Hardeman v. Maud

14 S.W. 287, 78 Tex. 84, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1348
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 1890
DocketNo. 6389
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 14 S.W. 287 (Hardeman v. Maud) 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
Hardeman v. Maud, 14 S.W. 287, 78 Tex. 84, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1348 (Tex. 1890).

Opinion

ACKER, Presiding Judge.

is an action of trespass to try title, instituted in the District Court of Travis County, on the 11th day of "October, 1887, by appellants against the appellee, to try the title to parts ol lots Nos. 1 and 2 in block 1 of a subdivision of lots Nos. 5,. 6, 7, and 8 of a subdivision of outlot No. 10 in division Z of the outlets of the city of Austin.

The defendant answered December 22, 1887, pleading “not guilty,’" and setting up the condemnation proceedings taken by the Republic of Texas in 1839 to condemn certain tracts of land, including the lots in question, for a seat of government, and alleging that plaintiffs claimed the lots in controversy as heirs of James Rogers, the original grantee of a third league tract included in said condemnation proceedings and embracing the-lots in controversy, and which tract of land had been patented over by the State in 1848, under one of which patents the defendant has a regular chain of title.

The defendant further pleaded, substantially, that plaintiffs’ ancestor had ceased to pay taxes and abandoned the land in controversy for more than twenty-five years prior to his death, and acquiesced in others buying it from the State, and improving and paying taxes thereon.

The case was tried before the court without a jury and judgment rendered for defendant December 22, 1887. Plaintiffs appealed.

Plaintiffs relied upon the following evidence of title: A certified copy of the headright certificate of James Rogers for a league and labor of land, issued January 22, 1838, and a certified copy from the General Land Office of field notes of a survey of 7 labors and 459,517 square varas of land surveyed in Bastrop County, March 1, 1838, and a certified copy of a patent number 45, volume 1, to said James Rogers for the same land, issued by the Republic of Texas -on the 6th day of February, 1841. It was admitted by defendant that the lots sued for by plaintiffs in this suit are a part of the land described in said patent; also that James Rogers died in 1864 intestate, and the plaintiffs are the only heirs of said James. Rogers. Here plaintiffs vested.

The defendant introduced in evidence:

1. Certified copy of the proceedings of the County Court of Bastrop County, as follows: “Special term of court held at the court house in the town of Bastrop on the 3d day of April, 1839. Present: L. C. Cunningham, C. J. C. B.; S. R. Miller, clerk; A. Mays, coroner, ex officio sheriff. In conformity with the provisions of the fourth section of the act entitled An Act for the permanent location of the seat of government, the [88]*88commissioners, to-wit, Albert C. Horton, William Menefee, Lewis C. Cook, Isaac W. Barton, Isaac Campbell, did on. the 23d day of March, 1839, present their petition setting forth the following, to-wit: That they have selected five thirds of leagues of land and two labors of land, situated, lying, and being in the county of Bastrop and Republic of Texas, on the east bank of the Colorado River, on a part of which stands the town of Waterloo, and the remainder of which are near or adjoined to said town and known as thirds one (1), two (2), three (3), four (4), and fractional third number-, and the said labors known as number five (5) and number -. Said commissioners further represent that third of a league number one (1) is the property of George Neill, residing in Washington County in said Republic; number two (2) is the property of Logan Van Deveer; number three (3) is the property of Aaron Burleson and George D. Hancock; number four (4) is the property of Edward Burleson and Joseph-Porter Brown, and the said fractional third is the property of James Rogers; all of the last named persons residing in the county of Bastrop. And of the labors aforesaid number five (5) the property of Jacob Harrell and number-west of Waterloo and adjoining thereto is the property of Edward Burleson, both of the county last aforesaid; and that the above named individuals have the lands surveyed and claim the same as their property; and likewise that James F. Perry, executor of the last will and testament of Stephen F. Austin, deceased, claims all the said land as the property of the succession of said Stephen F. Austin, deceased. Whereupon the proper writ was issued and delivered to the sheriff, requiring him to cite the said defendants to appear at the court house in the town and county of Bastrop, by 10 o’clock on the 3d day of April, 1839, in accordance with the above recited act, and also directions to said sheriff requiring him to summons six disinterested citizens of the county of Bastrop to appear in like manner at the court house in the town of Bastrop on said 1st day of April, 1839. April 3, 1839, this day the sheriff made return of said writ executed; likewise returned the names of the following individuals, to-wit, Bartlett Sims, B. M. Clapton, John Brown, James Stamford, Jeptha Boyce, James Lynn, who he had summoned as jurors. Whereupon the following defendants appeared in their own proper persons, to-wit, George Neill, Logan Van Deveer, Aaron Burleson, George D. Hancock, and Joseph Porter Brown; and Edward Burleson, Jacob Harrell, and James F. Perry, being solemnly called, came not but made default, whereupon the court appointed William Pinkney Hill curator for all said absent defendants. Said jurors being sworn according to law, and after hearing the testimony in the case, retired for deliberation, and returned the following verdict, to-wit:

“ ‘Republic of Texas, County of Bastrop.—We, Bartlett Sims, B. M. Clapton, John Brown, Jeptha Boyce, James Stamford, and James Lynn, being duly summoned and sworn as jurors to fix the value of five thirds [89]*89of leagues of land and two labors of land, lying on the east bank of the Colorado River, on a part of which stands the town of Waterloo, and claimed by individuals hereinafter named, have agreed on the following prices, viz.: One-third Ho. 1, claimed by George Heill, at ($3.50) three dollars and fifty cents per acre; one-third Ho. (2) two, claimed by Logan Van Deveer, at ($3.50) three dollars and- fifty cents per acre; one-third Ho. (3) three, claimed by Aaron Burleson and George D. Hancock, at ($3.50) three dollars and fifty cents per acre; Ho. (4) four, claimed by Edward Burleson and J. Porter Brown, at ($3) three dollars; and Ho. (5) five, claimed by James Rogers, at ($3) three dollars; and labor Ho. (o) five, claimed by Jacob Harrell, at ($3) three dollars; and Ho.-, claimed by Edward Burleson, at ($3) three dollars per acre, without including any improvements which may be on any of the aforesaid tracts of land. ' All of which is respectfully submitted.
“ ‘ Given under our hands at the the town-of Bastrop this third day of April, A. D. 1839.
“‘Bartlett Sims,
“‘B. M. Clapton,
‘“John Brown,
“ ‘ James Staniford,
“ ‘ Jeptha Boyce,
‘“James Lynn/
“ Whereupon it was ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that the sheriff of the < )unty of Bastrop be required to proceed forthwith and make to the Republic of Texas a deed of said land, pursuant to the provisions of the (5) fifth section of the before recited act.
“L. C. Cunningham,
“ Chf. Justice C. B.”

2. A deed executed by the sheriff of Bastrop County to the Republic .

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.W. 287, 78 Tex. 84, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardeman-v-maud-tex-1890.