This suit was instituted by Jessie Easterling and others, appellants herein, against Roy Simmons and N. H. Lindley, appellees herein, to recover title and possession of an undivided one-sixth interest in a 13-acre tract of land out of the Robert B. Longbotham league in Freestone county, Tex. Four certain oil companies alleged to hold leases on certain parts of said 13-acre tract were also made parties defendants. Cancellation of said leases and an accounting for oil taken thereunder was the relief sought against them. The parties will be designated as in the trial court.
Plaintiffs claimed as heirs of Mrs. Rosa Bounds Easterling, deceased. They introduced in evidence a grant from Coahuila and Texas to Robert B. Longbotham, dated July 24, 1835, for a league of land surveyed in two tracts, one containing 4 labors and the other 21 labors; an order of the probate court of Freestone county, Tex., dated July 17, 1884, appointing commissioners to partition the estate of R. B. Longbotham, deceased; the report of the commissioners of partition so appointed, and a decree of said court setting aside to the heirs of John Longbotham, among other lands, a tract of 13 acres, designated as a part of lot 9 and described as beginning at the northwest corner of lot No. 4 as shown by a plat of said partition attached thereto; thence south 712 varas to a stake on south line of league; thence east 81 1/2 varas to a 13-acre lot numbered 8; thence north 3 east 714 varas to stake in south line of lot No. 5; thence 119 1/2 varas to the beginning. Plaintiffs then introduced evidence that the said John Longbotham, deceased, was a son of Robert B. Longbotham, the original grantee of said league; that he left surviving him six children, one of whom was Hannah Longbotham; that she married G. W. Bounds; that she died in 1878 and left surviving one child named Rosa Bounds; that Rosa Bounds *Page 692 married S. H. Easterling and died in 1897, leaving one child, Roy Easterling; that said Roy Easterling died July 24, 1921, leaving plaintiffs as his only heirs at law.
Defendants introduced in evidence a partition deed between R. B. Longbotham and the heirs of his first wife, then deceased, dated November 18, 1873, in which said heirs released to said R. B. Longbotham, among other lands, 821 acres off of the south part of said second tract of said original league. This deed recites that said land lies principally in Freestone county, and said 821-acre tract is the same tract partitioned by the probate court of Freestone county as shown by plaintiffs' evidence. Defendants then, over the objection of plaintiffs, introduced in evidence a deed from S. H. Easterling and wife, Rosa Easterling, to J. M. Murphy, purporting to convey 2 1/6 acres out of the R. B. Longbotham survey, and designating as a beginning point the southeast corner of John Longbotham's heirs' tract in the south boundary line of said survey. The sufficiency of the description contained in said deed of the land thereby conveyed, and consequently its admissibility as a link in defendants' chain of title, is the principal issue in this case and will be hereinafter discussed. Defendants introduced a regular chain of title covering said 2 1/6-acre tract from said Murphy to the defendant N. H. Lindley. They also introduced a regular chain of title covering the north 10 5/6 acres of said 13-acre tract from the other heirs of John Longbotham, deceased, to the defendant Roy Simmons. They also introduced evidence showing that prior to said deed from Easterling and wife to Murphy, the owners of the other five-sixths interest in said 13-acre tract had fenced all of the same except the 2 1/6 acres off the south end thereof, which said Easterling and wife purported to convey to said Murphy. They also introduced evidence showing that shortly after said Murphy received said deed he, or his subsequent vendees, took possession of said 2 1/6 acres off of the south end of said 13-acre tract and have held possession thereof continuously since said time, and that their title thereto and right to the possession thereof has never been questioned by the owners of the 10 5/6 acres off the north end of said tract.
There was a trial before the court, and a general judgment that plaintiffs take nothing against any of the defendants and that said defendants go thence without day and recover their costs. Said judgment is here presented for review.
Opinion. Plaintiffs present as ground for reversal the action of the court In admitting in evidence over their objection said deed from Easterling and wife to Murphy. Said deed, so far as its terms are material to a consideration of the objections urged thereto, is as follows:
"The State of Texas, County of Freestone:
"Know all men by these presents: That we, Sam H. Easterling and Rosa Easterling, his wife, of the county of Navarro, state of Texas, * * * have granted, bargained, sold and conveyed, and by these presents do grant, bargain, sell and convey unto the said J. M. Murphy, of the county of Navarro and state of Texas, all that certain lot, tract or parcel described as follows:
"A part of R. B. Longbotham survey; beginning at a stake in the S. B. line of said survey at the southwest corner of the John Longbotham heirs 26 acre tract; thence west with the S. B. line of said survey 81 1/2 vrs. a stake at the southeast corner of the 26 acre tract; thence north 3 east 142 vrs. a stake; thence west 90 vrs. a stake in the W. line of the 26 acre tract; thence south 142 vrs. to the place of beginning, containing 2 1/6 acres of land on the W. side of the H. T. C. R. road. * * *
"Witness our hands this the 7th day of November, A.D. 1896. Sam Easterling.
