Rosborough v. Picton

34 S.W. 791, 12 Tex. Civ. App. 113, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 153
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 26, 1896
DocketNo. 986.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 34 S.W. 791 (Rosborough v. Picton) 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
Rosborough v. Picton, 34 S.W. 791, 12 Tex. Civ. App. 113, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 153 (Tex. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinions

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

Appellants brought this suit to obtain an injunction to restrain a sale of their lands by F. O. Proctor as trustee under a deed of trust which they had executed to appellees, Fannie E. Picton and her husband, D. M. Picton, to secure notes given by appellants for the purchase money of land bought by them from Mrs. Picton. Temporary injunction was granted in vacation, but in term time, after plaintiffs had filed an amended original petition, exceptions to it were sustained, the injunction was dissolved and the suit dismissed; .and the judgment thus rendered is brought in review by this appeal.

The petition is necessarily lengthy and only a general statement of the points involved in the rulings below will be given. Appellants bought from Mrs. Picton an undivided one-fourth of twenty-eight tracts ■of land, among which were a league granted to Peter Hynes, and seven-■eighths undivided interest in a fourth of a league granted to John Hynes. These grants were extended to the original grantees in 1834 by the Commissioner of Power and Hewitson’s Colony, the lands granted being situated within the bounds of the second contract of those colonists with the then existing government. The petition alleges that the sale *116 of lands made to appellants by the appellees was by the acre, at $4 per acre, and that these two tracts were represented by appellees and believed by appellants to contain 4128 and 1107 acres respectively, but that, as a matter of fact, which was unknown to appellants when they made their purchase, these grants included in the boundaries a portion of Hynes’ bay, a navigable arm of the Gulf of Mexico, and an area, more than .twelve hundred acres thereof, was covered by the waters of the bay, to which area, it is asserted, the title never passed out of the government. An abatement of the purchase money, commensurate with this shortage in the land purchased, was claimed, the balance remaining unpaid being tendered into court, and a restraint of the sale of the property by which the purchase money notes were secured was sought until a trial of the issues could be had.

We think that there is no doubt that the proposition that the title-to the land covered by the navigable waters of the bay did not pass by the grants, is well founded. According to both the common and civil law, an ordinary grant of land along the sea-coast, made by the ministerial officer of the government, did not pass the title to land under' water or beyond the coast‘line. This line was fixed by the common law at the point reached by ordinary high tide, and by the civil law at the mark of the highest tide. The exterior boundary line of the grant to Power and Hewitson was the sea coast (Sayles’ Early Laws, 108; Hamilton v. Menifee, 11 Texas, 718), and no authority was given them over the waters of the sea, or of the bays and inlets, or of the soil under them. These are, by well settled principles, reserved for common use. Hence, the grants by the Commissioner of that Colony passed title only to land which was not. under the waters of the sea. Galveston v. Menard, 23-Texas, 349; Galveston Surf Bathing Co. v. Heidenheimer, 63 Texas, 562; Arnold v. Mundy, 1 Halstead (N. J.), 1; Den v. Sawyer, 2 Hawk’s Law and Eq. (N. C.), 226; Martin v. Waddell, 16 Peters, 369.

The decisions in tins State, sustaining grants of land by these Commissioners outside of the colonial boundaries, where they were fairly made lipón a mistake as to the location of the boundary line, have no-application. The only question involved in those cases was as to the power to grant land, and it was sought to avoid the grants because the-authorities had mistaken the territorial limits of their jurisdiction, and had honestly granted lands which lay a short distance outside of the-boundary. Hero, the question is as to the power to grant that which, by the policy of all nations governed by the principles of the civil or-common law, is retained for the public use, and which passes by a. private grant only when so expressly provided by the sovereign authority. For the same reason, no subsequent recognition or confirmation of a grant, made by a ministerial officer, attempting to pass the soil under the sea, would be presumed; and hence it was unnecessary for the plaintiff to allege that there had been no such confirmation. In the first place, the power was not given to the commissioner of the colony to grant soil under navigable waters; and in the second place, *117 his grant would not be construed as attempting to do so, unless it expressly or by unavoidable construction so provided; and the same reason which would thus limit the effect of such grants would forbid any assumption that there had been any act of the government which could have the effect of passing away its title to soil under the water.

It is claimed that the petition does not sufficiently show that the quantity of land for which an abatement is claimed is actually covered by the water. But the allegation is that plaintiffs have caused a survey of the water area to be made, and states, as its result and upon information given to him by the surveyor, that the quantity of such area is as alleged by him. If they had attached the affidavit of the surveyor, as they did in companion cases, it would have been more satisfactory. But it is positively stated that the lines of both these surveys cross the bay, thus including its entire width, and leaving a part of the land embraced north and a part of it south, and the only fact, as to this point, stated upon information and belief, is that the water area is 1200 7-10 acres. There is, in any event, a water area included between the shores of the bay on the north and south and the lines of the grant on the east and west, and these allegations are, we think, sufficient to entitle appellants to a hearing. At any rate, the exception, based upon this supposed defect, was overruled and the petition was dismissed on other points.

It is next contended that the petition is insufficient in that it does not directly and positively allege that there is not contained in the two Hynes grants, or in the other grants purchased in the same transaction, the acreage bargained for, after deducting the area covered by water. The petition alleged that the deeds and abstracts produced by defendants called for the number of acres which appellees bargained to sell to appellants; that the sale was made by the acre, and that appellants paid and appellees accepted pay for the land as being the quantity called for in the different grants, and that, upon this information, appellants believed there was in none of the tracts an excess over the quantity called for in the grants. The land was about to be sold, and the object of the injunction was to prevent a sale until the merits of the claim for an abatement of purchase money could be decided. A majority of the court hold that, considering the number of tracts in question and the inconclusive character of any information other than that stated, which the pleader could have obtained as to their area, the facts alleged would, if proven, have made a prima facie case upon which the court should have held them entitled to relief, unless they were rebutted, and that hence the statement of such facts was sufficient to entitle them to a hearing. It is not a case where a party simply states a fact upon information and belief, but one where facts within his knowledge are given, and his inference from them is stated upon belief.

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Bluebook (online)
34 S.W. 791, 12 Tex. Civ. App. 113, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosborough-v-picton-texapp-1896.