Malone v. Dick

61 S.W. 112, 94 Tex. 419, 1901 Tex. LEXIS 161
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1901
DocketNo. 989.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 61 S.W. 112 (Malone v. Dick) 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
Malone v. Dick, 61 S.W. 112, 94 Tex. 419, 1901 Tex. LEXIS 161 (Tex. 1901).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

The land in controversy in this case was located1 and surveyed by virtue of a bounty warrant issued by the Secretary of War of the Republic of Texas, July 5, 1838, which is as follows:

“Republic of Texas.

“Know all men to whom these presents shall come: That Wm. T. Malone having served faithfully and honorably for the term of five months from the twenty-sixth day of September, 1835, to the sixth day of March, 1836, and having fallen in the Alamo, is entitled to nineteen hundred and twenty acres bounty land, for which this is his certificate. And said Wm. T. Malone or legal heirs is entitled to hold said land or to sell, alienate, convey and donate the same, and to exercise all rights of ownership over it.

“In testimony whereof, I have hereunto set my hand at Houston this fifth day of July, 1838.

“Geo. W. Hockley, “Secretary of War.”

The patent was issued upon the land on the 20th day of August, 1872, to the “heirs of W. T. Malone, deceased.” There is no evidence to show when the location of the certificate was made nor is there any proof as to the person to whom the certificate was delivered or upon whose application it was issued.

The index of the muster rolls deposited in the General Land Office, so far as they were produced on the trial, did not show that there was any such name as Wm. T. Malone among those who fell at the Alamo, and one witness who knew the ancestor of the plaintiffs testified that he knew him as a soldier in the army of the Republic of Texas, and did not know of any other Wm. T. Malone in the said army. Plaintiffs proved that they were the children and heirs of Wm. T. Malone, who died in the year 1880 in Lee County, Mississippi, and that their ancestor was a soldier in the army of the Republic of Texas, and the muster rolls *422 of Captain Parrott’s artillery company show that there was in said company at Bexar on the 23d day of November, 1835, a man by the name of Wm. T. Malone.

The defendant in the court below did not connect the chain of title under which he held possession with the State.

The trial court submitted the case under instructions to the' jury presenting the issue whether the plaintiffs were the heirs of the grantee in the certificate, and the jury found in favor of the plaintiffs, upon which judgment was rendered and appeal taken to the Court of Civil Appeals,' where the judgment was reversed and judgment rendered for the defendant.

In the trial of this case in the District Court, the sole issue submitted to the jury was, did the plaintiffs show that they were the heirs of the Wm. T. Malone named in the bounty warrant, By virtue of which the land in controversy was located and patented? The judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals rests upon the proposition that the testimony introduced by the plaintiffs is not sufficient to support the finding in favor of plaintiffs upon that issue. Plaintiffs’ ancestor bore the name of Wm. T. Malone, the same as that in the bounty warrant. He came to Texas in 1835 and was in the army of the RepuBlic for an uncertain time, and died in 1880 in Mississippi, whence he came. There is no proof of the length of time he served or the point at which he served, except that the name “Wm. T. Malone” appears on the muster rolls of Captain Parrott’s company, which was at Bexar on the 33d day of November, 1835. There is no proof that plaintiffs’ ancestor was the Wm. T. Malone whose name appears upon that muster roll or that he belonged to that company.

The bounty warrant by which the location was made was issued on the 5th day of July, 1838, by the Secretary of War of the Republic of Texas, reciting that Wm. T. Malone had served in the army of the Republic from the 6th day of September, 1835, to the 6th day of March, 1836, and having fallen at the Alamo, his heirs were entitled to a bounty warrant for 1930 acres of land. The law was in much confusion upon this subject, and the courts of this State have found it necessary to indulge the presumption that the officer who issued such warrants followed the construction placed upon the laws at that time. Rogers v. Kennard, 54 Texas, 30. We do not deem it necessary to discuss the different provisions to determine for what service all of these lands were granted, for it is manifest from the recitals in the bounty warrant that 640 acres of land were granted because of the fact that the soldier fell in the massacre of the Alamo on the 6th day of March, 1836. That recital was an official act performed in obedience to the requirements of the statute and expresses a conclusion arrived at upon investigation and must be taken as true. Pasch. Dig., art. 4061; McPhail v. Burris, 42 Texas, 142. In the case cited, Judge Moore, for the court, said: “It certainly can not be be seriously denied that.it was the duty of the boards of land commissioners to determine under what *423 law applicants were entitled to the certificates issued to them. In doing this, evidently the board determined the class to which the certificate belonged. In the absence of controverting testimony, the action of the board must be regarded as sufficient to establish the fact to be as determined by it, if, indeed, the class to which the certificate belonged, which necessarily entered into the decision of the applicant’s right to the certificate can collaterally be brought in question.” Upon the authority of that case, we are satisfied to rest the proposition that the recital in the bounty warrant established a strong prima facie ease that the W. T. Malone mentioned fell in the massacre of the Alamo, and in order for the plaintiffs to recover, it was necessary for them to make such proof as would overcome that recital and establish the fact that their ancestor was entitled to the bounty warrant and that it was actually issued to him or in his right.

There is no evidence from which the conclusion can he reached that this bounty warrant was issued upon the application of the ancestor of the plaintiffs made either in his person or by any person representing him, or that his claim to that warrant was under investigation by the Secretary of War at the time this bounty warrant was issued. The recitals in the warrant prove that the W. T. Malone mentioned died on the 6th of March, 1836. The proof shows that the ancestor of the plaintiffs was living at the time the warrant was issued, that he did not fall at the Alamo, but died after the land was patented. The recitals in the warrant show that the services of the Malone named began in September, 1835, and terminated on the day of the massacre at the Alamo. The proof does not show when the services of plaintiffs’ ancestor began, but does show that it did not terminate until after the battle of San Jacinto, on the 21st day of April, 1836. The bounty warrant in this case establishes that the W. T. Malone named in it was entitled to 1920 acres of land as a bounty for his services and for the fact of his death at the Alamo, but the plaintiffs’ proof failed to show to what amount of bounty land their ancestor was entitled, except for enlistment in the army of the Bepublic.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 S.W. 112, 94 Tex. 419, 1901 Tex. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malone-v-dick-tex-1901.