"Rosa Easterling."
Said deed recited a consideration paid part in cash and part by note, and retained the vendor's lien until said note was fully paid. It was acknowledged before J. H. Love, a justice of the peace and ex officio notary public in and for Freestone county, Tex., on the day of its date, and thereafter on the 15th, day of December, 1900, filed for record with the clerk of the county court of Freestone county, Tex. The substance of plaintiffs' objections to the introduction of said deed was that it did not state the name of the state or county in which the land purported to be conveyed was located; that the field notes therein called for the corner of a 26-acre tract as the beginning point and no such tract had: been located, and that the description contained therein was not sufficient to identify any land.
The rule is general both in this state and elsewhere that where a deed or written instrument furnishes other sufficient means of identifying the property conveyed, the failure to state the town, county, or state where the same is situated will not render such instrument void or inoperative. The county in which the land so described is situated may be inferred from the residence of the grantor, the place of the acknowledgment, and the place of the filing and recording of the instrument, where the grantor has property in such county to which the description given in the instrument is reasonably applicable. Miller v. Hodges (Tex.Com.App.) 260 S.W. 168, 170; Bond v. Garrison,59 Tex. Civ. App. 620, 127 S.W. 839, 842 (writ refused); Petty v. Wilkins (Tex.Civ.App.) 190 S.W. 531, 533, 534 (writ refused); Langham v. Gray (Tex.Civ.App.) 227 S.W. 741, 744, 745; Frazier v. Lambert,53 Tex. Civ. App. 506, 115 S.W. 1174; Flegel v Dowling, 54 Or. 40,102 P. 178, 179, 180, 135 Am.St.Rep. *Page 693 812, 19 Ann.Cas. 1159; Garden City Sand Co. v. Miller, 157 Ill. 225,41 N.E. 753, 755; Bryan v. Scholl, 109 Ind. 367, 10 N.E. 107, 109; 8 R.C.L. p. 1077, § 133. The caption of the deed in question was, "The State of Texas, County of Freestone." It was acknowledged for record before a Justice of the peace of Freestone county, acting in his capacity as ex officio notary public. It was filed for record in said county presumptively by the grantee therein. The evidence before the court at the time said deed was offered showed that there was such a survey in said county; that there was at the time of the execution and delivery of said deed a tract of land out of the same which had been set aside to the heirs of John Longbotham; that said tract was bounded on the south by the south boundary line of said survey; that it was 81 1/2 varas wide; that its west boundary line ran north and south and its east boundary line north 3 degrees east. In all these particulars the description in said deed is applicable to the land in controversy. While it is true that said deed recited that both grantors and grantee resided in Navarro county at that time, we think there is some significance in the fact that the grantors went to Freestone county to execute and acknowledge the same. We think the trial court, hearing the case without a jury, was justified in inferring from the evidence before him at that time that the land intended to be described in said deed was situated in Freestone county, and in admitting the same in evidence for consideration together with all the other facts and circumstances in evidence tending to identify the land described therein.
We do not attach any importance to the fact that the tract of land set aside to the heirs of John Longbotham contained only 13 acres and not 26 acres as erroneously recited in said deed. Under the established rules of construction, said erroneous recital should be rejected as surplusage if there remains a sufficient description to identify the land intended to be conveyed, construed in the light of surrounding circumstances. Arambula v. Sullivan, 80 Tex. 615, 619, 622, 16 S.W. 436; Cartwright v. Trueblood, 90 Tex. 535, 537, 538, 39 S.W. 930; Smith v. Chatham,14 Tex. 322, 328; Standefer v. Miller (Tex. Civ App.) 182 S.W. 1149, 1151, 1152. While not embodied in the objections urged to the admission of said deed at the time it was offered, plaintiffs in their brief contend that the field notes in said deed do not close, and that for this additional reason said deed was void and the court erred in admitting same in evidence. If we ignore everything contained in the description of the land conveyed by said deed except course and distance, the field notes therein do not close. We think, however, that there is a palpable error in the course given in the first call. Said call is as follows: "Beginning at a stake in the S. B. line of said survey at the southwest corner of the John Longbotham heirs 26 acre tract; thence west with the S. B. line of said survey 81 1/2 vrs. a stake at the southeast corner of the 26 acre tract." Since the call is to begin at the southwest corner and run to the southeast corner of the tract in question, it is clear that the course intended to be called for was east, and not west, as erroneously recited. The intention of the parties being apparent on the face of the deed and easily ascertainable without resort to extrinsic evidence, such intention should be given effect. Coffey v. Hendricks,66 Tex. 676, 678, 2 S.W. 47; Carlisle Co. v. King, 103 Tex. 620, 623, 626, 133 S.W. 241; Poitevent v. Scarborough, 103 Tex. 111, 113, 114, 124 S.W. 87; Mansel v. Castles, 93 Tex. 414, 415, 416, 55 S.W. 559.
