Denny v. Cotton

22 S.W. 122, 3 Tex. Civ. App. 634, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 342
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 26, 1893
DocketNo. 129.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 22 S.W. 122 (Denny v. Cotton) 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
Denny v. Cotton, 22 S.W. 122, 3 Tex. Civ. App. 634, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 342 (Tex. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

*637 FISHER, Chief Justice.

This was a consent consolidation of two actions of trespass to try title, brought by appellees July 15, 1887, in the District Court of El Paso County, respectively against appellant Denny and appellant Lee. February 20, 1890, appellees filed amended original petitions, in which, as against said appellants, respectively, they asserted title to the land in controversy, alleging same to be all those parts of the pre-emption surveys numbers 109 and 111 in conflict with Burdett survey number 2, claimed under title by appellees. February 24,1890, each appellant in the suit against himself filed an amended original answer, containing, besides a general demurrer and plea of not guilty, a plea in the nature of a plea in reconvention, asserting title as against appellees, each to the land included within the lines of the pre-emption survey claimed by him. Each appellant had previously, August 18, 1887, filed in the suit against him an original answer, consisting of a general demurrer and a plea of the general issue. February 24, 1890, appellees filed in each case a supplemental petition, interposing as against appellants’ respective assertions of title pleas of not guilty and five years limitation. Same day, February 24, 1890, after due consolidation of the two causes, they were tried as one cause by the court, without the intervention of a jury, and judgment rendered in appellees’ favor for the land sued for.

We find the following facts:

1. Patent from the State of Texas to Joseph Magoffin, assignee of N. W. Burdett, dated February 20, 1858, to the following described land, being the Burdett survey number 2: 320 acres in El Paso County, Texas, on the east bank of the Rio Grande River, about two and one-half miles below El Paso, known as survey number 2; beginning at a stake the southwest corner of survey number 1; thence north 2368 varas to rock mound; thence west 672 varas to rock mound; thence south 3000 varas to a stake on the bank of the Rio Grande; thence down said river with its meanders to the place of beginning.

2. Appellees hold and own the foregoing described land by regular chain of title from Joseph Magoffin and wife down to themselves.

3. Both appellants claim the land in controversy as pre-emptors of the land in 1887, and as such pre-emptors they have complied with the terms of the then existing laws that permitted citizens of Texas to acquire public lands as pre-emptors, and have title to the land provided it was vacant ■at that time.

4. At the time the Burdett survey number 2 was located, in 1858, the banks and channel of the Rio Grande and low-water mark thereof was several hundred varas north of where the bank and channel and low-water mark of the river was in 1887, when the pre-emption claims of appellants were filed. That the bank and channel and low-water mark of the river has since 1858, where the Burdett survey number 2 originally abutted on *638 it, receded from the north and gone south several hundred varas. That this was occasioned by annual rises in the river from 1858 to the time of filing the pre-emption claims by appellants, and by the peculiar formation and shape of the banks at that point. The Burdett survey was situated on the north bank of the river, and called for a stake on the bank of the river and to run down the river with its meanders. Land extending about the width or more of the Burdett survey number 2, and about several hundred varas in distance, has since 1858, up to 1887, formed between the bank of the river as it existed in 1858 to where it existed when the pre-emption claims were located in 1887. It is this land upon which the appellants have located their pre-emption claims, and is the land in controversy. The shifting of the bank and channel of the river and the formation of that land was the result of the annual rises in the river during that period. That the river generally remained up at a high-water stage two or three months in each year. That after each rise the changes made in the channel and banks of the river could be seen and discerned, but they could not be perceived while the progress of changing was going on. That the change in the banks and channel of the river and the low-water mark existing when the pre-emption claims were located, as different from that existing when the Burdett survey was located, was not sudden, but was the result of the annual rises in the river during' said period from 1858 to 1887.

5. That the said land so formed on the north side of the river and the-land in controversy is a part of the Burdett survey number 2, and is the result of accretion and alluvion.

6. The land upon which the pre-emption claims of appellants were located, and being the same land in controversy, was not vacant public domain subject to location at that time, but was a part of the Burdett. survey number 2, and the superior title thereto is in the appellees.

Opinion.—The appellants contend, that the call in the Burdett survey for the stake in the bank of the Rio Grande River as it existed in 1858, the time when the survey was made, should control, and that it should not be extended in course and distance so as to reach the bank of the river as subsequently formed; and that the land formed between the old river as it existed in 1858 and the new channel was vacant land, and subject to the location of the pre-emption claims of appellants.

Upon the other hand, appellees contend, that the facts of this case call for an application of law of accretion and alluvion. That the call of theBurdett survey for the bank of the river with its meanders will carry it to the middle of the channel or low-water mark of the river as newly formed, and that the land so formed since the location of the Burdett survey are the accretions thereto, caused by the deposit of alluvion. *639 thereon, or the dereliction resulting from the gradual recession of the water to the new channel and the gradual changing of the bed of the river.

This, in .effect, presents the diverse views of the parties to this controversy.

The main question we are called upon to decide is, Is the change in the bed of the river and the increase and addition to the land the result of alluvion or avulsion ? The appellees contend that it is the former, and appellants the latter.

The accretion by alluvion belongs to the owner of the shore whose lands front on the stream and to which the addition is made; also, such is the case where the accretion is the result of a dereliction occasioned by the gradual recession of the water from the land and the making of a new channel. This right rests upon the consideration, that while the riparian owner is liable to lose soil by the action of the water, he should also have the benefit of accretion resulting from the same cause.

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Bluebook (online)
22 S.W. 122, 3 Tex. Civ. App. 634, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denny-v-cotton-texapp-1893.