Childress County Land & Cattle Co. v. Baker

56 S.W. 756, 23 Tex. Civ. App. 451, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 353
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 25, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 56 S.W. 756 (Childress County Land & Cattle Co. v. Baker) 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
Childress County Land & Cattle Co. v. Baker, 56 S.W. 756, 23 Tex. Civ. App. 451, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 353 (Tex. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

*452 KEY, Associate Justice.

Appellant, the Childress County Land and Cattle Company, brought this suit against A. J. Baker, Commissioner of the General Land Office of the State of Texas, and against several other defendants who were sued as individuals, to recover forty-seven surveys of land situated in Childress County.

Among other relief, the plaintiff’s original petition sought an injunction against Baker, as Commissioner of the Land Office, restraining him from selling to the other defendants the land sued for. The court below sustained a plea interposed by the Land Commissioner, and that feature of the suit was abandoned by the plaintiff. The other defendants disclaimed as to all the land described in the plaintiff’s petition, except so much thereof as was embraced within the boundaries of twenty-seven surveys, described in their answer, and situated in block H, Waco & Northwestern Railroad Company. They also interposed a general denial and plea of not guilty; and pleading in reconvention they-alleged that the lands claimed by them were part of the public free school lands of the State of Texas, and had been purchased by them from the State.

The State of Texas, by the Attorney-General, intervened in the cause and prayed for judgment canceling the patents under which the plaintiff claimed the land.

The plaintiff, by supplemental petition, replied to the pleadings of the State and the other defendants, by general and special demurrers, plea of estoppel, and alleged that the surveys claimed by the defendants, if in conflict with the plaintiff’s surveys, were not made by an officer authorized to survey the same, and were therefore void; that in fact no conflict existed between the surveys claimed by the respective parties, and also charged that the defendants were not actual settlers upon nor entitled to purchase the land from the State; and therefore acquired no title by their alleged purchase.

The court below overruled all the demurrers to the plaintiff’s original petition that were insisted upon, but sustained exceptions to all the supplemental petition, except the demurrers and general denial. The case then proceeded to trial before a jury; and, in accordance with a request made by the defendants, the court submitted special issues to the jury and a special verdict was returned. Thereupon, the plaintiff moved the court to render judgment for it, which the court declined to do; and after making and filing certain additional findings of fact, entered judgment establishing the line' in dispute between the parties substantially as claimed by the defendants, and canceling the plaintiff’s patents to all the land in conflict with the surveys claimed by the defendants.

The plaintiff has appealed, and presents the case in this court in an elaborate brief, containing over forty assignments of error. In a brief of equal magnitude, counsel for the appellees have replied in detail to all the questions presented by appellant. This court has given the case careful consideration, materially assisted by the briefs of the respective *453 parties, and has reached the conclusion that no reversible error has been pointed out.

It is not to be expected that all the points raised will be discussed in this opinion, and we shall only advert to a few that are deemed of most importance. In the main, the suit resolved itself into one of boundary, and the trial court charged the jury that the burden of proof on that issue rested upon the plaintiff. Counsel for appellant vigorously assail this charge and contend that, under the facts disclosed by the record, the burden on the issue of boundary was not upon the plaintiff, but rested upon the defendants.

The testimony shows that in 18.82 F. P. Knott purchased the surveys of land sued for and described in the plaintiff’s petition from the State as part of the unappropriated public domain, paying therefor 50 cents per acre. These surveys were patented to Knott in 1883. The defendants claim under surveys made in 1873, for the Waco & northwestern Railroad Company, the alternate sections of which surveys were by the constitutional law set apart as part of the public free school fund of the State. The individual defendants had contracted to purchase some of these surveys from the State in Hovember, 1897, under the law then and now in force authorizing the Commissioner of the Land Office to sell such school lands. Ho patent had ever issued upon these surveys. Evidence was submitted tending to show a considerable conflict between these surveys and those claimed by the plaintiff, and as the plaintiff held under a patent and the defendants did not, but relied solely upon prior unpatented locations, counsel for the plaintiff contend that the burden of proof upon the issue of boundary rested upon the defendants. The parties filed a written agreement with reference to the venue of the suit and other matters referred to therein; and it is claimed on behalf of the appellees that the agreement referred to places the burden of proof upon the plaintiff.

We are not disposed to adopt this construction of the agreement, but have reached the conclusion that appellees’ contention embodied in their second counter-proposition is correct. The proposition referred to asserts, “inasmuch as the appellant is the plaintiff to the action and claims under a junior location, the burden of showing that the land described in its petition does not conflict with the older locations in block H, was upon the appellant.” The State’s title to the alternate sections in block H, Waco & Horthwestern Railroad surveys, held by the State in trust for the school fund and the title of the defendants who had contracted in the manner prescribed by law for the purchase of any of said surveys, secured as great a right and was as effectual as a title under the land laws of this State, as would have been the case if patents had issued thereon prior to the date of the patents under which the plaintiff claims. And this being the case, we can see no logical reason why the burden of proof did not rest upon the plaintiff upon the issue of boundary, as well as upon all other issues of title. Clark v. Hills, 67 Texas, 141; Scott v. Pettigrew, 72 Texas, 321; McKinney v. Baldwin, *454 14 Texas Civ. App., 13; Rosson v. Hiller, 15 Texas Civ. App., 603. The cases cited hold that in boundary suits the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff. It may be true, as contended by appellants’ counsel, that none of them show a state of facts in which a plaintiff claimed under a patent or grant, and the defendant under a mere location; but this court is of the opinion that the distinction referred to is unimportant when the plaintiff claims under a junior title; and especially is this true in a case like the present, where the lands claimed by the defendants under the prior location were part of the public free school fund until after the surveys claimed by the plaintiff were patented; and therefore could not, prior to that time, have been patented. The State can not issue a patent to itself nor to the school fund, and lands which have been legally segregated from the public domain and set apart for the benefit of the school fund are held by the State in trust for that fund by as perfect a title as can be acquired by patent or otherwise.

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Bluebook (online)
56 S.W. 756, 23 Tex. Civ. App. 451, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/childress-county-land-cattle-co-v-baker-texapp-1900.