The sole purpose of a description of land as contained in a deed of conveyance is to identify the subject-matter of the grant. 8 R.C.L. p. 1074, § 129. However full and precise such description may be, to identify the land on the ground resort must be had to personal knowledge or extrinsic evidence. Douthit v. Robinson, 55 Tex. 69, 73, 74. The rule generally adopted for determining the sufficiency of the description contained in a deed is that if there appears therein enough to enable a party familiar with the locality to identify the premises intended to be conveyed with reasonable certainty, to the exclusion of others, it will be sufficient. It is enough that the description points out and indicates the premises so that by applying it to the land it can be found and identified. Myers v. Maverick (Tex.Civ.App.) 27 S.W. 950, 951, 952; Battle v. Wolfe (Tex.Civ.App.) 283 S.W. 1073, 1078. When such is the case, identification may be completed by parol evidence. Miller v. Hodges, supra, page 170. We have already referred to the fact that with the correction of the palpable error as to course in the first call, the deed under consideration accurately describes a tract off of the south end of the 13-acre tract set aside to the heirs of John Longbotham in partition of the R. B. Longbotham estate. The deed locates this tract of land west of the Houston Texas Central Railroad. The plat in evidence shows that said 13-acre tract is so located. A practical surveyor testified, in substance, that he was familiar with the 13-acre tract and had recently surveyed and mapped the same, and that the deed under consideration correctly describes 2 1/6 acres off of the south end thereof. Plaintiffs, in an effort to create some uncertainty or ambiguity, introduced evidence showing that grants of land located in other counties had been made to R. B. Longbotham, and also that other grants or parts of grants made to him were located in Freestone county. There was, however, no attempt to show that any of *Page 694 said grants in Freestone county or elsewhere were west of and adjacent to said railroad, nor that the description contained in the deed under consideration could be applied to any part of the same. We do not think the court erred in admitting the deed in evidence, nor in holding that it was effective to convey whatever interest the grantors had in the land therein described.
Plaintiffs contend that the court erred in denying them a recovery of an undivided one-sixth interest in and to the 10 5/6 acres off the north part of said 13-acre tract. They base this contention upon the theory that the deed under consideration, if effective to convey any interest in said 2 1/6-acre tract, conveyed only Mrs. Easterling's undivided one-sixth interest therein, and did not divest her of her undivided one-sixth interest in and to said 10 5/6-acre tract. Defendants seek to sustain the judgment in this respect on the ground that there was a parol partition of said 13-acre tract between Mrs. Easterling and the other owner or owners thereof, and on the further ground that plaintiffs are barred from asserting a claim to any interest in said 10 5/6-acre tract by the several statutes of limitation.
Said 13-acre tract was set aside to the heirs of John Longbotham in 1884. There were six of said heirs, one of whom was Rosa Bounds. The interest of all the other heirs in said tract except Rosa Bounds was acquired by Jasper Stedman in 1885 or 1886. He immediately inclosed 10 5/6 acres off of the north end of said tract with a fence, and he and his vendees have held continuous possession thereof, using and enjoying the same, since said date. All the land in said 13-acre tract was of like quality and value, and the 2 1/6 acres off of the south end of said tract left uninclosed was one-sixth of the whole both in quantity and value. G. W. Bounds, father of Mrs. Easterling, testified that when she married in 1896 he turned this 2 1/6 acres of land over to her and told her that it was her part of the 13-acre tract that she had inherited from her grandfather, and that she and her husband were satisfied with it and shortly thereafter sold it to said Murphy. Murphy testified that when he bought said 2 1/6 acres she said it was her interest in said tract of land. G. W. Bounds also testified that when Stedman acquired said 13-acre tract and cut off said 2 1/6 acres at the south end, he fenced the remainder for himself.
