Boon v. Hunter

62 Tex. 582, 1884 Tex. LEXIS 294
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1884
DocketNo. 1573.
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 62 Tex. 582 (Boon v. Hunter) 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
Boon v. Hunter, 62 Tex. 582, 1884 Tex. LEXIS 294 (Tex. 1884).

Opinion

Stayton, Associate Justice.

The petition, as amended, contained all the material averments necessary in an action of trespass to try title, and the court did not err in overruling the general demurrer.

*584 The special demurrer, which questioned the sufficiency of the averments which alleged that the Hughson survey and patent were void, for the reason, that no actual survey of the land for which the patent issued was ever made, was also correctly overruled; for before the exception was acted on, the averments of nullity of survey and patent by reason of there being no actual survey were withdrawn, and the averment that no actual survey of the land was ever made on which the patent under which appellant claims was issued, "was but the averment of a fact proper to be proved in determining the actual locality of the land located by and patented to the appellant by reference to the various calls in the patent, the relative values and weight of which might be largely determined by knowledge whether an actual survey had or had not been made.

The question between the parties was one of boundary

The true locality of the survey made for the appellee is not questioned, nor is his right thereto denied, if it be not in conflict with the grant of land made to the appellant through the patent under which he claims.

It appears that the appellant’s location was as follows:

“ Jacksboro, Tex., Dec. 27, 1872.

“ E. Boon applies for a survey of one league and one labor land by virtue of certificate Ho. 520, issued by the clerk of the district court for Matagorda county on the 14th day of September, 1846. Situated in Jack county, beginning at the southwest corner of a survey in the name of Alfred Benton; thence west, thence south, thence east, thence north to the place of beginning, so as to cover the survey made for James Eider, M. M. Flores, T. P. Camp and F. Perez.”

Under this location no survey was ever actually made, but field notes were made out by the map then in use in that land district, and returned to the general land office, on which a patent issued.

The description of the land, as contained in the patent, is as follows:

“ L. and L. survey in Jack county, on the waters of Bock creek,.a tributary of the Brazos river, about 13 miles 8. 80 W. from the town of Jacksboro. Beginning at the 8. E. corner of a survey in the name of Alex. McCulloch, from which a lone p. o. N. 11½; W. 78 vrs.— thence E. 3611 vrs., a stone mound west boundary line of a survey made for Lewis Knight — thence North 1898 varas, a stake from which a post oak North 9, East 13 varas do., South 78, West 11 vrs.— thence East 989 varas to a corner on the north boundary line of said Lewis Knight — thence north 4162¼- varas, passing A. *585 Benton’s South West corner — thence West 4600 varas, a stone mound. — thence S. 6060¼ varas, passing the N. E. corner of McCulloch survey and with his east boundary line to the place of beginning.” Date, 21st November, 1878.

The location and survey under which appellee claims were made since the patent through which the appellant claims was issued.

At the time the appellant’s location was made, the map in use, upon its face showed the several tracts of land mentioned in the field notes under which the appellant claims to be as appears in the sketch here inserted;

It seems, however, to have been subsequently ascertained that the true position of some of the tracts of land mentioned in the field notes of the grant which the appellant claims, may have been inac *586 curately given on that map, and that their true locality, as found on the ground, may be as shown in the following sketch:

The true positions, however, of the Louis Knight survey, and of surveys 2748 and 2749, are admitted, and found to be correctly given on both of the sketches here referred to.

*587 The alteration in the map of Jack county, which makes the position of the several surveys referred to in the Hughson field notes to appear as in the last sketch given, was not made until some time in 1874.

The field notes of the Alfred Benton survey, made October 29, 1858, are as follows:

“ Four and a fraction labors in Denton District, Jack Co., on the waters of West Fork of Trinity river, about 10 miles N., 85 W. from Jacksboro. * * * Beginning at a stake 100 vrs. N. of Colony half section, S. E. corner No. 2749, from which a 1. o. N. 12 W. 45 vrs.; thence E. 560 vrs., a spotted oak, corner on W. side of Rocky Spring Branch, a p. o. N. 5, West 5 vrs.; thence S. 500 vrs., a stake, a double p. o. 5 in. in dia., S. 20, E. 6 vrs.; thence W. 1200 vrs., a rock corner, a live oak, S. 54, W. 7 vrs.; thence S. 820 vrs., a rock pile, small double p. o., N. 49, E. 2½ vrs.; thence W. 1785 vrs., p. o. sapling corner, a p. o. vrs. S. 80, E. 9 vrs.; thence N. 2562 vrs., a stake on S. line of Colony half section, No. 2748; thence E. 1081½ vrs., with said section line, S. E. corner of same and North W. corner of half Section No. 2749, thence S. with said Section line, 1344 vs., the S. W. corner of same—thence E. 1344 vs., S. E. corner of same, a p. o., S. 79, W. 17 vrs., do. S. 72½ W. 12 vrs., both marked with blaze — thence N. 100 vs. to beginning.”

The land claimed by the appellant, if located as he claims it to be, was on land vacant at the time his location was made, and not by any other person appropriated prior to the issue of the patent under which he claims; but if it be located as the appellee contends, then the location was made on land already appropriated by other persons. The location made by the appellee is known on the above sketch as the “ Fagworth ” survey, which, however, in name is incorrect and should be Ensworth.”

It clearly appears that no actual survey under the Hughson certificate was ever made, but that the field notes were made out by calculations based on the map then in use, after the ground west of the Louis Knight survey, and supposed to be covered by the forfeited surveys named in the location, had been examined. It also appears that the calls in the field notes, in so far as they call for the Louis Knight lines, corners and bearings, are correct.

That a patent is not void because no survey was actually made is well settled. Williamson v. Simpson, 16 Tex., 440; Stafford v. King, 30 Tex., 270. The appellant does not appear to be without fault in reference to the manner in which the field notes of the grant were *588 made, but we are not authorized to declare the patent void for what occurred prior to its issue in this respect.

The question then is: Can the land covered by the patent under which the appellant claims be so identified as to locate it where he claims it to be ? If so, then the appellee was not entitled to recover, for the evidence shows that there is a conflict of seventy-five or one hundred varas between the surveys claimed by the respective parties.

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62 Tex. 582, 1884 Tex. LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boon-v-hunter-tex-1884.