Gonzales v. Ross

120 U.S. 605, 7 S. Ct. 705, 30 L. Ed. 801, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2007
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 14, 1887
Docket28
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 120 U.S. 605 (Gonzales v. Ross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gonzales v. Ross, 120 U.S. 605, 7 S. Ct. 705, 30 L. Ed. 801, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2007 (1887).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bradley

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action of trespass to try title, brought by the heirs of - Juan Gonzales against The International and Great Northern Railroad Company and their tenant in possession (Ross), to recover eleven leagues of land situate in Kinney County, Texas, adjoining the Rio Grande. The defendants pleaded not guilty, and title from the sovereignty of the soil. At the trial a jury was waived, and the court found the facts specially (which are set out in a bill of exceptions), and rendered judgment for the defendants. The judgment is based upon the failure of the plaintiffs to make out their title; and their failure to make title arose from the court’s overruling and rejecting the testimony offered by the plaintiffs as evidence of the extension of title to their ancestor, Juan, Gonzales.

The court found and decided that the plaintiff had shown an application for, and concession of, eleven leagues of land in the name of Juan Gonzales, in the state of Coahuila and Texas, *608 and gave the purport of the documents showing the same, being an exemplification of the original in the archives of the government of Coahuila, at Saltillo. These documents were in Spanish, accompanied by a verified translation. They were exemplified under date of August 20, 1874, and had been duly recorded in the clerk’s office in the records of. Kinney County on the1 8th of February, 1878, as appeared by the clerk’s certificate thereon.

The application of Gonzales, as translated, was as follows, to wit:

“ To his Excellency: The citizen Juan Gonzales, before your Excellency, with greatest respect, states:

“ That in accordance with the provisions of the law of colonization of the state your Excellency will please grant me the serle of eleven sitios of land of those vacant lands of the department of Monolova and places by me designated, promising to introduce in them the number of stock required by the same law and paying the value, delivering at once the fourth part of the same and binding myself to fulfil all requirements of the same law. Praying your Excellency will grant this petition as requested, will receive grace and justice.

“ Juan Gonzales.”

The grant, bearing date, Leona Yicario, October 16, 1832, was attached' to the application, and Arms in the name of the Governor in the usual form, and, as translated, Avas as follows:

•“ In accordance to article 13 of the neAV law of colonization enacted by the honorable Congress of the state April 28, 1832, I grant the sale to petitioner of the eleven sitios of land prayed for at the place' designated by him, provided that they shall be all in one tract and not under any title belonging to any corporation or person whatsoeArer.

“The commissioner for the division of lands in the enterprise to which corresponds the one which petitioner solicits, and in his default, or in case there is none, of not being engaged in any other enterprise, the alcalde 1st, or the only one acting of the respective municipality or the nearest one, complying with [the] order given in the matter, aaúII place him in *609 possession of the said sitios, and will extend the corresponding title to the same, first classifying the quality of said lands, so as to be able to state the amount to be paid the state, which payment must first be paid by the interested party in the manner and terms specified in the last part of said article 13, making the payment at once as provided by this article, in the treasury of the state, receipt of which he will present to the secretary, sp that the secretary, upon sight of it, will proceed to give [the] interested party copy of his petition, with which he will go to the commissioner and have its requirements complied with.

“ Eca y Musquiz. (One rubric.)

“ Santiago Del Talle, Secretary. (One rubric.) ”

The court next found as follows :

“ Second. That Fortunato Soto was duly appointed by the ■proper authority of the state of Coahuila and Texas, as commissioner to.extend titles in the colony contracted for by Juan Carlos Beales and Diego Grant. That his commission of authority was dated March 13th, 1834, and was signed by Francisco Tidann y Taílastéñor, the then- governor of the state of Coahuila and Texas and by J. Mijuel Falcon, the then secretary of state, of Coahuila and Texas.

“ Third. The plaintiffs are the legal heirs of Juan Gonzales, the beneficiary and grantee of the concession referred to in decision number one, above set forth.

“ Fourth. That defendants are in possession of the land described in plaintiff’s petition. .

“ Fifth. That the boundaries of the colony contracted for by Juan Carlos Beales and Diego Grant are shown by the following . . . contract of colonization entered into with the citizen Diego Grant and Don Juan Carlos Be'ales as empresarios to introduce 800 families in the vacant lands of the state.”

The contract referred to, between the government of Coahuila and Texas and Juan Carlos Beales and Diego Grant, is then set out in full, the application bearing date October 5, 1832, and the concession October 9, 1832. It included, first, *610 a grant for the whole territory lying between' the Rio Grande and Nueces rivers, and bounded south by the state of Tamaulipas, and north by the 29th parallel of latitude; secondly, a grant of a tract formerly granted to Woodbury and Yehlein, and subject to their right to colonize 200 families, embracing a territory over 200 miles in length, bounded north by the ' 32d parallel of latitude, south by the old road leading from Rio Grande to Bexar, west by the 100th degree of west longitude, and east by other grants in the interior of Texas. The first' tract adjoins the southwest corner of the second; and Kinney County, in which the lands in question are situated, lies in the angle between the two tracts, but outside of both.

The 9th article of the concession to Beales and Grant has the following provision : “ This colony shall be regulated and their lands divided by a commissioner of* the government, who in proper time will be appointed, and will discharge his duties in accordance with the laws and instructions that for said officials have been approved by the honorable Congress.”

The bill of exceptions then exhibits two maps given in evidence by the plaintiffs, certified by the Secretary of State' of the United States, one being a copy taken from Disturnell’s map of the united Mexican states, published in 1847, and deposited with the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, 1848; the other showing, the boundary fine between the United States and Mexico, as laid down in Melish’s map, published in 1818, and agreed to in the treaty of January 12, 1828. ' These maps show that the province of Texas did not then embrace any territory west of the river Nueces.

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Bluebook (online)
120 U.S. 605, 7 S. Ct. 705, 30 L. Ed. 801, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gonzales-v-ross-scotus-1887.