record. The proof of execution, by proof of the
handwriting of the subscribing witness, was sufficient. The
objection founded upon the supposed erasures was fully met by
testimony as to the identity between Elizabeth O'Brien and Eliza
O'Brien. The only erasure appearing, being a change from one name
to the other, was sufficiently explained by the proof of identity.
At any rate, the presumption was that the erasure was made before
the execution of the deed.
Little v.
Harndon, 10 Wall. 26. The consideration of the
deed, being one dollar, was merely nominal.
Hitz v. National
Metropolitan Bank, 111 U. S. 722. And
while it appears to be well established law in Texas that property
purchased during the marriage, whether the conveyance be to the
husband or wife, is
prima facie community property,
Higgins v. Johnson, 20 Tex. 389, that rule only holds
where the purchase is made with community funds, and this
presumption may be rebutted by proof that the purchase was intended
for the wife,
Dunham v. Chatham, 21 Tex. 244. As in this
case the consideration was nominal only and the deed made to the
wife, the presumption is that it was intended to vest the title in
her as separate property.
The remaining questions which we deem it important to notice
arise upon the title claimed by the intervenors, Branch and
Sargent. They are material also in the controversy between the
plaintiff and the original defendant, as the latter was entitled to
defeat the plaintiff's recovery by showing an outstanding legal
title in any other parties. To sustain this claim of title, the
defendant and the intervenors introduced
Page 119 U. S. 173
first a power of attorney, dated May 16, 1870, purporting to be
executed by James Hanrick, John Hanrick, and Elizabeth O'Brien to
Philip O'Brien. This power of attorney granted power and authority
to Philip O'Brien, on behalf of the other parties, to recover their
interest in the estate of Edward Hanrick, and for that purpose to
do all such acts and take such proceedings and use all such lawful
ways and means as he should deem necessary to assert and establish
their right. It also contained the following clause:
"And also for and on behalf and in the names of us, and as our
acts and deed, to make, sign, seal, execute, and deliver all such
agreements, contracts, leases, conveyances, and assurances, with
all usual and reasonable covenants therein, on our part, of all and
any part of said messuages, tenements, premises, estate, and
effects as shall be found necessary or expedient."
Professing to act under this power of attorney, Philip O'Brien
executed a deed in the names of his principals on February 1, 1878,
to William Jenkins, Jr., in consideration of one dollar and other
valuable considerations, conveying all the right, title, and
interest of his principals in the real estate belonging to them as
heirs of Edward Hanrick. On the same day, William Jenkins, Jr., the
grantee in that deed, conveyed the same interest to Eliza M.
O'Brien, the wife of Philip O'Brien. On the same day, Eliza M.
O'Brien, wife of Philip O'Brien, in her own right, her husband
joining in the conveyance, in consideration of one dollar and other
valuable considerations, granted to John B. Sargent, one of the
intervenors,
"one undivided half of all my right, title, and interest in and
to the following described lands, situated in the State of Texas,
the said land being the same this day conveyed to me by William
Jenkins, Jr."
This deed contained covenants that the grantor is
"lawfully seized of an interest in fee simple of the granted
premises aforesaid; that they are free from all encumbrances by me
incurred, and that I have good right to sell and convey the same as
aforesaid, and that I will, and my heirs, executors, and
administrators shall, warrant and defend the same to the said
grantee, and to his heirs and assigns, forever, against the lawful
claims and demands of all persons. "
Page 119 U. S. 174
On the 14th of February, 1878, Philip O'Brien, acting for
himself and his wife Eliza M. O'Brien, and for James Hanrick, John
Hanrick, and Elizabeth O'Brien, the heirs of Edward Hanrick,
deceased, in consideration of $1,000, to be paid by John B.
Sargent, conveyed to him in fee simple an undivided one-half
interest in and to all the estate of Edward Hanrick, deceased, to
which the grantors were entitled, their interest therein being
described as three-fourths thereof. This deed contained covenants
"that our said interest in the property and premises are free and
clear of all and every encumbrance, and that we," etc., "will
warrant and defend the same," etc. A similar deed, on the same
date, was made in the name of the same grantors to Wharton Branch,
conveying an undivided one-fourth interest in and to all the estate
of Edward Hanrick, deceased, to which the grantors were entitled.
