Lecomte v. Toudouze

17 S.W. 1047, 82 Tex. 208, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1104
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1891
DocketNo. 6907.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 17 S.W. 1047 (Lecomte v. Toudouze) 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
Lecomte v. Toudouze, 17 S.W. 1047, 82 Tex. 208, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1104 (Tex. 1891).

Opinion

FISHER, Judge,

Section B.—This is an action of trespass to try title and for damages, brought by appellants against appellees to recover a strip of land lying between the farms of the parties, and for rents and profits, and damages for timber destroyed, in the sum of $650, and praying for an injunction to stay waste, etc. Defendants pleaded want of equity in bill, etc.; and also pleaded the statute of limitation of three, five, and ten years; and that plaintiffs have taken a part of defendants’ land; and. pray for rents, profits, etc. Plaintiffs also claim title by ten years occupancy of the land in controversy, and also plead the three and five years statutes of limitation. Defendants further plead that the boundary line was settled by a verbal agreement between the parties and run out by a surveyor; and the suit finally resolved itself into a controversy concerning a boundary line.

The jury found the following verdict: “We the jury find from the evidence that the line established by County Surveyor Locke was agreed upon by all parties, and find in favor of defendant.”

The land in controversy is a part of the Manuel De Luna grant, situated on the south bank of the Medina River. The plaintiffs claim so much of the De Luna grant as was not previously sold by Lecomte De *210 Watine, the father of plaintiff Leon Lecomte, and the former owner of the survey, under a decree of partition of the estate of Lecomte De Watine rendered in 1870, by which decree about 3000 acres of the De Luna survey was awarded Leon Lecomte. Leon Lecomte is the husband of plaintiff Octavia T. Lecomte. She holds under a deed from Henry Toudouze, who had previously purchased from Leon Lecomte. There is not in the decree of partition any description of the De Luna grant, nor is there in any of the deeds in plaintiffs’ line of title any description of the land given, except that it is bounded by other surveys (naming them) and by the Medina River. The field notes of these other surveys are not in the record. It is admitted that Lecomte De Watine is the common source. November 6,1851, Lecomte De Watine sold to E. T. De Curzen a part of the De Luna survey. The calls in the deed begin, “at the corner on the Medina River which is the terminus of the line separating my ranch from the property of Dn. Domingo Losoya; thence running down said river so as to include all of the low. ground or bottom land which fronts on said river at that place; thence Tunning back a line parallel with the said before mentioned line so as to contain within said lines the quantity of 400 acres.” The Losoya grant is immediately west of the De Luna, and the corner on the Medina called for in the above deed is the common corner of the two grants. The field notes and boundaries of the Losoya are not given.

The controversy in the case is concerning the location of the east line of the 400 acres survey described in the deed from Lecomte De Watine to De Curzen. Gustave Toudouze holds under De Curzen by deed that conveys the same land described in the deed to De Curzen. The common line between the De Luna and Losoya grants runs back from the Medina River in a southwesterly course about one-fifth the distance of the common line; then for a short distance turns and runs in a southeasterly direction. Then the line—that is, about four-fifths of the common line of the two grants—runs back in a southerly direction to the back line of the grants. It will be seen from this that the common line between the Losoya and the De Luna runs back from the Medina River in an irregular course. The contention of the appellants is that the parallel line called for in the De Curzen deed should run parallel with the short irregular line of the common line between the Losoya and De Luna grants. Appellees contend that the parallel line called for in the deed should run not parallel with the short irregular lines, but should run parallel with the main or long common line between the two grants. Appellees further claim that in order to get all the bottom or low ground which fronts on the river as called for in the deed the line must run as they claim it, and claim that they and appellants, by á verbal agreement, fixed the line between them about in the position as claimed by appellees. This agreement was made in 1884. *211 Appellants claim that long previous to the bringing of suit they were in possession of the lands, and are entitled to hold the same by limitation.

Appellants contend that the court erred in refusing to give charges requested by appellants presenting the issues of limitation, and in refusing to inform the jury as to the legal effect of the calls in the De Curzen deed as determining where and how the parallel line should run; and erred in leaving it to the jury to ascertain what was meant by “parallel lines” as stated in the deed; and also erred in refusing, upon request of appellants, to charge that the call for quantity in the De Curzen deed was the controlling, call.

The court in its charge submitted the issues of agreed boundary and the question of boundary as-raised by the reference to the calls in the deeds offered in evidence, and permitted them to look to the deeds and maps in evidence and the circumstances to ascertain the boundaries of the lands conveyed; and further instructed them, that if the land conveyed to De Curzen was 400 acres to run in parallel lines with the Losoya and De Luna grants, to find for the plaintiffs. The court refused to charge on limitation.

We think the court properly left it to the jury to ascertain what land was intended to be included in the calls of the deeds. It appears that the appellants were in possession, of some of the land in controversy such length of time as would create a bar under the ten years statute of limitation. But in looking to the evidence we can not determine with certainty as to what portion of the lands their possession relates. If they seek protection under the statute, the burden is on them to fix the extent of their possession. The three and five years statutes of limitation under the facts of this case could have no application.

There are other assignments that complain that errors "were committed upon the trial in the rejection and admission of testimony. The questions raised by these assignments, and those of the refusal of the court to give the charge in the particulars that we have considered, are deemed by us unnecessary of consideration in disposing of this case. If the court did in any of the particular’s complained of in these assignments commit errors, as we conclude that the verdict of the jury on the issue of agreed boundary is supported by the evidence and that it must stand, then these errors are harmless and would not result in any injury to the appellants. If the .court had given the charge requested by appellants, and had agreed with them in the admission and exclusion of evidence, no phase of the case would have thereby been presented that would have likely influenced the jury to reach a different result than their finding in appellees’ favor as to the agreed boundary. If the action of the court in the particulars complained of are errors, they are simply so in the abstract and could not have affected the result. Beauchamp v. Railway, 56 Texas, 243; Hussy v. Moser, 70 Texas, 45; Smith v. Bank, 74 Texas, 457.

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.W. 1047, 82 Tex. 208, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lecomte-v-toudouze-tex-1891.