McLellan v. Brown

209 S.W. 177, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 211
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 22, 1919
DocketNo. 6140.
StatusPublished

This text of 209 S.W. 177 (McLellan v. Brown) 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
McLellan v. Brown, 209 S.W. 177, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 211 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

• MOURSUND, J.

The issue as made by the pleadings on which a trial was had was whether the appellees owned a certain tract of 266 acres of land in Hidalgo county, either by record title or by limitation under the ten-year statute. We have thus stated the issue for the reason that appellees were plaintiffs. The defendant, in addition to putting the plaintiffs on proof of their title, affirmatively pleaded estoppel, and by cross-action sought to recover by virtue of a purchase of such land by him from the state in 1909.

The trial resulted in a judgment in favor of plaintiffs for the land and for nominal damages. At defendant’s request the court filed conclusions of fact and law.

We will not copy the 46 findings of fact, but will undertake to matee a statement full enough to give the appellant the benefit of all facts found which even remotely bear on the issues presented in his brief.

About 1789 the Spanish government by valid grant, confirmed in 1852 by the Texas Legislature (section 2, vol. 3, Gammers Laws), granted to Juan Jose flinojosa a tract of land on the Rio Grande river containing about 25½ leagues, in the form of a rectangle, known as the Llano Grande grant, the lines of which were run upon a magnetic course, the eastern and western lines, called for as running north and south, being run, without correcting the variation, as would have been necessary to' run the lines true north and south.

In 1834 the state of Tamaulipas made a valid grant to Lino Oabasos of five leagues of land known as the La Blanca, lying west of the Llano Grande grant, along its entire west line, and calling for certain well-known land marks in the west line of said Llano Grande grant. This grant was duly recorded in Cameron county in 1849. Hidalgo county was created out of Cameron county in 1852. No patent was taken out for either of said grants.

In 1847 the then owners of the Llano Grande grant partitioned the same, said partition being made by running lines perpendicular from a base line along the river true north a short distance to a point a short distance south of the military road, such lines, however, having never been run out their full length. The extreme west line called to run through the Puerta La Blanca, a well-known landmark called for as a mark near the river of the west line of the Llano Grande grant.

In 1877 one Fields, deputy surveyor of Hidalgo county, made a resurvey of the Llano Grande grant, and the map and field notes thereof were recorded in the surveyor’s records of said county, and were in 1879 filed in the general land office. These field notes were erroneous and conflicted with the original field notes of the La Blanca grant, due to the fact that the western boundary of the Llano Grande was run upon a course of 55 minutes west of true north instead of magnetic north as originally run. Plaintiffs, and those under whom they hold, never participated or acquiesced in said resurvey.

Field notes of a resurvey of the La Blanca grant, made by Salinas and Haynes, and a plat thereof, were recorded in the surveyor’s records of Hidalgo county and filed in the general land office in 1879. This resurvey was made on the ground, and began at the southwest corner of the Llano Grande grant, and from there the eastern boundary was run north by the needle, or magnetic north, to correspond with the original eastern boundary of the La Blanca. The field notes contain the recital that the survey was made for the heirs and legal assigns of Lino Oabasos. No other evidence was introduced as to who caused such resurvey to be made.

The result of the two resurveys above described was that the triangular piece of land in controversy was noti included in either survey, although a part of the original Llano Grande grant.

In April, 1874, a map by the district surveyor of the district, which included Hidalgo county, was filed as an archive in the general land office, and remains on file, which showed that the eastern boundary of the La Blanca and the western boundary of the Llano Grande coincided, and that said line was run magnetic north and south without correcting the variation of the compass.

Haps of Hidalgo county, prepared by the general land office and on file therein, one dated April, 1880, and the other April, 1S96, show *179 the location of Llano Grande grant as resurveyed by Field; that is, show the land in controversy as a vacancy.

In January, 1909, defendant made application to the county surveyor to survey as vacant land the land in controversy, and such survey was made and duly recorded. On May 1, 1909, defendant applied to purchase said land under the act of May 16,1907, in regard to sale of school lands without settlement, and on May 15, 1909, it was sold to him on the terms prescribed by statute for the sale of school lands.

In 1852 the title to the western two leagues of the Llano Grande and the eastern two leagues of the La Blanca was in the surviving wife and “one sole heir” of Antonio. Martinez Chapa, who by deed duly recorded in 1853 conveyed to John Young a tract out of the western portion of the Llano Grande grant, the west line of which was recited to be coincident with the division line of the La Blanca and Llano Grande grants. The heirs of the grantors in the deed to Young conveyed to James G. Browne by deed recorded in 1869 the eastern league of the La Blanca grant, running all the way from the river to the back line of the original grant, describing it as bounded on the east by the Llano Grande grant.

In 1869 James G. Browne went into possession of the land in controversy and of the La Blanca league conveyed to him, and used said tract in controversy, claiming it as his own, cutting and selling timber therefrom. This possession continued down to the time in 1909 when the defendant entered upon the land and took possession by cutting plaintiffs’ fences. The court in several findings describes the nature of the possession and use, and the extent of the inclosure at various periods of time, but also states in the thirtieth finding that the possession and use was such as to give plaintiffs title by limitation to all the land at the Jime defendant interfered with such possession, and finds, and such finding is not attacked, that plaintiffs were in actual possession of and had inclosed all of the land in controversy at the time of such forcible entry by defendant.

It is contended that the evidence shows that ihe land in controversy was public land in 1909, and subject to be sold by the state to the defendant, and that it was sold to him, and therefore the judgment is erroneous. The first proposition under the assignment reads as follows:

“Though the land in controversy was included within the boundary of the Llano Grande grant as originally surveyed, and as granted by the crown of Spain in 1789, the fact that the then owners of said grant, in accordance with the provisions of the act of the Legislature of 1852 as found at page 949, vol.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
209 S.W. 177, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclellan-v-brown-texapp-1919.