Miller v. Texas & Pacific Railway Co.

132 U.S. 662, 10 S. Ct. 206, 33 L. Ed. 487, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 1884
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 6, 1890
Docket737, 867, 868
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 132 U.S. 662 (Miller v. Texas & Pacific Railway Co.) 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
Miller v. Texas & Pacific Railway Co., 132 U.S. 662, 10 S. Ct. 206, 33 L. Ed. 487, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 1884 (1890).

Opinion

Me. Justioe Bradley

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was originally an action of trespass to try title, brought in March, 1884, in the District Court of Tarrant County, Texas, by William L. Foster and his children, William D. Foster and others, against Elizabeth J. Dággett and her husband, E. B. Daggett, and The Texas and Pacific Railway Company, The Missouri Pacific Railway Company, The Fort Worth and Denver Railway Company and The Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fé Railway Company, to recover possession of 320 acres of land in the city of Fort Worth. Much of the land in question is laid out in streets and covered with buildings, and nearly 100 acres of it is occupied by the said railroad companies, or some of them, for their tracks, station houses, freight depots, shops, etc. The plaintiffs claimed title as heirs at. law of one Thomas P. Rutledge, through Eliza A. Foster, wife of William L. Foster, and mother of the other plaintiffs, who had been the wife and widow of said' Rutledge, and mother of his only son, deceased. The defendants filed answers, claiming the lands under an alleged’ purchase from Rutledge of his head-right certificate under which the lands were located, and also under an independent title derived by purchase from the heirs *665 of one John Childress; and also by long and undisturbed possession. No patent for the lands had ever been granted on the Iiutledge title, which was older than the Childress title; but a patent was granted'on the latter in June, 1868 : so that the various claims under the Rutledge title were of an equitable character, which, in the Texas jurisprudence, is equally available with the legal title.

In October, 1881, Thomas II. Miller and others, children of one Alsey S. Miller, intervened in the suit as plaintiffs, claiming the same land as devisees of Thomas P. Rutledge.

On the 20th of April, 1885, William Dunlap and others filed their petition in the suit, claiming one-half interest in the lands as heirs-at-law of Adaline S. Worrall, wife of one I. R. Worrall; and on the 23d of March, 1886, Martha R. Worrall and others intervened as plaintiffs, claiming the other half interest in the lands as heirs-at-law of said Adaline, through the said I. R. Worrall. The Dunlaps and the Worralls claim under the same right, and allege that Adaline S. Worrall became entitled to the lands by purchase from the heirs of John Childress, and that, on her dying without issue in 1870, her brothers and sisters, represented by William Dunlap and others, inherited one-half of her interest, and her husband, I. R. Worrall, represented by his mother, Martha R. Worrall, and others, inherited the other half.

In December, 1885, the original plaintiffs, William L. Foster and his children, took a non-suit, and were dismissed out of the casé, leaving three sets of claimants to the land, to wit: (1) the original defendants, the Daggetts and the railroad companies, who were in possession, claiming under all the titles; (2)-Thomas II. Miller and others, claiming as devisees of Thomas P. Rutledge; (3) the Dunlaps and the Worralls, claiming under John Childress, through Adaline S. Worrall.

In March term, 1886, the last set of claimants, William Dunlap and others, and Martha R. Worrall and others, who were* citizens of other states than Texas, removed the proceedings into the Circuit Court of the United- States for the Northern District of Texas; and in that court a repleader took place on the equity side of the court. Thomas H. Miller *666 and others, claiming as devisees of Rutledge, filed' a bill to maintain their alleged equitable title to the land, and made the other parties defendants, who all filed answers; and the intervenors, Dunlap and others and "Worrall and others, also filed separate cross-bills, to which the other parties filed answers. The court below dismissed both the original and cross-bills, and this appeal is brought from that decree.

The land in question, when the titles set up by the complainants originated in 1852 and 1868, was of small value; but having become the site of a portion of the city of Fort Worth, and of an important railroad centre, it has acquired a very great value, and is the subject of earnest litigation.

The Rutledge title originated under a head-right for 320 acres of land in Texas, granted in October, 1816, to Thomas P. Rutledge as an emigrant, by the board of land commissioners of Gonzales County, where he then resided. It is alleged by the defendants, and! proof was adduced to show, that Rutledge sold this certificate to one Matthew Rrinson in or about 1818, and that Brinson sold it to one M. T. Johnson in 1851. It was located by Johnson (in Rutledge’s name) on the premises in dispute in 1851 or 1852, and a survey in pursuance of such location was made January 8, 1852, by A. J. Lee, deputy surveyor for the Robertson Land District. It had previously been located on lands in Fannin County, but the evidence shows (as we think) that that location was abandoned, and that the location on the lands in dispute took the place of it.

The following is the copy of the survey made by Lee, to wit:

“ The State of Texas, Robertson Land District:
“ I have surveyed for Thomas P. Rutledge 320 acres of land situated in Tarrant County, about f of a.mile S. E. from Fort .Worth and 5£ miles S. 11 W. from Birdville, by virtue of his head-right certificate No. 131, class 3rd, issued by the board of land comm’rs for Gonzales County on the 12th day of October, 1816 —
“Beginning at the S. E. cor. of W. W. Warnell’s 1280 sur., *667 now in the name of E. Briggs, at a stake, whence a hackberry 2 in. di. brs. S. 67 E. 77 vs. and an elm. 2 in. di. brs. N. 68 W. in the head of a hollow; thence west 1344 vs. to said Warnell’s S. W. cor., a stake and mound in prairie; thence south 1344 vs. to a stake and mound in prairie; thence east 1344 vs. to a stake and mound in prairie; thence north 1344 vs. to the place of beginning.
“ Surveyed the 8th day of January, 1852.'
“A. J. Lee, D. S. R. L. D.,
“Mercer Fain & T. I. Johnson, Chainers.”

This survey Avas duly recorded in the records of the land district and filed in the General Land Office of the State; but no patent Avas issued upon it.

The tract thus surveyed Avas an exact square of 1344 varas, or 1244-J yards on each side. One E. M. Daggett located another tract of 320 acres somewhere in the same neighborhood, and in the year 1853 or 1854 he made an exchange Avith Johnson for the lot in question, and in June, 1855, Johnson executed to Daggett a deed, of Avliich the folloAving is a copy to Avit:

“ The State of Texas, County of Tarrant :
“ Knoiv all men by these presents that I, M. T. Johnson, of the state and county aforesaid, for and in the consideration of the three hundred and twenty acre land certificate issued by the board of land commissioners of Shelby county, in the name of E. M. Daggett, class 3rd, and as deeded to me by said Daggett this day, I have bargained; sold, and aliened unto the aforesaid E. M.

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Bluebook (online)
132 U.S. 662, 10 S. Ct. 206, 33 L. Ed. 487, 1890 U.S. LEXIS 1884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-texas-pacific-railway-co-scotus-1890.