Reese v. Cobb

135 S.W. 220, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 894
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 135 S.W. 220 (Reese v. Cobb) 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
Reese v. Cobb, 135 S.W. 220, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 894 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinions

The third amended petition of appellee, Cobb, was one in trespass to try title to a tract containing 285.66 acres situated on the "Island" on the south side of the present channel of the Rio Grande river, and alleged to be a part of the San Elizarlo grant in El Paso county, Tex. Defendants by a second amended answer pleaded not guilty, etc.; that the land was never a part of the San Elizarlo grant; that defendants have had continuous adverse possession of same for over 40 years; that since 1853 it has ever been recognized by the inhabitants of the town of San Elizario as being south and west of the boundary line of said grant; that ever since 1853, and since the patent to the San Elizario grant was made, and ever since the town of San Elizario was organized by the special act of the Legislature in 1871 (Sp. Laws 1871, c. 42), the inhabitants of San Elizario and the town of San Elizario and all persons interested have acquiesced in the fact that said land was not a part of the said grant, and that the grant did not extend over said land, and that defendants in their purchases of said land relied on said facts, and plaintiff is precluded and estopped from claiming said land as a part of the grant, and defendants also pleaded the statute of limitations of 10 years. After the evidence was concluded, the court directed a verdict in favor of plaintiff. *Page 222

The first question which we shall refer to is whether or not the court should have submitted the case to the jury on the issue of limitations. It is claimed by appellee that the evidence was not sufficient to make a case of continuous adverse possession as our statute requires. But the view we take of that issue, as it is presented here, renders it unnecessary to notice that particular question. All the evidence taken shows that during all the time with reference to which defendant claims to have adversely possessed and used this land the boundary line of the two governments, as recognized and observed by the political authorities of the United States and the state of Texas, left the land in controversy within the territory over which Mexico exercised dominion. This condition relating to the extent of territorial jurisdiction actually exercised by the American authorities, both state and federal, arose from a change in the bed of the river at an early date, admitted to be in 1857. It does not matter how this condition arose, or that the boundary line de jure, governed by the position of the river as it was when the treaty was made between the United States and Mexico, was in fact further west and entitled Texas to this land. The fact is that the state of Texas and the United States never in fact extended, nor sought to extend, their governmental authority over the territory in question, and that the Mexican government did in all things retain and exercise its jurisdiction over the territory until March or April, 1897, when the boundary between the two countries was, by the International Boundary Commission of the two countries, ascertained and fixed by monuments along a former bed of the river, thereby establishing this land on the American side. During all the years prior to the work of said commission, the law of Mexico prevailed and was exercised fully over this territory; and the river as it ran was the territorial limit of the governmental jurisdiction observed and exercised by the state of Texas and of the United States. The boundary was a matter for the political authorities, and, so long as it was an unsettled question between the two federal governments and so long as the Mexican government, without question, was permitted to continue to govern the territory, and actually did so, it is clear that the courts of the country were powerless to assert their jurisdiction over that territory, or to enforce its decrees therein. This being so, the statutes of limitation of Texas could not be invoked by possessors of the land against title thereto emanating from the state of Texas, the sovereignty to which the land de jure belonged. This follows from the fact that as conditions stood the courts of Texas were without power to give relief in any action of a possessory character.

Appellants' counsel in oral argument, although not in their brief, called attention to the fact that plaintiff did not in reply to the plea of limitations plead the above conditions. We are of opinion that they were a proper subject of judicial notice, and therefore it was unnecessary to plead same. It was undisputed that until the action of the International Boundary Commission in 1897, and during all the time of the adverse possession claimed in this case, the Rio Grande, as the boundary line between Texas and Mexico, was recognized and acted upon by the two governments as being the channel to the east of the tract in question, that the Mexican government exercised dominion west of that channel, and the government of the United States and of the state of Texas refrained from asserting and exercising dominion beyond that channel. The courts in such matters regard and follow the lead of the political department of its government. United States v. Arredondo, 6 Pet. 691, 8 L.Ed. 547; Garcia v. Lee, 12 Pet. 511, 9 L.Ed. 1176. This de facto condition, while it existed, it was the duty of the district court of El Paso county to observe, which necessarily involves judicial notice of the fact. State v. Dunwell, 3 R. I. 127. We think that it is clear that while said conditions prevailed a suit involving title to land described as lying beyond that recognized boundary filed in the district court of El Paso county would upon the court's own initiative and in the performance of its duty not have been entertained.

The following are the material facts developed by the testimony as to title: By the act of February 5, 1853 (Sp. Laws 1853, c. 6), "the grant made to the people of Presidio de San Elizario" in the year 1790 was recognized and confirmed to land described as commencing on Rio Grande at line between Socorro and San Elizario; thence easterly to hills bordering on east bank of Rio Viejo; thence southeasterly with said hills to point where Rio Viejo empties into the Rio Grande; thence up said Rio Grande from the mouth of Rio Viejo to the place of beginning. The patent dated March 8, 1853, granted and relinquished to the inhabitants of the town of Presidio de San Elizario all the right and title in and to the land described in the above act, and describing same accordingly. By special act of the Legislature in 1871 the town of San Elizario was incorporated, and the limits were fixed identical with the grant, as confirmed. Sp. Laws 1871, c. 42. This act prescribed the condition upon which the incorporated town might deed any part of the grant. The situation remained until the act was repealed by the act of 1891 (Sp. Laws 1891, c.11); and at the same session in 1891 another act (Sp. Laws 1891, c. 4) was passed validating deeds that had been made by the town of San Elizario after an attempt to incorporate under the general law, and reciting that the grant of the body of land had been made to the inhabitants of the *Page 223 town of San Elizarlo, and that they had before that time subdivided the land and conveyed the same by deed. In May, 1893, the town of San Elizario, by virtue of an election held in the town of San Elizario, was incorporated under the provisions of chapter 2, tit. 18, Rev.St. 1895, with corporate limits reduced to a parcel of land about 4,000 varas by 4,800 varas in the northwestern portion of the grant.

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Bluebook (online)
135 S.W. 220, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 894, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reese-v-cobb-texapp-1911.