Elliot v. Mitchell

28 Tex. 105
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 28 Tex. 105 (Elliot v. Mitchell) 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
Elliot v. Mitchell, 28 Tex. 105 (Tex. 1866).

Opinion

Donley, J.

—Exceptions were filed by appellees in the court below to the sufficiency of the petition, but it does not appear that the exceptions, were noticed; the appellees have not appealed; no errors have been assigned by them. They have not in any way made themselves actors to bring before this court for revision the errors complained of in argument.

It has been repeatedly decided by this court, that when [109]*109exceptions are filed, but not subsequently noticed in the proceedings below, they will be deemed to have been waived by the party filing them. (Jones v. Black, 1 Tex., 529; Phillips v. Hill, 3 Tex., 397; Carter v. Carter, 5 Tex., 93.)

The grant to Rachel Leach, if situated within the limits of Burnet’s colony, is sufficient to vest the title in her, if the land described in the grant can be identified. Objection is made to the title, that it is not within the limits of Burnet’s colony. The colony calls to start from the town of Nacogdoches on the course north fifteen leagues distant, when, leaving free the twenty border leagues on one side on a parallel with the river Sabinas and the dividing line of the United States of the North; thence a line shall be run directly on the course west as far as the creek called Navasoto; thence downward on the left bank of the same, &c.

The surveyor who made the survey, relied on as evidence on the trial, began at the public square in the town at Nacogdoches, thence north 24°, west fifteen leagues, and from thence south 78° west to the west bank of the Navasoto. He says that the land in "controversy lies fifteen or eighteen miles north of this line, and would, according to this survey, be that distance without the limits of the colony.

This testimony, if objection had been made, should have been excluded. To determine the boundary of the colony, a line should be run directly west from the termination of the first line of fifteen leagues in a northern direction from Nacogdoches, and 'the evidence to show the boundaries of the colony should have been confined to a direct west line from the point of intersection of .the line from Nacogdoches with the line of the twenty leagues west from the east boundary of the State. It is conceived that only in one event can there be a departure from a direct course west in extending a line to ascertain the northern bound[110]*110ary of the colony. If a line directly west would pass north of the Havasoto creek, the line must be so varied as to strike the most northern branch of that creek. The jury were instructed, that “if the Leach survey were made without the limits of Burnet’s colony, then it would be void for the want of authority in the officer issuing the title.” Hearly the same question is presented in the first charge asked by the plaintiff and refused. The giving of the charge above, and refusing the charge asked by plaintiff, was error. The boundaries of the colony had not, it is believed, been established by a survey. Persons who emigrated to and settled within the colony became, by virtue of that emigration and settlement, entitled to a grant of land, to be selected of any vacant land within the limits of the colony. If the lines of the colony had been marked, so as to be known, it is believed that a survey must have been within the limits of the colony; yet it might have been made with the line of the colony, as one of the lines of the survey.

If the lines of the colony have not been established by a survey, nor by certain and well-known boundaries, yet it was the right of the colonist to select the portion of land to which he was entitled in any place within the colony, and if it shall be ascertained, after many years, that in fact the land is a short distance without the limits of the colony, yet, if it can be ascertained or inferred from .the facts in evidence that the grantee and the commissioner might reasonably conclude that the land was within the colony, the title shall not be divested. If the conclusion may fairly be drawn, that the commissioner and grantee might reasonably believe that the lands were within the limits of the colony, the grant must be sustained. The condition of the country at the time of the issuing of the grants under which the appellant here claims requires a liberal construction in favor of the grantee. In Hamilton v. Menifee, 11 Tex., 749, it is said, that “It would be an [111]*111act of great injustice to permit titles fairly and honestly granted, with reference to a line of boundary not traced by the government, but honestly determined upon by the authorities on the best lights which they had on the subject, to be impeached, because they are two or three miles within or without what may now be supposed to be the exact line.”

A question is made in this case as to the fact, whether a survey of the league of land was made before the issuing of the grant, and whether the land is so described by the survey that it can be identified. It is believed that the marks on the ground, and the witnesses who assisted in malting the survey, identify the land as the same surveyed for Rachel Leach. It appears, from a survey made during the pendency of the cause, that there are, in fact, some three hundred acres more than a league. This cannot affect the grant. It is believed to be well settled, that, where there has been an actual survey, and more land is included than was intended to be granted, but the excess is not so great as to induce the belief that a fraud has been attempted, the grantee must hold. We do not remember a case where such an excess as appears in this case has been held as an objection to the title. (Maxcy v. O’Connor, 23 Tex., 240; White v. Burnley, 20 How., 247.)

On the trial, the defendants offered to read in evidence the deposition of John A. Harlan. The plaintiff objected to reading the deposition, for the reason that the witness, Harlan, was then present in court. The objections were overruled, and the deposition was read in evidence. The deposition appears to have been material, and'the objections should have been sustained.

By Art. 817, Hart. Dig., it is provided, that “no deposition of a witness, except when the witness is a female, shall be permitted to be read in evidence, unless the party offering the same, his agent, attorney, or some competent person, shall first make oath that the witness is without the [112]*112limits of the county where the suit is pending, or that such witness is dead; or that, by reason of age, sickness, or official duty, such witness is unable to attend the court.” (Paschal’s Dig., Art. 3733, Note 819.) The objection is made to reading the deposition in evidence, not for the reason that the oath prescribed by law is not made, but it is shown that the oath could not be made. We cannot know what reason induced the defendant to prefer reading the deposition, rather than placing the witness upon the stand. As the witness was present in court, it was the right of the plaintiff to have him placed on the witness stand, and there he should give his testimony before the jury in court.

Some questions have been discussed by counsel that are not adverted to in this opinion.

By Art. 2940, Hart.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Tex. 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elliot-v-mitchell-tex-1866.