MacKey v. Armstrong

19 S.W. 463, 84 Tex. 159, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 913
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1892
DocketNo. 2759.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 19 S.W. 463 (MacKey v. Armstrong) 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
MacKey v. Armstrong, 19 S.W. 463, 84 Tex. 159, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 913 (Tex. 1892).

Opinion

HENRY, Associate Justice.

— This is an action of trespass to try title, brought by the appellant to recover seventy-six alternate surveys of land in Cameron County, made by virtue of certificates issued to the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Company. The cause was,tried by the court without a jury, and a judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants.

The case made by the plaintiff was sufficient to authorize a judgment in his favor, unless it was defeated by the one made by the defendants. The defendants claimed, that they held possession of the land under a grant of twenty-five leagues made by the king of Spain about the beginning of this century to one Francisco Balli, and that the land having once been severed from the public domain, was protected from plaintiff’s locations by section 2 of article 14 of the Constitution of this State.

Plaintiff’s evidence established that the records of the General Land Office did not show anything concerning the claim of Francisco Balli, nor did the records of Cameron County, but that there were deeds between parties for said lands on record in said county, of which plaintiff had notice before his locations were made.

The defendants introduced evidence tending to show the following facts:

They first introduced the depositions of a number of Mexicans, the purport of which was to prove the existence of the tradition that there was a tract of land known as La Barrita, the name being given to it by a growth of timber on it called barrita; that this tract lay north of a grant of land made to Narciso Cabasas, known as the San Juan de Carricitas, and fronting on the Laguna Madre on the east, and between a grant to one Salinas and another grant on the north, and the Carricitas tract on the south. That a number of Mexicans lived on this tract called Barrita, and kept their stock of cattle and horses on it; some of them as far back as the year 1828, and continued to do so until the year 1836, when they abandoned the country when Santa Anna’s army was retreating after the battle of San Jacinto. After the abandonment of the country by those living on this land in 1836, no one occupied or lived on it until in 1848. After that year it was lived on and occupied by various persons, owning and keeping stocks of cattle and horses, continuously. None of them ever saw or knew of any survey being made,, but had been told by others abotit the lines of the Carricitas tract and the Barrita tract being the same, and the northwest corner of the Carricitas and the southwest corner of the Barrita *166 tracts being the same, and certain lands marking the boundaries of these tracts. Rone of them ever saw any title papers, or knew anything of any grant of this land by the government to any one, except one or two of them had heard the land spoken of as the Balli grant. One Santos Garcia, 79 years old, said that he knew one Francisco Balli when witness was a small boy, who was then an old man; did not know whether he was the Balli inquired about; that he, witness, went to live with his uncle, George Cabasas, who was the son of Ra-rciso Cabasas, the owner of the Carricitas grant, in the year 1828, and that he heard conversations between his uncle and others about the boundaries of the Carricitas grant; and that there were then people living at different places on the lands lying north of Carricitas, called the Barrita land. Had never seen any paper grant, either of the Carricitas or Barrita.

They then introduced evidence as follows:

1. They proved by the depositions of Pedro Bustamente, Martin de J. Sanchez, and Pablo Levin, residents of the city of Victoria, State of Tamaulipas, Mexico, that the public archives of the State of Tamaulipas were kept at the said city of Victoria, and that in the year 1864 said archives were all destroyed by an armed- force of guerrillas under command of Colonel Dupin. By Sanchez, that he was 32 years old; was the chief clerk and secretary of the Governor of Tamaulipas; that he had resided in Victoria for thirteen years; that in 1863, 1864, and 1865 he resided in San Carlos, State of Tamaulipas; that he was, at the time of testifying, custodian of the public archives, and had been in charge of the same during the past thirteen years; that he had many times examined said archives, and had carefully searched through them, and knows that no expediente or proofs of any kind whatever exist therein bearing date anterior to 1867, and was unable to find any expediente or proofs sent up from Beynosa in 1842; that he had fully examined such archives, and no title papers to Francisco Balli exist among them; that the archives are not complete from 1802; there is no document or record of any kind among said archives dating back prior to 1867; that of his own knowledge he did not know the particulars of the destruction of the government archives, but it was well known and authenticated that on or about July, 1864, Colonel Dupin, in command of a mixed force, entered the city of Victoria and destroyed all the public documents and records.

2. Defendants then offered in evidence translations of certified copies taken from the general and public archives of Mexico; first, papers purporting to be a letter to the viceroy of Rew Spain, relating to the inundation of Beynosa in 1802; second, reply in the royal order of the 14th of January, 1803 — item royal cédula of the 16th of January — directing that account be given of the provisions which may have been made on account of such inundation and the results thereof. That the settlement of Lampazos, as well as the town of Beynosa and others, *167 be re-established in high places, exempt from such dangers; and if that ■. might not be done owing to the formation of the land, directing the construction of protecting dikes.

3. A paper termed royal cédula, addressed to the viceroy, governor, and captain general of the province of Sew Spain.

4. Opinion of the solicitor of the royal exchequer.

5. Opinion of solicitor of civil affairs.

6. Sentence of superior junta of the royal exchequer, January 17, 1804.

These papers were followed by the certificate of Justino Rubio, chief of the general and public archives of Mexico. Preceding these several copies, and attached thereto, was the petition of one Frederick Hall, addressed to the citizen chief of the general archives of the nation, of date September 1, 1883, to which, when offered by defendants, plaintiffs objected, because not embraced in the agreement of counsel, and not admissible as a transcript of a part of the archives of Mexico.

In the opinion of the solicitor of the royal exchequer, the removal of the town of Reynosa to a place called San Antonio, ceded in the major part by military Lieutenant Don Francisco Balli, is mentioned; and that for this cession, and for having aided the citizens very much in the necessities and perils of the inundation, there should be given to him the corresponding graces, as also to other citizens who ceded in like manner their own lands for such removal. Further, in said opinion it is recited, that it would not greatly affect the exchequer to concede to the military Lieutenant Balli twenty-five leagues of land in the vicinity of the Rio Grande, in the place where it may suit him, out of such as are there found to be unappropriated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 S.W. 463, 84 Tex. 159, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 913, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mackey-v-armstrong-tex-1892.