Mexia v. Oliver

148 U.S. 664, 13 S. Ct. 754, 37 L. Ed. 602, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2263
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 17, 1893
Docket182
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 148 U.S. 664 (Mexia v. Oliver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mexia v. Oliver, 148 U.S. 664, 13 S. Ct. 754, 37 L. Ed. 602, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2263 (1893).

Opinion

*665 Mr. Justice Blatcheord

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action at law, brought in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Texas, by Sarah B. Mexia and her husband, Enrique A. Mexia, citizens of Mexico, against T. J. Oliver, a citizen of Texas, for the possession of a piece of land. The “ first amended original petition” in the suit, filed November 30, 1888, is endorsed with a notice to the defendant that the action is brought, as well to try title as for damages. The petition states that on January 1, 1878, the plaintiffs were seized and possessed in fee, in right of said Sarah B. Mexia, of the following. described tract of land, situated in Limestone County, Texas, bbing some 4000 acres, more or less, out of 11 leagues of the land granted originally to Pedro Yarella, “beginning at a stake and mound' ' on the eastern boundary of the Pedro Yarella 11-league grant, 2253 varas south, 45° east, from the northeast corner oí said 11-league grant, said stake and mound being also the southeast corner of a 6000-acre tract in the name of Jose M. Cabellera out of said 11-league grant, as the same was originally surveyed and established in June, 1855, by.G. H. Cunningham, surveyor, at the instance of E. A. Mexia,.agent for J. M. Cabellera and plaintiffs’ vendors, thence south 45° west with the south boundary line of said 6000-acre tract, . . . (ac-. cording to a block of surveys made by G. H. Cunningham in 1856 in sectionizijig and subdividing said 11-league grant, and set apart to plaintiff Sarah B. Mexia by deed of partition between Adelaide M. Hammekin, George L. Hammekin, Sarah B. Mexia and E. A. Mexia dated March 30, 1874;)” thence proceeding with the boundary around said land to the place of beginning, “ said boundaries including sections Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and a part of section No. 6, of the subdivision and partition of the said Pedro Yarella 11-league grant, as shown on the records of the said Limestone County.” The petition sets forth also that on February 11,1850, “Adelaide M. Hammekin, joined by. her husband George L. Hammekin, being at that time the owners of said 11-league grant, made, executed and delivered to one Jose M. Cabellera a conveyance for 6000 *666 acres of said 11-league grant, out of the northeast corner of same, before any actual survey was made of said 6000-acre tract, and that the same was never actually surveyed on the ground until the month of June, -1855, at which time said 6000-acre tract was actually surveyed on the ground and cut off from said 11-league grant, and the south or southwest boundary line thereof was well established on the ground in accordance with the field-notes as hereinbefore set forth, and the same has ever since been held and regarded and acquiesced in as the south boundary of said 6000-acre tract and as the division line between the. same and the remainder of said 11-league grant on the south and west thereof, and from that time -to the present said line and survey has been acquiesced in by the adjacent owners of the land north and south of said line ”; that said survey was made, and said line thus established, by G-. H. Cunningham, then surveyor of the land district in which said land was situated, and this was done by request and authority of said J. M. Cabellero and the said Hammeldns, and said survey and lines were afterwards ratified, and ever since acquiesced in, by them and their vendees; that such title as the defendant claims under is derived from Cabellero under said conveyance for 6000 acres; that the defendant will claim and insist in this cause that the south boundary line of said 6000-acre tract, in the name of Cabellero, should be at a point about 277 varas further south than as heretofore established and as claimed by the plaintiffs; that on January 1, 1878, the defendant illegally entered on the land and ejected the plaintiffs therefrom, to their damage in the sum of $10,000; and that the land claimed is of the value of $20,000. The petition prays judgment for the land, damages and costs, for a writ of possession, and for other relief.

The defendant filed a first amended original answer” on April 17, 1889, by which he demurred to the plaintiffs’ first amended original petition as insufficient in law, denied all the allegations of the petition, pleaded not guilty, and alleged that he had been in quiet, peaceable, continuous and adverse possession for more than three years before the filing of the suit, of so much of the land described in the petition as was *667 included within the boundaries following, to wit: “In Limestone County, about 6 miles above the town of Springfield, on the northern or left of the river Navasota, being a part of the 11-league grant by the States of Coahuila and Texas to Pedro Varella, and commencing on the.left bank of the eastern (or northern) branch of the Navasota at the point where the original line of said 11-league grant from the second to the third corners crossed the said creek; thence N. 45° E., following the original line of said 11-league grant, to the original 3rd corner; thence S. 45°. E. two thousand five hundred and thirty (2530) varas, following the original line of the said 11-league grant; thence S. 45° "VV., being a line parallel with the first line of this survey, to the left bank of the Navasota; thence up said river to the beginning”; that, as to all not included in said boundaries, he did not set up any claim;-.that he pleaded the three-years and the five-years statutes of limitation; that he and those whose estate he had in the lands sued for had adverse .possession of the land described in his plea of three years’ limitation, for one year next before the commencement of the suit, claiming the land in good faith; that he and they had made permanent and valuable improvements thereon, to the amount of $5000, which he asked, to have valued and allowed to him under the statute; and that, as to all land not included in the boundaries given in the answer, he made disclaimer.

The answer further alleged, that on July 27, 1874, he purchased from Mrs. Maria Dolores Felicite Conti, the only daughter and only heir, of Jose M. Cabellero, the land described in the answer, paying therefor to her $5000 cash, in gold, and received a deed, wfith said field-notes from her and her husband J. M. Conti; that, if the Hammekins and said Cabellero ever agreed that the said 6000-acre tract should be surveyed, and the same was so surveyed as to make its southern boundary 277 varas farther north than the southern boundary as called for by said deed from the Hammekins to Cabellero, and they afterwards acquiesced in and ratified the same, which is not admitted but expressly denied, then the defendant avers that, at and before. the time he paid such *668 purchase money and received the deed from Mr. and Mrs. Conti, he had no notice, actual or constructive, of such agreement, survey or ratification of the survey, nor that the Hammekins or the plaintiffs claimed any right to, or interest in, said 6000-acre tract or any part thereof, as set out by metes and bounds in the deed to Oabellero ; that the defendant was a bona fide

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Bluebook (online)
148 U.S. 664, 13 S. Ct. 754, 37 L. Ed. 602, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mexia-v-oliver-scotus-1893.