Keck v. Woodward

116 S.W. 75, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 267, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 606
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 16, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 116 S.W. 75 (Keck v. Woodward) 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
Keck v. Woodward, 116 S.W. 75, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 267, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 606 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Chief Justice.

This is an action of trespass to try title, the land involved being a 1280 acre survey in Liberty County originally granted to Francis Smith. The defendants in error claim under Francis Smith, who came to Texas from the State of Arkansas and settled in Fayette County, in this State, in 1838, where he died in 1846. Plaintiffs in error claim under Francis Smith, who came to Harrisburg, in Harris County, Texas, some time prior to 1838, and lived there until some time in the 40s, when he moved to Liberty County, Texas, where he died about 1850. The only issue as to title raised by the evidence is which of these men was the grantee in the certificate upon which the land in controversy was patented. Some of the defendants in error were plaintiffs in the court below and the others were defendants seeking affirmative relief against the original defendants, plaintiffs in error here, therefore the burden of showing title was upon the defendants in error. The cause was tried by a jury and a verdict and judgment rendered in favor of defendants in error for all of the land claimed by them.

Succinctly stated, the facts disclosed by the record are as follows:

The patent to the land in controversy was issued on January 13, *269 1846. The conditional certificate for the land was issued to Francis Smith on May 4, 1838, by the Board of Land Commissioners for Harrisburg County sitting at Harrisburg. The unconditional certificate upon which the patent issued was issued by the Board of Land Commissioners for Harris County on July 7, 1841. The evidence shows that at the time these certificates were issued the Francis Smith under whom plaintiffs in error claim lived at Harrisburg, in Harrisburg, or Harris, County, the name of the county having been changed from Harrisburg to Harris between the dates of the issuance of said certificates. There is an endorsement upon the conditional certificate made by the chief clerk of the General Land Office on July 23, 1841, to the effect that the certificate “had been delivered to the claimant for the purpose of enabling •him to obtain an unconditional one,” and that “the whole amount of land as called for by it had been surveyed and the field notes returned to the General Land Office.”

There is in the General Land Office, on file with the other papers connected with the survey, a power of attorney from Francis Smith to Archibald Wynns, of date September 16, 1841, authorizing said Wynns to obtain a patent for the land to which the grantor is entitled by virtue of the unconditional certificate before mentioned, said certificate being referred to and fully described in said power of attorney. There is also in this file a power of attorney from Francis Smith to Doc Levi Jones, dated at Liberty, Texas, August 30, 1845, empowering the said Jones to obtain the patent to which the grantor is entitled by virtue of - survey made “upon certificate No. -, issued by the Board of Land Commissioners for the county of -.” The certificate is not further identified and no description of the land is given in this instrument. In another file of the Land Office designated as “Miscellaneous Powers of Attorney” the following letter is found: ,

“Liberty, Dec. 10, 1845.
“Mr. Wynns:
“Dr. Sir: I reed, your communication bearing date Oct. 28th and Nov. 22nd about the same time, and according to your advice I have obtained a sketch of that part-of the map containing my survey, which sketch you will find inclosed, and as you have a power of attorney for the business you can proceed to obtain the patent and if you succeed in getting it before the next term of the District Court of Liberty County (unless you meet with a sure opportunity of sending it to me before that time) you had better retain it until you come over yourself to court. I also sent you the survey of Bodoff Hector, the filed notes of which are deposited in the city surveyor’s office, but which is not on the map of Libty Cty the land office which survey you will find north of my own upon the sketch inclosed. With best wishes for prosperity and health, I remain, your friend, etc., Francis Smith.
“Dec. 14 I failed to meet the mail with this, and now that my son, Wager S. Smith, will be coming down soon, and if you have any patents ready you can send by him. I am quit sick, had a chill today.
“Yours, F. S.”

*270 This letter has upon it the following endorsements: “Miscellaneous Powers of Attorney. File No. 1031.” Also endorsed in pencil: “This is nothing like a power of attorney, but only a letter directed to a party not connected with the land office. Apr. 5/75 "Grooms.” Also endorsed on the back in lead pencil: “Handed me by Col. Ward to draw patent.” Also is endorsed: “A. Wynns, Esq., Atty- at Law, Houston, Texas.” Also endorsed on it the word: “Austin.”

At the time this letter was written Col. T. W. Ward was Commissioner of the General Land Office. It was shown that the records of the Land Office disclosed that the examining clerk in said office in 1875 was named Grooms. There is also on file in the Land Office the following letter from Francis Smith to Col. T. W. Ward:

“Houston, June 15th, 1841.
“Col. T. W. Ward,
“Dear Sir:
“I wish to ask a favor at your hands which I know your accommodating disposition and desire at all times to favor your friends when you can make it convenient to do so, will not allow you to refuse. About the first of May, 1838, I received a second class con"ditional certificate for twelve hundred and eighty acres of land; the certificate has been located and returned to your office. A law passed at the last session of Congress makes it necessary that I shall prove up the certificate the second time to it by compliance with the conditions of the law &c but this I cannot do without the certificate, as I am informed by the county court which is now the Board of Land Commissioners. The favor which I wish to ask of you is that you be so good as to forward to me the above named certificate, in order that I may prove it up and obtain my patton without further difficulty. If you cannot find any trusty hand by which you can intrust it, send it by the first mail and I will be under a great obligation to you for your trouble.
“Your most obedient servant, &c.,
“Francis Smith.”
This letter has on it the following: “Bec’d. June 22nd, 1841.”
“Certificate sent by mail June 23, ’41.”

The letter from Francis Smith to Wynns, above set out, appears to have been sent without being inclosed in an envelope, as there is evidence on the letter of its having been sealed with sealing wax, which was the custom at that time, as shown by old letters on file in the Land Office. The letter from Smith to Col. Ward was not inclosed in an envelope, but was sealed with wax. The field notes of the survey, which were made on August 6, 1838, have this endorsement thereon: “Can not be platted on map till all connecting surveys are returned to the Land Office. (Signed) Hector, Sept.

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Bluebook (online)
116 S.W. 75, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 267, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keck-v-woodward-texapp-1909.