It was also shown that Eliza M. O'Brien, in the years 1877 and
1878, had acquired the title of Nicholas Hanrick, Ellen Hanrick,
and Honora Hanrick, children and heirs at law of James Hanrick, a
brother of Edward Hanrick. On the 11th of May, 1878, Elizabeth
O'Brien, by the name of Eliza O'Brien, executed a deed conveying
all her right, title, and interest in the estate of her deceased
brother, Edward, to Eliza M. O'Brien, the wife of Philip O'Brien,
being the same deed already referred to in a previous part of this
opinion. It is conceded that John Hanrick and James Hanrick,
brothers of Edward Hanrick, who joined in the power of attorney to
Philip O'Brien, dated May 16, 1870, had both died, John Hanrick in
1870, and James Hanrick in 1875, and before Philip O'Brien executed
any conveyance of the property as their attorney in fact. As to
them, and their heirs or assigns, of course, the power of attorney
was thereby revoked.
The deed from Philip O'Brien to Branch dated February 14, 1878,
and the deed to Sargent of the same date, were also ineffectual as
to Eliza M. O'Brien, his wife, for whom he had no authority to act
at all. They were also void as to Elizabeth O'Brien, because the
conveyances were not authorized by the power of attorney, even if
the latter was not revoked, as to her also, by the death of her
brothers, with whom she had
Page 119 U. S. 175
joined in its execution. Equally unwarranted was the deed from
Philip O'Brien to Jenkins dated February 1, 1878, and the
conveyance by Jenkins to Eliza O'Brien of the same date. O'Brien's
authority under the power of attorney from his principals was to
recover their estate for them, and not to give it away. The
intervenors, however, rely upon the operation of the covenant of
warranty contained in the deeds to John B. Sargent of February 1,
1878, made by Eliza M. O'Brien in conjunction with her husband,
Philip O'Brien, claiming that it operated to convey her title
subsequently acquired under the deed from Eliza O'Brien, her
mother-in-law, dated May 11, 1878. The covenant of warranty in the
deed to Sargent, however, relates only to the premises granted,
which the grantors agree to warrant and defend, and the premises
granted are described as "one undivided half of all my right,
title, and interest in and to the following described lands," and
cannot therefore operate as an estoppel preventing the grantors
from asserting any subsequently acquired title. The conveyance and
the covenants are both confined to the right, title, and interest
which Eliza M. O'Brien had at the date of the deed, expressly
referred to and described in the deed of February 1, 1878, as the
interest conveyed by the deed from Jenkins. There is no recital in
the deed to estop her as to the character of her title or the
quantum of interest intended to be conveyed within the rule laid
down by this Court in
Van Renesselaer v.
Kearney, 11 How. 297. In the absence of such
recital, a covenant of general warranty, where the estate granted
is the present interest and title of the grantor, does not operate
as an estoppel to pass a subsequently acquired title.
The rule on that point seems well stated by Mr. Rawle, Covenants
for Title, 4th ed., 393, in the following language:
"Where the deed, although containing general covenants for
title, does not on its face purport to convey an indefeasible
estate, but only the right, title, and interest of the grantor, in
cases where those covenants are held not to assure a perfect title,
but to be limited and restrained by the estate conveyed, the
doctrine of estoppel has been considered not to apply -- in other
words, although the covenants are, as a general rule, invested
with
Page 119 U. S. 176
the highest functions of an estoppel in passing, by mere
operation of law, an after-acquired estate, yet they will lose that
attribute when it appears that the grantor intended to convey no
greater estate than he was possessed of."
White v. Brocaw, 14 Ohio St. 343;
Adams v.
Ross, 30 N.J.Law 509;
Blanchard v. Brooks, 12 Pick.
47;
Brown v.
Jackson, 3 Wheat. 452.
In the present case, there is no ground for supposing that the
parties to the deed had in contemplation anything more than the
supposed interest of Eliza M. O'Brien existing at that date as
derived under the deed from William Jenkins, Jr., of February 1,
1878. The conclusion is that the covenant of warranty relied upon
does not have the effect claimed of enlarging the estate conveyed
by including the subsequently acquired title which passed to Eliza
M. O'Brien by the deed from Elizabeth O'Brien of May 11, 1878.
This disposes of all questions of substance arising upon the
record. We find no error in the proceedings and judgment of the
circuit court. Its judgment is accordingly
Affirmed.