Houston Oil Co. v. Gallup

50 Tex. Civ. App. 369
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 23, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 50 Tex. Civ. App. 369 (Houston Oil Co. v. Gallup) 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
Houston Oil Co. v. Gallup, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 369 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinions

WILLSON, Chief Justice.

The suit was to try the title to the Patsey Lewis survey of 17,639,400 square varas, situated in San Augustine County, on Ayish Bayou, and about twenty-one miles south of the town of San Augustine. Appellants, except as to a portion of the land for which they obtained judgment, claimed title through mesne conveyances from parties claiming as devisees under Patsey Lewis’ will, and appellees claimed through mesne conveyances from parties claiming [372]*372as her heirs. From a finding of the court in favor of the title asserted by the heirs as against the title asserted by the devisees, and a judgment entered in accordance with such finding, and from a finding in favor of appellee D. L. Gallup against appellant S. W. Blount, who had warranted the title to a portion of the land, in the sum of $1427.40 as damages- for a breach of the warranty, this appeal is prosecuted.

The trial court’s conclusions of fact are a part of the record. So far as they do not conflict with the findings below, we think they are supported by the record. In one or two particulars we think they are not so supported; and in one or two other particulars where findings should have been made, none were made. These omissions have been supplied in the findings below.

Patsey Lewis, a widow with several children, emigrated to Texas from Missouri about 1818 and settled in San Augustine County. September 23, 1834, as the head of a family, she made application to the proper authority for a grant as a colonist to one league of land; and September 26, 1834, the proper commissioner directed that a survey be made for her of the quantity of land she had applied for. October 13, 1834, a survey—of twenty labors, it seems—was made for Mrs. Lewis by surveyor David Brown. The field notes of this survey were shown to be in the vault in the General Land Office where the Spanish archives are kept, and a copy thereof seems to have formed a part of the deposition of the witness Robison, but for some unaccountable reason same were not made a part of the record on this appeal. Therefore, we have been unable directly to determine whether the survey then made was of the land in controversy or not. Circumstantially, it perhaps sufficiently appears that it was. The circumstances connected with the filing of the field notes and the date of the filing thereof in the Land Office are not shown in the record. On a map compiled by David 0. Warren, County Surveyor of San Augustine County, certified by Warren on November 10, 1839, as being correct, and forming a part of the archives of the General Land Office, the land in controversy was represented as the “Lewis” survey, as fronting west on Ayish Bayou, and as lying south of and adjoining the Leakey survey. On another map forming a part of said archives compiled in 1841 by Ira Ellis, then County Surveyor of San Augustine County, the land was represented about as it was on the Warren map.

July 23, 1835, a final title was extended to Patsey Lewis to a survey of 4,289,587 square varas, surveyed for her by authority of the order of the commissioner made on her application referred to. This land was shown to have been situated in said San Augustine County, about seven miles east of the town of San Augustine, and to have been the land on which she resided before and at the time of her death.

Patsey Lewis died in San Augustine County in 1843, leaving a will dated February 13, 1843, and probated June 19, 1843, by which she devised to her daughter Matilda C. Thompson 200 acres of the land in controversy, and to her sons Burrell J., George, and A. A. Lewis, the remainder thereof. November 12, 1849, Burrell J. Thompson, who had been appointed administrator with the will annexed of her estate, [373]*373as “administrator and representative of Patsey Lewis, deceased,” petitioned the Legislature to pass an Act requiring the Commissioner of the General Land Office to issue a patent to the land in controversy, according to the survey thereof made by David Brown in 1835. In his petition Thompson recites:

“Patsey Lewis, deed., during her life time and in and about the year 1834 or 5 obtained an order of survey for one league of land from the Commissioner of Lorenzo de Zavala grant or colony as a colonist, viz.: from George A. Nixon, and by virtue of said order of survey had a portion of said land surveyed near San Augustine where she then lived and afterwards died, and a title extended to the same by the aforesaid commissioner, George Antonio Nixon, in the year 1838—and your petitioner also finds that she had the residue surveyed in the spring of 1835 about 20 miles south of San Augustine on the Ayish Bayou by David Brown, one of the regular commissioned surveyors of said colony, which is evidenced by and from the copy of the field notes herewith appended to this petition, as also from the certificate of the County Surveyor of San Augustine County that said survey for Patsey Lewis, deed., has always appeared upon the map of said county, recognized and acknowledged as her lands and has also been returned and appears on the map sent to the General Land Office from this county.”

February 1, 1850, "an Act for the relief of the heirs of Patsey Lewis, deceased,” became a law. It was as follows:

“Section 1. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Texas, That the Commissioner of the General Land Office be, and he is hereby authorized and required to issue to the heirs of Patsey Lewis, deceased, upon their paying the usual fees and Government dues, a patent for thirty-five hundred and sixty-two acres of land, that being the residue of a league to which said Patsey Lewis in her life time was entitled, and that this Act take effect from its passage.”

In accordance with said Act, on field notes of a survey of the land made October 5, 1852, the land was patented to the heirs of Patsey Lewis, deceased, August 3, 1853.

The inventory returned July 24, 1844, in the administration had on Patsey Lewis’ estate included as a part of the property belonging to the estate “three-fourths of a league of land on Ayish bayou surveyed and not titled.”

At her death Patsey Lewis left as her heirs, Matilda Thompson, her daughter; Ephraim Tally, child of her daughter Sarah Tally; Margaret Johnson, her daughter; Mary Jones, her daughter; Precious Blankenship, her daughter; Melinda Stovall, her daughter; and George W. Lewis, Allison A. Lewis and Burrell J. Lewis, her sons. During her life time, at dates ranging from 1835 to 1841, she had executed deeds of gifts whereby she had conveyed to each of her daughters, except Matilda Thompson, to whom she devised 200 acres of the land in controversy, 200 acres of the land she resided upon. She had also during her life time conveyed to her son Burrell J. Lewis a negro boy named Willis, and to her daughter Sarah Tally a negro girl named Jane. By her will, on conditions named therein, she gave to her daughter Matilda Thompson a negro woman named Polly, to B. J. Lewis a negro woman named Sophia, and to Mary Jones a negro named Jane; and to [374]*374Presha Blankenship without condition a negro child. By the same will she devised to B. J. Lewis her “old field and .what land she owned north of the old main road from San Augustine to Milam,” which seems to have been a tract of forty acres out of her home place.

The inventory of her estate, before referred to, showed as belonging to same, in addition to the land in controversy, the following property only: negro slaves name “Polly,” “Sofy,” “Jane” and "Ellen;” forty acres of land; one old mare; and one cow and calf.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
50 Tex. Civ. App. 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-oil-co-v-gallup-texapp-1908.