Giles v. Ponder

275 S.W.2d 509, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2428
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 19, 1955
Docket12696
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 275 S.W.2d 509 (Giles v. Ponder) 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
Giles v. Ponder, 275 S.W.2d 509, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2428 (Tex. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

POPE, Justice.

Russell S. Ponder commenced this suit under the provisions of Article 5421c, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.Stats., claiming a described area as vacant unsurveyed lands. He sued many parties who claim interests in the land concerned, including the Commissioner of the General Land Office of Texas and the Attorney General of Texas. The judgment awarded Ponder a, tract of land as vacant land, but held that other described lands were not vacant. The Commissioner of the General Land Office and the Attorney General are the only appellants, and they urge that other lands are also vacant lands.

The controversy is over a portion of low-lying land below a bluff and presents the legal question of whether the civil law rule of the common law rule shall apply-to a Republic grant in fixing the shoreline to the property which fronts on Copano Bay, in Aransas County, Texas. Certain steps were commenced to obtain a patent from the Republic of Texas prior to January 20, 1840, when the Republic generally adopted the common law, but the field notes were not returned to the land office and the patent did not issue until after that date.The State insists that the grant had its inception under the civil law, and for that reason the shore of the sea is to the line of the highest tide in winter; but the appel-lees argue that the grant extended, under the common law, to the line of ordinary high tide. Mayor, etc., of City of Galveston v. Menard, 23 Tex. 349; Heard v. Town of Refugio, 129 Tex. 349, 103 S.W.2d 728; De Merit v. Robison, 102 Tex. 358, 116 S.W. 796; Hynes v. Packard, 92 Tex. 44, 45 S.W. 562; Galveston City Surf Bathing Co. v. Heidenheimer, 63 Tex. 559, 562; State v. Balli, Tex.Civ.App., 173 S.W.2d 522, 543; Angell on Tide Waters, 20-27; Farnham, Waters and Water Rights, 228 (1904); 44 Tex.Jur., Water, § 99. The shore line under the civil law is at a higher point than, under the common law and, applied to the ground,, the difference between the lines is the property here in dispute.

After Texas became a Republic, but before it generally adopted the common law, Henry Smith, a transferee of the William Steele Land Warrant No. 840, dated December 8, 1837, caused John Talley, the Deputy Surveyor for Refugio County, to survey what is described in the field notes as “1280 acres of land” which fronted on the bay. Henry Smith, also a transferee of the Van Benthuysen Land Warrant No. 1188, dated December 20, 1837, caused the same surveyor to survey “640 acres of land” adjoining the other tract. The surveys were made and the field notes prepared with plats attached, and the surveyor, in accord with the law then in effect, made his affidavits that the plat, field notes and the survey were made since the first day of August, 1838. These affidavits were dated and signed by the deputy surveyor on September 23, 1839, and on the same date were certified as correct by the Refugio County Surveyor. The- trial court found as a fact, based upon presumptions, that the field notes on the two surveys were not filed in the General Land Office until after January 20, 1840, when the Republic generally adopted the common law. The patents were issued by Marabeau B. Lamar during April of 1841.

John Talley, in making his survey along the shore, ran his line on the'upland rather than going below what was a small bluff and onto the low-lying “flats” in dispute. The trial court correctly determined, upon sufficient evidence, that the line was a meander line. The grantee of meandered land owns at least to the shore line, whichever shore may be the correct one. Stover v. Gilbert, 112 Tex. 429, 247 S.W. 841.

The State reasons that the grant took its civil law nature when the property vested, which occurred when itrwas located and surveyed. The appellees argue that *511 the grant was not operative until after January 20, 1840, because the field notes were not returned to the General Land Office and the patent did not issue until after 1840. We hold that the common law shore line is the true line, because:

(1) Under the Constitution and Statutes of the Congress of the Republic, grants made by the Republic between September, 1836, and January 20, 1840, were made under the principles of the common law;

(2) Under the Constitution and Statutes of the Congress of the Republic, a “grant” meant a final title or patent.

We gain a clearer understanding of this Republic grant when we place ourselves in the historical setting in which these events transpired. Davis v. Bond, Tex.Civ.App., 141 S.W.2d 979, affirmed 138 Tex. 206, 158 S.W.2d 297. See also Frost Nat. Bank v. Boyd, Tex.Civ.App., 188 S.W.2d 199, affirmed 145 Tex. 206, 196 S.W.2d 497, 168 A.L.R. 1326. When we follow the footsteps of the early Republic lawmakers, we can more easily discover their intent, and since this was a Republic grant, her laws as they then existed must prevail. When we compare the Mexican laws with those of the Republic, we learn that the Constitution and Congress of the Republic, at the time of the grant in question, had already departed from the Mexican system and had incorporated the English system of land measurements into the laws of Texas.

When Moses Austin came to Texas in the winter of 1820 to lay his colonization plans' before Governor Martinez, Mexico was already preparing to declare her independence from Spain. Shortly thereafter Moses Austin died. On February 21, 1821, Iturbide declared the Mexican independence from Spain. Stephen F. Austin determined to continue his father’s colonization plan and came to Texas for a conversation with Governor Martinez, who asked for a positive statement of his plan. Austin, in the summer of 1821, submitted a plan by which he would promise each head of a family'and each single man over age, 640 acres of land, 320 acres in addition for the wife, ’ 160 acres for each child, and 80 acres for each slave. 1 Gammel 6. The plan met with favor, but several months later, on another trip to Texas, Governor Martinez, probably by reason of the change in governmental status, advised Austin that the Mexican Congress was then in session and that permission to colonize would need confirmation by the Mexican Government in Mexico City. 1 Gammel 6-7. A twelve hundred mile trip, through the dangers, deserts and mountains of Mexico, brought Austin to Mexico City, there to find that. Iturbide had caused himself to be proclaimed Emperor and that enmity existed between the Emperor and Congress. The first step toward a lawful colonization was not taken until January 4, 1823, when the Junta Instituyente, dominated by Iturbide, adopted, its general colonization law. 1 Gammel 9.

To a people born to the civil law, Austin’s plan to give lands measured in acres and sections of 640 acres, perhaps sounded strange, for the colonization law refused to adopt it. The civil law concept of land and land measurements was in different units; and the new law stated:

“Art. 5. The measurement of land shall be the following: establishing the vara, at three geometrical feet; a straight line of five thousand varas shall be a league; a square, each of. whose sides shall be one league, shall be called a sitio; and this shall be the unity of counting one, two, or more sitios; five sitios shall compose one hacienda.

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Bluebook (online)
275 S.W.2d 509, 1955 Tex. App. LEXIS 2428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giles-v-ponder-texapp-1955.