Martin v. Parker

26 Tex. 253
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 26 Tex. 253 (Martin v. Parker) 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
Martin v. Parker, 26 Tex. 253 (Tex. 1862).

Opinion

Wheeler, C. J.

The plaintiff’s appeal cannot avail him unless he has a good title. It is material, therefore, first to consider the objections to his title. These are, 1st, want of consent of the empresarios of the colony within which the land was selected. 2nd. Want of power in the alcalde of San Felipe de Austin to issue the title. 3d. That the boundaries of the land cannot be found and identified.

The first point was decided in the case of McGehee v. Dwyer; and it was held that the failure to obtain the consent of the empresarios did not invalidate the title. (22 Tex. R., 435.) The recital in the grant leaves little doubt that- such consent was, in fact, obtained in this case; but if not, the want of it cannot now be held to annul the title.

The second objection to the title is based on the supposition that the land was not situated within the municipality of Sari Felipe de Austin, and that the alcalde of that municipality exceeded his jurisdiction in issuing-the title. The same objection has been urged in other cases not materially different from the present, and has been held untenable. (Hancock v. McKinney, 7 Tex. R.; Ryan v. Jackson, 11 Tex., 391.) It is to be ob[257]*257Served that the boundaries of the municipality of San Felipe de Austin were not necessarily the same as those of Austin colony. The former had no necessary connection with or dependence upon the latter. Municipalities were established with reference to the convenience of the inhabitants of certain districts over which the authorities were to exercise civil government; and without any necessary reference to or dependence upon colonial boundaries. Thus, in 1882, the municipality of Brazoria was carved out of that of Austin. (Laws and Bee. Coahuila and Tex., dec. No. 196.) In 1834, the municipalities of Matagorda and San Augustine were established, (Id., dec. 265,) and the same year San Patricio and Mina. (Id. dec. 283.) In defining the limits of these several municipalities there is no reference made to the boundaries of any colony, as such, except in one instance in bounding the municipality of Mina. It is quite evident that colonial boundaries were no farther regarded than convenience might dictate in prescribing the boundaries and jurisdiction of municipalities. Austin’s colony had originally no limit assigned to it on the north. Its northern boundary Was not defined until in 1827. (Land Laws of Cal., Or. and Tex., p. 578, 613.) In 1823, the Governor, by official act, gave the name of San Felipe de Austin to the chief town to be established in the colony, which became the seat of justice of the municipality of that name. Its jurisdiction appears to have been co-extensive with the colony as at first granted, and without any limit on the north; and when, in 1827, a boundary was assigned to the colony on the north by the road leading from Bexar to Nacogdoches, the jurisdiction of the municipality seems to have been left without any such restriction. So far as appears, the authorities of the municipality continued to have and exercise jurisdiction beyond the northern boundary of the colony, as far as Occasion required, until the new municipalities of Yiesca and Mina were established and organized in 1834 or 1835, with jurisdiction over the inhabitants and territory north of that boundary. Until that period, no law that we are aware of had fixed any limit to the jurisdiction of the municipality of San Felipe de Austin on the north; and it is believed that no such limit had been prescribed ; but that the municipal authorities habitually and right[258]*258fully exercised jurisdiction over the territory as far as there was occasion. If there was any such limit, it was matter of law; and it devolves on the party asserting that the jurisdiction exercised by the officer was a usurped and unauthorized exercise of authority, to show it. As has been repeatedly said by this court, the presumption is that the officer, in issuing the title, acted upon a subject within his jurisdiction, until the contrary appears; and it can only be made to appear by showing that he exceeded the limits which were assigned to him by law. No law has been, and it is believed no law can be shown limiting the jurisdiction of the officer to the northern boundary of Austin’s colony, until a new' municipality was erected with jurisdiction over that territory, which was subsequent to the issuance of the title in this case. We are referred to Decree, No. 265, (Laws & Dec. of Coahuila and Tex., p, 242,) where, in describing the limits of the municipality of Matagorda, the “ northern ” boundary of the municipality of Austin is Called for; from which the inference is drawn that it must have had a northern boundary. But this was manifestly a mistake in the publication of the decree, as the geography of the country and the relative situation of these, municipalities show, and as will be seen by reference to any correct map of the country. It was the southern and not the “northern” boundary of the municipality of Austin, that was meant by the call for that boundary in the decree.

We are of opinion that the title was rightfully issued by the alcalde of the municipality of Austin, as the alcalde of the municipality to which the land “ pertained.” This subject may be more fully considered when we come to dispose of the case of Barrett v, Kelly, now before the court, where it is illustrated by a mass of evidence, showing that the authorities of that municipality habitually exercised jurisdiction north of the northern boundary of the colony, without question at that day.

Upon the question of identity of the land, the jury decided for the plaintiff, in finding for him the land not claimed by the defendants ; and we cannot say their finding was-not warranted by the evidence.

This disposes of the objections of the defendants to the original [259]*259title under which the plaintiff claims; but there were objections urged by the intervener and defendants to the evidences of title in the plaintiff, produced by him upon the trial, which it is necessary to consider.

It is objected that the deed from Manchaca to Reynolds of the 2nd of September, 1880, having been executed before the title of possession was issued, did not pass the legal title, but a .mere equity, which not having been perfected into a legal title by suit for specific performance, has become inoperative and worthless by the lapse of time.

It is to be observed that an action of trespass to try title can be maintained in our courts as well upon an equitable as upon a legal title. And although after a great lapse of time a court of equity will not entertain a suit by the vendee against the vendor for specific performance of a contract to convey, yet it is not to be inferred from this that a good and valid title, sufficient in law to enable the holder thereof to maintain and defend an action for the property, if it be wanting in some formality essential to constitute it a legal,. as contradistinguished from an equitable title, will, in consequence, by the lapse'of time, become inoperative and ineffectual as a title. The application of such a doctrine to a title which invests the holder with the legal ownership and absolute power of disposition of lands, we think inadmissible.

But at the time of the acquisition of the title by Reynolds, the common law distinction between legal and equitable titles did not obtain. Before the deed in question was executed, Reynolds had received a power of attorney from Manchaca to apply for and obtain the title of possession.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Tex. 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-parker-tex-1862.