Ayers v. Harris

13 S.W. 768, 77 Tex. 108, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1071
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1890
DocketNo. 6271
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 13 S.W. 768 (Ayers v. Harris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ayers v. Harris, 13 S.W. 768, 77 Tex. 108, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1071 (Tex. 1890).

Opinion

HENRY, Associate Justice.

—This suit was brought by the appellant to recover of the defendants the land described in his petition, originally granted by the Mexican Government to Maximo Moreno as eleven leagues, situated in Bell County, of which appellant alleges he is the [112]*112owner. The appellees claimed title in hostility to the boundaries of the Moreno grant as alleged by the appellant, and in addition to their pleas of not guilty they set forth specifically the several tracts by them claimed respectively, by virtue of locations, surveys, and patents junior to the Moreno grant, and asked affirmative relief respectively. Before the trial of the cause in the court below an agreement was made by the appellant and appellees which eliminated from the controversy all questions regarding the validity of the title or titles relied upon on both sides, and it was stipulated that the appellant had a complete chain of transfer to the Moreno grant, and that the several appellees had title to the several tracts of land claimed by.them respectively, and it was agreed by the parties that the question between the plaintiff (appellant) and the defendants (appellees) was as to the position and locality of the north boundary line of the Moreno grant.

Upon the verdict of a jury judgment was rendered for the defendants.

The description of the land in the title is as follows: “The land surveyed by me for the citizen Maximo Moreno is situated on the left margin of .the river San Andres below the point where the creek called Lampasas enters said river on its opposite margin, and it has the lines, limits, boundaries, and landmarks as follows, to-wit: Beginning the survey at a pecan fronting the mouth of said creek, which pecan served as a landmark for the first corner, and from which 14 varas to the north 59 west there is a hackberry twenty-four inches in diameter, and 15 varas to the south 34 west there is an elm twelve inches in diameter, a line was run to the north 22 east 22,960 varas, planted a stake in the prairie for the second (northwest) corner; thence another line was run to the south 70 east, at 8000 varas crossed a branch of the creek called Cow Creek, at 10,600 varas crossed the principal branch of said creek, at 12,580 varas two small hackberries serve as landmarks for the third (northeast) corner; thence another line was run to the south 20 west, at 3520 varas crossed the said Cow Creek, at 26,400 varas to a tree on the aforesaid margin of the river San Andres, which tree is called box-elder, from which 7 varas to the south 28 west there is a cottonwood with two trunks, and 16 varas to the south 11 east there is an elm fifteen inches in diameter; thence following the river up by its meanders to the beginning, and comprising a plain area of 11 leagues of land or 275,000,000 square varas.”

The order for the survey of the Maximo Moreno grant was made at San Felipe de Austin on the 28th day of September, 1833. It was directed to F. W. Johnson as surveyor.

The date of the survey does not appear in Johnson^ report of the survey. The title was issued at San Felipe de Austin on the 8th day of October, 1833.

The deposition of F. W. Johnson was taken and read by plaintiff. He testified that he made the survey in 1833, but did not state at what period [113]*113of the year he made it; that he was never on the land subsequent to the date of his survey, except when he was traveling through the county; and that he kept a field book of the lines he ran for the Moreno survey and noted in it the creeks crossed and other prominent objects, and that it was then in the General Land Office at Austin.

William Duty testified that he assisted Johnson in making the survey, and that it was made in April, 1833.

W. 0. Walsh, Commissioner, testified that “there is in the archives of the General Land Office a book known as 'Book O’ of original English field notes of surveys made in the States of Coahuila and Texas, among which are the surveys of large tracts on the San Andres or Little Eiver. This book is also known as Johnson’s field book. I know it from official tradition.

“ The original field notes of the survey of Maximo Moreno’s eleven league tract exist in the archives of the General Land Office, and are under my custody.

“They are contained in Book C above described, but I have had no opportunity of identifying them as Johnson’s work.

“I do not personally know when the field notes known as Johnson’s work and contained in Book C were deposited in the General Land Office, nor is there any official statement establishing the date of that deposit, but I understand that the deposit was made at the same time as that of the titles issued by the alcalde of San Felipe de Austin—that is, at the opening of the General Land Office.

“ They were bound in book form in 1846. The original field notes of the Maximo Moreno tract are hereto attached, marked Exhibit A.

“A photographic copy of pages 173 and 173 of Book C is hereto attached.

“I believe that the words north 33 east'33,960, found in the first call* were written by the same hand that wrote the body of the field notes. They cover a blank left vacant when the body of the field notes was written, and appear to have been written with a finer pen than that used for writing the body of the field notes.”

X. B. De Bray, clerk and translator of the General Land Office, gave substantially the same testimony as that of the witness Walsh, and also stated that he knew F. W. Johnson, and had heard him designate Book. C as his official field book, and say that the field notes contained in it were in his own handwriting. This witness also testified that the original English field notes of the Maximo Moreno eleven league tract were in his custody, under the Commissioner, contained in Book C, and referred to Exhibit A and the photographic copies of them attached to .the deposition of Walsh as correct.

Exhibit A, attached to the depositions, reads as follows:

“Sunday, 31st April, 1833.—Surveyed for Samuel Sawyer 11 leagues [114]*114of land on the north side of San Andres opposite the mouth of Lampasas.

“Sunday, 21st April, 1833.—At a pecan 18 inches diameter bearing north 59 west 14.3 varas from a hackberry 24 inches, and south 34 west 152 varas from an elm 12 inches; thence north 22 east 22,960 varas to the corner a stake in the prairie; thence south 70 east 1690 varas to a branch of Cow Creek, 4500 varas to second branch, 8000 varas to third branch, 11,000 varas to Cow Creek, 12,580 varas to the corner two small hackberries; thence south 20 west 3520 varas to Cow Creek, 7500 northwest corner of second tract a stake bearing north 77 east 93.3 varas from a hackberry 8 inches to Spring Branch 23,640 varas, 23,700 to bottom prairie, 24,360 crossed same branch to the corner a box-elder, 2640 varas bearing south 48 west 7.2 varas from a forked cottonwood 48 inches, and south 11 east 16.4 varas from an elm 15 inches.”

A photographic copy of the same instrument was attached as an exhibit to the depositions.

The first assignment of error is as follows: “The court erred in permitting to be read in evidence by defendants the photographic copy of field notes made for Samuel Sawyer.”

The second error assigned is: “The court erred in permitting to be read in evidence, over the objections of the plaintiff, the-documents (purporting) to be a certified copy of field notes from Book C of an eleven league survey made for Samuel Sawyer.”

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Bluebook (online)
13 S.W. 768, 77 Tex. 108, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1071, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ayers-v-harris-tex-1890.