Lopez v. Vela

200 S.W. 1111, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 84
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 23, 1918
DocketNo. 5949.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 200 S.W. 1111 (Lopez v. Vela) 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
Lopez v. Vela, 200 S.W. 1111, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 84 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

FLY, O. J.

This is an action of trespass to try title to 2,000 acres of land out of-a Spanish grant to Alejandro Farias, known as the San Jose tract, on January 24, 1809, and patented'by the state of Texas on January 15, 1S76. The suit was instituted by Francisco Lopez and 10 others against Jesus Maria Vela and 37 others. The suit resolved itself into a contest as to the location of a boundary line between the San Jose tract and the San Ramon tract, which was granted by the government of Spain to Julian Farias on January 24, 1S09. The boundary line in dispute is the east line of the San Jose tract and the west line of the San Ramon tract. The cause was tried without a jury, and resulted in a judgment for appellees.

■ The facts show that in 1804, the Spanish government granted 16 leagues of land to Julian, Alejandro, and Francisco Farias, three brothers, each receiving about four leagues of land, the grant to Julian Farias being called the San Ramon, the one to Alejandro Farias being named the San Jose grant, and the one to Francisco Farias being known as the Santa Cruz grant Surveys of the three tracts were made by the same surveyor in the year 1808, in the same month. The three tracts were surveyed consecutively, beginning with the San Ramon taking a starting point on the west boundary line of a tract known as the Santanita, an older survey. The three tracts lay alongside each other, the Ramon on the east, the San Jose in the center, and the Santa Cruz on the west of the San Jose. The court found, and the evidence justifies the finding, that the tracts were laid off' in rectangular shapes, the perpendicular lines running from north to south,, the San Ramon grant being not so long, hut some wider than the other two grants. There is evidence tending to show that, as originally surveyed, the land in controversy was mostly on the San Jose tract and not a part of the San Ramon grant.

In issuing the patents the true meridian lines laid out in the original Spanish grant were not followed, but for some reason not apparent the Santanita, an older survey, which was originally surveyed and granted on meridian lines which formed a pentagon, were changed by the patent to magnetic lines, and the shape changed to a rectangle. The San Ramon grant was also patented on magnetic lines, and not on the original meridian lines. These changes caused a conflict between the east line of the Ramon and west 'line of the Santanita tracts which caused a lawsuit. A map was made by Cocke and Hord which was used in evidence in this suit. That máp showed that under the original surveys the-northwest corner of the Ramon was a short distance west and north of the corner fixed by subsequent surveys on magnetic lines, and the west line of the Ramon tract on its way south cut into the west magnetic line, forming a small triangle in the northwest corner of the tract, which under the magnetic survey would he on the San Jose tract. After crossing the magnetic line aforesaid, the original meridian would pass further and further east of the west magnetic line of the San Ramon until it reached the original southeast corner of the San Ramon tract, forming with the west and south magnetic lines a large triangle containing the land in dispute. In the survey made by J. E. Eivet, the northwest corner of the Ramon tract was fixed at a point 480 varas due east of the east line of the San Jose, thence a little west of south until the east line of the San Jose tract is reached, thence with that *1112 east line to its southeast comer, thence on the south line of the San Jose tract, 1,912 varas to a stake, thence a little west of south to the extreme southwest comer of the Ramon tract, thence to southeast corner, thence to northeast corner to beginning. The lines on the west of the Ramon were produced by a failure of the surveyor to run a straight line from the northeast to the southeast corner, which would have taken a triangle oft' the San Jose tract in its southeastern corner. The patent from the state followed the Eivet survey.

We adopt the findings of facts of the trial judge, .as follows:

“Hirst. In the year 1804, four leagues of laud each were denounced by Julian, Alejandro, and Francisco Farias, brothers, which were known, respectively, as the San Ramon and San Jos'e and Santa Cruz grants, and surveys of said grants were made by the same surveyor, Antonio Margil Cano in the same month of the year 1808, consecutively, beginning with San Ramon, and starting from the west boundary of San-tanita, which had been previously surveyed. The grants to these lands were made by the same Spanish governor, and title vested in the grantees to the respective grants in the year 1808, and by the act of the Legislature of the state of Texas of February 10, 1852, the lands so granted were confirmed, and the state of Texas relinquished to said original grantees, their heirs and assigns all the right of the state to said lands, as originally surveyed and granted, and each was subsequently patented by the state of Texas.
“Second. Plaintiffs deraign title by regular chain from and under the original grantee to the lands claimed by them respectively in the San Jose grant, and defendants deraign title by regular chain from and under the original grantee to the lands claimed by them respectively in the San Ramon grant.
“Third. The _surveys of the San Ramon, San Jose, and Santa Cruz grants were made by the same surveyor, in the same month of the year, beginning with San Ramon, and then consecutively San Jose and Santa Cruz, in the order named, and all maps of the original grants show that said lands as originally surveyed and granted were surveyed between parallel lines in the form of rectangles, that they adjoined in the order named, and that no vacancies existed between them.
“The point marked ‘XXI’ on the Cocke & Hord man in evidence is the correct northwest corner of the San Ramon grant, as originally surveyed, and is on the east line of the San Jose grant, as originally surveyed. The southeast comer of the San Jose grant as originally surveyed is the point designated ‘Y,’ on said Cocke & Hord map, and this corner is on the west line of the San Ramon, as originally surveyed.
“Fourth. The point ‘H’ on the Cocke & Hord map, in evidence, being the point located and identified by a stone about 6,380 varas N. 81 deg. W. from the stone called ‘Rosario’ marked ‘U,’ on the Cocke & Hord map, and 388 varas N. 9 deg. E. from the point marked ‘F’ on the Cocke & Hord map and a mesquite with a stone at the foot thereof marked ‘E’ on said Cocke & Hord map, just west of the San Ramon ranch and on the west side of a depression in which the old San Ramon ranch and wells are situated, has for more than 30 years been recognized, regarded, and accepted by the owners of the land in the San Ramon and San Jose grants as tho northwest corner of the San Ramon, and other well known and accepted corners and boundaries of the San Ramon grant are identified on the Cocke & Hord map by the following letters and figures: ‘F,’ ‘E,’ ‘S,’ ‘L,’ ‘M,’ ‘XIII,’ ‘B,’ ‘G,’ and T.’
“Fifth. The aforesaid corner designated ‘H’ on said Cocke & I-Iord map and the line running therefrom S. 9 deg. W.

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200 S.W. 1111, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lopez-v-vela-texapp-1918.