Byrne v. Fagan

16 Tex. 391
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 16 Tex. 391 (Byrne v. Fagan) 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
Byrne v. Fagan, 16 Tex. 391 (Tex. 1856).

Opinion

Hemphill, Oh. J.

This was an action to try title, and also that the title of the plaintiff, Byrne, might be quieted and established, against the pretended grant, or title, of defendants. The boundaries of the tract claimed by plaintiff are specifical[393]*393ly set forth, and the entry and ouster by defendants ; and the plaintiff avers, that, as color for their wrongful acts, the defendants set up and claim under a pretended, spurious, and invalid title, alleged to have been made by a certain supposed officer of the State of Coahuila and Texas, to the said Anastacia Riojas, as a colonist in the colony of Power & Hewetson, which they assert to be valid and subsisting ; and the plaintiff further represents, that the said title, or grant, and claim and pretence, tend to his manifest injury, cloud his title and prevent the sale of his land, &c.

The defendants pleaded in reconvention, a grant from the State of Coahuila and Texas to Anastacia Riojas, as a colonist in the colony of Power & Hewetson ; that the claims and locations of plaintiff were a cloud upon their title, which they prayed to be removed and declared null and void.

There was verdict and judgment for defendants, and motion for new trial being refused, the plaintiff appealed, and assigns,

1st. That there was error in admitting the testimonio and translation offered by defendants, as competent evidence of title.

2nd. In overruling the motion for new trial.

• 3rd. In rendering judgment for the defendants, on the pleadings, verdict and evidence.

The defendants relied on a title purporting to have been issued on the 1st Sept., 1834, by Jose Jesus Vidaurri, the commissioner of Power & Hewetson’s Colony, to Anastacia Riojas, a Mexican widow ; and, on offering the testimonio (in the original language, and by way of translation,) of the grant, objections were taken, on the grounds,

1st. That the grantee, Anastacia Riojas, was not properly a a colonist in Power & Hewetson’s Colony, and that the commissioner was not authorized to issue title to her as a settler.

2nd. That she should have applied to the Ayuntamiento and received her title from a special commissioner; and that Vidaurri, as colonial commissioner, was authorized to issue titles [394]*394to colonists only, admitted as such before the expiration of the contract.

The objections were overruled, and the question is, was this error?

The gist of the objection is, that it does not appear from the face of the title, that Madam Riojas was admitted as a colonist before the time limited for the expiration of the contract, viz : the 11th April, 1834. The commissioner to issue titles to the colonists, was not appointed until after the contract had expired, viz : the 19th June, 1834. In the discharge of his functions, he passed, in the usual form, the petition for title, to the Empresarios, for the expression of their consent as to the admission of the applicant. The fact of admission was preliminary to the grant, and the certificate of the Empresarios was required by the commissioners as the most authentic evidence of such fact; and, whether the contract had expired or not, the inquiry was made of the Empresarios, and their certificate required, on the grant of title. There is no evidence as to the time of admission of the grantee. She was a Mexican, and, under the special order of the Government, could claim admission and the rights of a colonist. She had, as appears from the petition, resided for five years within the limits of the colony ; and, in the absence of proof, the presumption is that she, or her husband when alive, was admitted, on their introduction, as colonists.

But it is said in argument, that the title furnishes intrinsic evidence, that the grantee was not admitted, until after the application for the grant, and that this appears from the reply of the Empresarios to the commissioner, to the effect that “ with respect to the admission of the Mexican woman, Dona Anastacia Riojas, in this colony, we immediately, (or from “ this moment, desde luego,) give our consent, as required of us “ by law.”

This mode of expressing the assent of the Empresarios is doubtless obnoxious to criticism ; and if the response had been, [395]*395that the applicant has been admitted by us as a colonist, it might have more accurately expressed the legal fact which was or should have been the object of inquiry by the commissioner. But it will be remembered that the commissioner was not appointed until after the time for the contract had expired ; that no application was made for title, until after that time; and it appears from this title, when application was made, the petition was passed to the Empresarios, not that they might state whether they had formerly admitted the applicant, as a colonist, but that they might express their consent as to her admission. To this the natural reply was,' that they gave their assent. But the mode of interrogation by the commissioner, or reply by the Empresarios, could not, at this day, be set up to defeat the rights of a grantee. The commissioner for the colony had his instructions, and his commission prescribed the limits of his authority ; and whether his questions to the Empresarios, or their answers, were the most pertinent that could have been devised, whether the fact was expressed with precise accuracy, is wholly immaterial. The issue of the grant to an applicant, as a colonist, precludes inquiry as to the fact of his formal admission as such, and especially where the residence of the grantee had been within the colonial limits.— The inquiry of the commissioner and the reply of the Empresarios are in the usual form, as will be seen by reference to other titles in that colonial contract. In Hatch v. Dunn, (11 Tex. R. 709,) the application of Dunn, for title, was passed to the Empresarios, that they might, among other matters, express their consent with respect to his admission, and the reply in. effect was, that they do admit him, not that they have admitted him, as it should have been, according to the argument of appellant. It appeared that Dunn had resided for some time within the boundaries of the colony. So, in the title to Juan Flores and Miguel Manchaca, the Empresarios say to the commissioner, from this time we give our consent to their admission, as required by law.” (Vide White v. Holliday, 11 Tex. R. 607.)

[396]*396The certificate of admission, in this title, was, it appears, in the customary form, and the deductions of appellant, from its phraseology, could not be admitted, without involving the general forfeiture of colonist titles, a consequence truly alarming and not to be tolerated, unless on palpable and manifest grounds of nullity. The terms are not to be taken as evidence of the time at which the grantees were really admitted into the colony. There were, perhaps, no books kept, showing the time of such admission, and at the worst the modes of expression employed by the commissioner, and the Empressarios, were but irregularities, which cannot affect the validity of the grants. For further views on this point see Hatch v. Dunn, 11 Tex. R. 709. There was no error in overruling the objections, and in the admission of the title in evidence.

Under the second assignment, the appellant insists that there was no proof that the grant given in evidence by defendants, included the lands claimed by the plaintiff. But the answer to this is, there was no necessity for such proof.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McBride v. Gulf Oil Corp.
292 S.W.2d 151 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1955)
State of Texas v. Balli
190 S.W.2d 71 (Texas Supreme Court, 1944)
Boone v. Hulsey
9 S.W. 531 (Texas Supreme Court, 1888)
Gonzales v. Ross
120 U.S. 605 (Supreme Court, 1887)
Airhart v. Massieu
98 U.S. 491 (Supreme Court, 1879)
Elliott v. Mitchell
47 Tex. 445 (Texas Supreme Court, 1877)
King v. Elson
30 Tex. 246 (Texas Supreme Court, 1867)
Musquis v. Blake
24 Tex. 461 (Texas Supreme Court, 1859)
Nicholson v. Horton
23 Tex. 47 (Texas Supreme Court, 1859)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 Tex. 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byrne-v-fagan-tex-1856.