When Stedman fenced the 10 5/6 acres and began the use and enjoyment of the same he became equitably entitled to have that identical part of the tract set aside to him in satisfaction of his interest therein whenever a partition between him and the minor, Rosa Bounds, was had. Osborn v. Osborn, 62 Tex. 495, 497; Robinson v. McDonald, 11 Tex. 385, 390, 62 Am.Dec. 480. Such action indicated a purpose on his part to take and appropriate that identical land in satisfaction of his interest in the whole tract, and to leave the uninclosed part to be appropriated by Rosa Bounds, who owned the remaining interest therein. G. W. Bounds seems to have so understood the situation and to have so explained the same to his daughter when he says he turned said 2 1/6-acre tract over to her. She, according to his testimony, was satisfied, and, joined by her husband, she sold said specific tract to Murphy. The land all being of like quality and value, such voluntary division was fair both to her and to Stedman, and such division was never questioned until plaintiffs instituted this suit.
A parol partition of a tract of land voluntarily made by tenants in common is valid and not in contravention of the statute of frauds. When the transaction is of ancient date and the parties thereto are dead, it is frequently impossible from the lapse of time to submit direct evidence of the very making of the agreement. In such cases such agreement may be shown by circumstances and inferences from the acts of the parties and their acquiescence in such acts. Glasscock v. Hughes, 55 Tex. 461, 473, 474; Mitchell v. Allen, 69 Tex. 70, 73, 6 S.W. 745. Parol partitions in which married women were involved have been frequently upheld in this state, where their husbands assented thereto and where such partitions were shown to be fair and equitable and to have been acquiesced in for long periods of time. Wardlow v. Miller, 69 Tex. 395, 399, 6 S.W. 292; Aycock v. Kimbrough, 71 Tex. 330, 333, 12 S.W. 71, 10 Am. St. Rep. 745; George v. Thomas, 16 Tex. 74, 89, 67 Am.Dec. 612; Cowan v. Brett,43 Tex. Civ. App. 569, 97 S.W. 330, 331 (writ refused); Martin v. Harris (Tex.Civ.App.) 26 S.W. 91, 92; Evans v. Martin, 6 Tex. Civ. App. 331,25 S.W. 688, 690; Berry v. Seawall (C.C.A.) 65 F. 742, 755, 760.
Rosa Bounds was a minor at the time Stedman fenced and appropriated his pro rata share of said 13-acre tract. She continued a minor until her death. Upon her marriage, however, in 1896, she was informed by her father that Stedman had set aside this unfenced 2 1/6 acres as her share of said tract. The testimony indicates that she must necessarily have known that Stedman was in possession of the remainder thereof and claiming the same as his share, and that with such information and knowledge she accepted said 2 1/6-acre tract as her share thereof. If she did know that Stedman was asserting an adverse claim to the land so inclosed by him, limitation under the statute then in force would have begun to run against any claim on her part to an interest in said 10 5/6 acres before her death but for her minority. Article 5544 of the Revised Statutes expressly provides that the period of limitation shall not be extended by connecting one disability with another. If limitation would have *Page 695 begun to run against her but for her minority, it began to run against her child, Roy Easterling, under whom plaintiffs claim, upon her death in 1897, notwithstanding his minority. Best v. Nix, 6 Tex. Civ. App. 349,25 S.W. 130, 131; Elcan v. Childress, 40 Tex. Civ. App. 193, 89 S.W. 84, 85 (writ refused); Lamberida v. Barnum (Tex.Civ.App.) 90 S.W. 698, 700. Nearly 20 years elapsed between the death of Mrs. Easterling and Roy Easterling's enlistment in the navy in 1917. If Stedman's possession was adverse to Mrs. Easterling at the time of her death, there is no contention that it did not continue adverse during all said years.
The finding of the court in favor of the defendants was general, and therefore every issuable fact must be considered found in their favor if there is any evidence to support such a finding. In passing upon the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain each such finding we must view the same in the light most favorable thereto, rejecting all evidence favorable to the opposite contention and considering only the facts and circumstances which tend to sustain such finding. Hines v. Kansas City Life Ins. Co. (Tex.Civ.App.) 260 S.W. 688, 690, and authorities there cited. We think the evidence in this case is sufficient to support a finding that there was a voluntary partition of said 13-acre tract between Stedman and Mrs. Easterling, that the same was fair to both of them, and that such partition was acquiesced in continuously thereafter until the institution of this suit. We also think the evidence is sufficient to support a finding that the possession of Stedman was adverse to Mrs. Easterling from the time he inclosed said 10 5/6-acre tract, and that notice of such adverse claim was brought home to her when her father turned over to her the 2 1/6-acre tract which she afterwards conveyed to Murphy. Such being the case, the judgment of the court denying plaintiffs the recovery of any part of said 10 5/6-acre tract should be sustained.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.