Irvin v. Bevil

16 S.W. 21, 80 Tex. 332, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1000
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1891
DocketNo. 2998.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 16 S.W. 21 (Irvin v. Bevil) 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
Irvin v. Bevil, 16 S.W. 21, 80 Tex. 332, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1000 (Tex. 1891).

Opinion

HENRY, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by appellees to recover the value of trees charged to have been eut and removed by the appellant from the A. A. Burrell league of land, lying in Hardin County. Appellees owned an undivided three-fourths interest in said league and the appellant owned the remaining one-fourth interest.

Plaintiffs in their petition made the following allegations with regard to the description and situation of the said league of land:

“The said league is described in the grant, of date September 2,1835, to said Burrell as follows, to-wit: 'The tract surveyed for the colonist A. A. Burrell is situated at the northwestern corner of Joseph Ellery’s survey, on the western side of the Aeches, for the first corner of the league of land of the party interested; thence west 10,000 varas were measured and a stake was set for the second corner, which is also the northwest corner of this survey; thence 2500 varas were measured and the third corner was formed, which is also the southwest corner of this same survey; thence east 10,000 varas were measured and a stake was set for the fourth and last corner of-this survey; thence north 2400 varas were measured to intersect the beginning corner;’ that the call for the northwest corner of the Ellery survey as the beginning corner of the Burrell league and the call stating the length of the east line of Burrell to be 2400 varas are mistaken and erroneous, and that both of said calls as contained in said original grant are corrected by the description contained in the original English field notes, which they allege are as follows, to-wit: ‘ Commenced at the northwest corner of George W. Brooks’ survey about six miles west of the Aeches River for the beginning corner of sitio of land for A. A. Burrell; thence west 10,000 varas and set post at the northwest corner of this survey; thence south 2500 varas and set post at the fourth and southwest corner of a survey belonging to-; thence north 2500 varas along the line of said survey to the place of beginning.”’ And plaintiffs further alleged that said survey was actually made adjoining and west of said Brooks survey, and has always heretofore and still so appears on°the official maps of Tyler and Hardin counties, and that the trees that were cut by the defendant were taken from within the boundaries last above described.

Appellant complains that “the court erred in overruling appellant’s general demurrer to plaintiffs’ petition, because the plaintiffs alleged that the original grant to A. A. Burrell located the land at one place without any ambiguity in the description contained in said grant, and alleged said land to be at another and different place, and alleged that the timber was cut at such other place, and because the pretended de *337 scription of the land as they allege it to be located on the grounds is wholly unintelligible and embraces no land whatever, and because to place the land where they claim it to be would entirely ignore all the calls contained in the grant, their description of such other place being wholly ambiguous and insufficient;’’ and also that “the court erred in admitting in evidence over defendant’s objections and exceptions the original English field notes of the A. A. Burrell league, because same is fatally variant from the description thereof contained in plaintiffs’ petition;” and upon the same issue he complains that “the court erred in its charge to the jury in this: It wholly failed to submit the issues of the locality of the land and of the cutting to the jury, and to instruct them that unless the land was at the place on the ground where plaintiffs alleged it to be located, and further that unless the timber was cut from such place where they' alleged the land to be, they must find for defendant, the appellant having asked a special charge presenting those issues.”

The title to Burrell was dated on the 2d day of September, 1835, and is in the usual form of grants of that date to colonists.

The decree for title was dated August 18,1835, and directed the “Surveyor Citizen D. Brown” to “cause a tract of land designated by the party interested to be surveyed,” and that he “examine the field notes which shall be translated in this office.”

The record contains á translation from the Spanish of the title, which corresponds with plaintiffs’ allegations above referred to. The field notes are signed by David Brown, surveyor, and by Jos Carrierere, translator, and dated the 27th day of August, 1835. The field notes are not repeated in the body of the title, signed by the commissioner, but are there referred to in the following language: “The boundaries whereof are described on the map and field notes returned by the surveyor David Brown, as appears in these proceedings.”

The plaintiffs, in connection with the Land Office translation of the title, introduced what the Commissioner of the General Land Office certified to be “a true copy of the original English field notes existing in the archives of this office,” reading as follows:

“Commencing at the northwest corner of George W. Brooks’ survey, about six miles west of the Aeches River, for the beginning corner of sitio of land for A. A. Burrell; thence west-10,000 varas and set post at the northwest corner of this survey; thence south 2500 varas and set post at the third and southwest corner of this survey; thence east 10,000 varas and set post at the fourth and southwest corner of survey belonging to-; thence north 2500 varas along the line of said survey to the place of beginning.” Dated August 27, 1835, and signed “David Brown, surveyor.”

The G. W. Brooks survey lies immediately north of the Joseph Ellery survey," and the Burrell, when located by the call for the Brooks, *338 lies immediately north of where it would be if located by the call for the Ellery survey, and is wholly different land.

It was proved that the maps of Hardin and Tyler counties have always shown the Brooks to be the beginning corner of the Burrell, and that it is so reputed in the neighborhood. Ho evidence to the contrary was offered.

There can be no doubt about what are called the English field notes being the original ones made by the surveyor and the ones upon which the title was issued. They were returned as evidence of the boundaries of the tract of land surveyed for the colonist, and have been preserved as an archive with and as part of the original title. There is every reason for believing that in translating them a mistake was made with regard to the beginning corner. It is plain that a mistake was then made with regard to the length of one of the lines. The English field notes being the original, and being preserved along with the Spanish copy of them as an archive, and the title not itself containing the field notes but referring in that respect to the report of the surveyor, we think it was proper to treat them as part of the title and not as extraneous evidence changing or contradicting it.

We do not regard the evidence as being introduced for the purpose of correcting a mistake in the title and changing it from one tract of land to another, which could not be done without other parties than were before the court, nor under the allegations made. Treating them as inconsistent calls and both as part of the grant, it was proper to allege in the petition which was the correct call and to introduce evidence to sustain the pleading.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.W. 21, 80 Tex. 332, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1000, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irvin-v-bevil-tex-1891.