Corrigan v. State

94 S.W. 95, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 171, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 220
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 28, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 94 S.W. 95 (Corrigan v. State) 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
Corrigan v. State, 94 S.W. 95, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 171, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 220 (Tex. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

FISHER, Chief Justice.

In the two above styled cases the State, as plaintiff filed suits against the defendants in the District Court of Travis County in trespass to try title, to recover certain lands described in plaintiff’s petitions, and for damages.

The defendants answered by general denial and pleas of not guilty. The trial was before the court without a jury and judgment rendered in favor of the State in the Corrigan case for the land sued for, and in favor of the State in the Dunn case for all the land sued for except about 200 acres.

The trial court filed its conclusions of fact and law, and the appellants in each case filed exceptions thereto, but no exceptions were made to the findings of fact by appellee. By agreement these cases were tried together, and it was agreed that on the appeal the cases should stand as one case, and that the judgment that might be rendered in the Corrigan case should be rendered in the Dunn case.

The findings of the trial court are as follows:

“1. The land, title to which is in controversy in this cause, was originally embraced in a grant of land expressed to be for five leagues made by the Mexican government to Diego Ynojosa. The validity of said original grant to Diego Ynojosa is not controverted in this suit, and for the purposes of this case, I find that same was a valid grant.
“2. Subsequent to the date of said grant, and to the annexation of Texas by the United States, a dispute arose between the owners of the grant and the State, concerning the validity of the grant and the location of its boundaries. This dispute culminated in the passage by the Legislature of the State of Texas, in the year 18'52, of an act confirming the validity of the grant. Under the provisions of law existing at the date when said act of confirmation became effective, it was the *174 duty of the owners of said grant if they wished to avail themselves of said Act of confirmation and to procure a patent thereunder, to have the land embraced in the grant surveyed, and to file in the General Land Office of the State, within the time prescribed by law, the field notes of such survey, showing the boundaries of the grant. After said Act of confirmation, and within due time, the owners of said Diego Ynojosa grant did procure to be made the survey contemplated by law, and did file in the Land Office the field notes of same, and did on August 25, 1856, procure from the State a patent to the land embraced in said grant as so resurveyed. Said grant as so resurveyed, said field notes as filed in the Land Office, and said patent as issued thereon, show the land here in controversy to be no part of said Diego Ynojosa grant; and that the grant as resurveyed and patented contains five leagues of land. The State of Texas has continuously claimed' the land in controversy since the enactment of said Act of confirmation and the acceptance of the terms of same by the owners of said grant, as evidenced by said survey, the filing of said field notes in the General Land Office by them, and issuance of said patent, and the land has been surveyed and appropriated by the State to the common free school fund. There is also evidence in the record which it is claimed shows that owners of the Diego Ynojosa grant have claimed the land in controversy by virtue of their ownership of said grant, since said Act of confirmation, survey thereunder, and the issuance of said patent, but such evidence is equivocal in character, and does not to my mind establish anything more than that said owners, since said date, have claimed that their grant originally included the land in controversy.
“3. It is agreed in open court that if plaintiff is entitled to recover judgment for the land as I have decided in this case, it is also entitled to recover the rents awarded in said judgment.
“4. The original owners of the Diego Ynojosa grant, under whom defendant claims owned same at and prior to the date when the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo became effective, and were at and prior to said date Mexican citizens.
“5. Defendant claims the land in suit solely under the Diego Ynojosa grant.
“Conclusions of Law.—Defendant’s predecessors in title accepted the settlement made between themselves and the State concerning the boundaries of the Diego Ynojosa grant; and from the date of such acceptance became bound thereby; and could not now be permitted in such a suit as this to prove that the grant originally embraced the land here, in controversy. The status of the land, title to which is in controversy in this suit, was fixed and determined by the terms of said settlement to be no part of said grant. Therefore, the owners of the grant, by virtue of such ownership, could not thereafter have conveyed to defendant any title to said land.”

Whatever additional findings of fact or conclusions of this court that might relate thereto will be stated in the opinion in passing upon the several assignments of error.

Appellant’s sixth assignment of error is to the effect that the court erred in finding as a fact that subsequent to the date of the Diego *175 Ynojosa grant and to the annexation of Texas by the United States, a dispute arose between the owners of the grant and the State concerning the validity of the grant and the location of its boundaries, and that this dispute culminated in the passage by the Legislature of the State of Texas, in the year 1852 of an Act confirming the validity of the grant. The court correctly found as to the validity of the Diego Ynojosa grant, and that it embraced all the lands in controversy.

It appears from the evidence that the grant in controversy is located in that portion of the State of Texas that was, prior to the Revolution, a part of the State of Tamaulipas, Mexico; and that in 1835, the grant, by proper steps previously taken, became perfect, and that the field notes of the surveyor Canales, which call for the surrounding grants, taken in connection with the evidence in the record, locate the lands in controversy as being embraced within the boundaries and limits of the original Diego Ynojosa grant. The documentary evidence accompanying the title show that at the proper time the proper steps were taken to establish the juridical possession; and there is nothing indicating, up to the time of the perfection of the grant, and during the period •of time over which Mexico entertained jurisdiction of the territory where the land was situated, that she ever asserted any right or that the rights of the original grantee were ever questioned or disturbed. The land had been in possession of those claiming under the original grant for a number of years, and they were asserting a claim to the extent of the boundaries defined in the Canales survey. It is the excess of the five leagues called for in the grant upon which the locations have been made, the title to which is claimed by the State and which is in controversy here. Prior to 1850 or 1852, it does not appear from the evidence that the State was asserting any right to these lands. In fact, whatever assertion of right the State has made has been subsequent to the time that the patents were finally issued, based upon the legislative confirmation in 1852.

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.W. 95, 42 Tex. Civ. App. 171, 1906 Tex. App. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corrigan-v-state-texapp-1906.