Burnett v. Powell

25 S.W. 1030, 6 Tex. Civ. App. 39, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 398
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 24, 1894
DocketNo. 235.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 25 S.W. 1030 (Burnett v. Powell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burnett v. Powell, 25 S.W. 1030, 6 Tex. Civ. App. 39, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 398 (Tex. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

HEAD, Associate Justice.

Believing that the legal literature of this State is already sufficiently voluminous, especially in prescribing rules for the correct solution of questions of boundary, this court, from its organization, has felt that it could subserve the interests of litigants better by devoting its time to the decision of cases than by writing at length the reasons for such decisions, unless some useful purpose could be accomplished thereby; and we have, therefore, adopted the practice of delivering our opinions orally in affirmed cases in which our jurisdiction is believed to be final, contenting ourselves with filing a brief statement of *40 the grounds of the decision, to serve as a guide to the losing party in making his motion for a rehearing, instead of a formal written opinion. This practice we shall continue to follow until convinced of our error in its adoption.

In this case appellee claims the land in controversy under a patent issued May 21,1888, while appellant claims under patents of much older date. There was no issue made in the court below as to the titles of the respective parties under these patents, the only issues being as to whether or not the land is embraced within appellant’s surveys, and if not, the amount of damages for which he was liable for use and occupation. It is true appellant assigned as error the refusal of the court below to allow him to introduce in evidence the field notes of the State’s part of the land located by virtue of appellee’s certificate, it being Confederate script number 2026, for the purpose of showing that it was not contiguous to the land in controversy, and hence the supposed invalidity of appellee’s patent; but there is nothing in the record to sustain the assignment that such evidence was offered or rejected, except a recital in the motion for new trial to that effect, and it would be idle to consume time to show, that in the absence of a bill of exceptions approved by the court, this was wholly insufficient.

Besides, in Von Rosenberg v. Cuellar, 80 Texas, 256, the present Chief Justice of our Supreme Court, in treating of this very question, after showing that the law required locations by virtue of these certificates to be made contiguous as in other cases, and that the question could be raised previous to the issuance of patent, uses this language: “If he (appellee) were suing on patents issued on illegal surveys, no one not claiming under some right existing prior to the issuance thereof could question their validity;” and we are of opinion that this principle has been so often recognized in this State that it should be no longer considered an open question.

It seems to us, then, that the case as presented in the lower court comes plainly within the statute which gives this court final jurisdiction in “ all cases of boundary,” whether the evidence relied upon to establish the location of the respective surveys be natural or artificial objects, course, distance, additions by accretion, or avulsion. It either case the question is, To which survey does the land belong ? and this we understand to be the view entertained by our present Supreme Court.

In Schley v. Blum, 85 Texas, 553, the present Chief Justice of that court, in construing the statute in question, says: “ There is, however, another reason why this court has no jurisdiction of this cause. While the action against the surveyor is to compel him to perform an official act, that against the adverse claimant of the land is to test the right of the respective parties claiming it; the one by virtue of locations, valid if the land was vacant, and the other through patents claimed to embrace *41 it. The claimant of the land was made a defendant in order that the court might adjudicate the right to the land, as a necessary fact to be determined before the surveyor could be compelled to make the survey.

“ The action was one involving the title to the land as fully as though that had been the sole purpose for which it was brought; and a judgment rendered in it, as between the adverse claimants, would be as conclusive as would be a judgment rendered in an ordinary action of trespass to try title. The right depended on a question of boundary; if the western boundary of the East Texas Railway block was the eastern boundary of the Morris & Cummins block, plaintiffs had no right, for there was no vacant land subject to location under their certificates; while if the blocks were not contiguous, they were entitled to land between the blocks covered by their locations.

“ Where the right of parties to an action involving the title to land depends solely on location, which must be determined by the boundaries of different tracts of land, then we have what the law designates as a case of boundary.’ The law provides, that ‘The judgments of the Courts of Civil Appeals shall be conclusive in all cases upon the facts of the case; and a judgment of such court shall be conclusive on facts and law in the following cases; nor shall a writ or error be allowed thereto from the Supreme Court, to-wit: * * * 2. All cases of boundary.’ This court has no jurisdiction to grant the writ prayed for, nor to review,, through any process, the decision of the Court of Civil Appeals in this cause, and the application must be dismissed.”

In this case the question as to whether the land sued for was in appellee’s or appellant’s survey was decided in favor of appellee, either upon the ground that the surveyor in making appellant’s location mistook a slough for the river, and the call for Red River in his patent was therefore a mistake (Allen v. Koepsel, 77 Texas, 505; Koepsel v. Allen, 68 Texas, 446); or upon the ground that the land in controversy was left adjacent to appellant’s surveys by a sudden change in the river, so as not to make it a part thereof as an addition thereto by accretion or reliction, the evidence being sufficient to sustain the verdict upon either ground, and the charge of the court clear and unexceptionable.

We therefore conclude, that viewed in any light, this is a case of boundary, from which no writ or error lies from this to the Supreme Court; and acting upon this view of the law, we affirmed the judgment of the court below in an oral opinion delivered October 25, 1893, making a brief memorandum in writing of the points decided, instead of formal conclusions, as is our custom, and we are now asked in this motion to reduce our opinion to writing, to serve as a basis for an application for a writ of error. If this request affected only this particular case, we should comply therewith without hesitation; but viewing the question as we do, we believe it in *42 volves not only this but every other case in which the law has attempted to confer final jurisdiction upon this court.

Delivered January 24, 1894.

The law certainly does not contemplate that we shall reduce to writing our opinions in affirmed cases, in which no writ of error lies from our decision. We must, of course, decide in the first instance as to whether the particular case is of that class.

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Bluebook (online)
25 S.W. 1030, 6 Tex. Civ. App. 39, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burnett-v-powell-texapp-1894.