Smith v. Power

2 Tex. 57
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 2 Tex. 57 (Smith v. Power) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Power, 2 Tex. 57 (Tex. 1847).

Opinion

Hr. Chief Justice Hemphill

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff in error being one of several defendants in an action instituted by James Power, defendant in this court, and plaintiff below, had, on filing his answer, moved to dissolve an injunction which had been granted; and on the overruling cf this motion, this writ of error was sued out.

The said plaintiff, James Power, had filed his petition, stating that in pari consideration for services rendered by himself and his partner, James Hewitson, to the then existing government of Coahuila and Texas, in colonizing and settling a certain tract of country then belonging to the said state, [62]*62but now lying within the limits of the republic of Texas, and' known as Power and Hewitson’s colony, there were granted him, by the proper authorities of the said state of Coahuila and Texas, several leagues of premium lands, the locations of which are described, and are stated as lying and situate, or the greater part of them, within the now county of Refugio. Tie further represents, that on the 24th December, 1829, there was granted to him and his said partner, James Hewitson — but in their individual rights as Mexican citizens, by the proper authorities of the said state of Coahuila and Texas — two separate grants, or concessions of eleven leagues of land each, the locations and boundaries of which are described, and they are stated as lying and being situate within the county of Refugio.

He further represents that there was granted to one Francisco del Prado, a Mexican citizen, by the government of Coa-huila and Texas, on the 22d of January, 1831, a concession of eleven leagues, in conformity with the law of colonization, of the 24th March, 1825, and that anterior to the 26th (November,. 1834, he purchased a concession of eleven leagues of land from one Francisco de la Pena, a citizen of Mexico, which concession was made to the said Francisco de la Pena, in conformity with the law of colonization. The locations of the-lands embraced in these concessions are defined; and they are described as lying and being within the county of Refugio.

He also claims some additional lands as granted to him and his partner, for their respective headrights, and which are described as having been surveyed within the county of Refugio. The petitioner alleges, that one Henry Smith and Joseph F. Smith, a near relative of the said Henry, and others, well knowing that all the above claimed lands were his property,, procured from various individuals, certain land claims, known as headright certificates, land scrip and military bounty certificates, and fraudulently caused said land ‘claims to be located and surveyed upon the lands aforesaid of the petitioner, well knowing that, at the time the said locations and surveys were made, the said lands were not vacant, and that they did [63]*63not belong to the public domain of Texas, and were, in truth and in fact, the lands of your petitioner, legally owned, held and possessed by him and not subject to location.

The petition, after making various allegations in relation to the conduct of Henry Smith, states that Joseph F. Smith, the plaintiff in error, had filed a petition, praying for a peremptory mandamus against the commissioner of the general land office, requiring him to issue patents to the said Joseph F. Smith, for himself and divers other persons, upon locations and surveys made upon the lands of your petitioner, although the said Smith well knew that the said locations and surveys were made upon the lands of your petitioner. And the said Smith and others are represented as urging the commissioner of the general land office to issue patents upon their surveys, alleging-that the plats and surveys of the petitioner’s lands, not appearing upon the map of the county of Uefugio, the said commissioner is not bound to respect the petitioner’s titles, although fully apprised of their existence, by their being deposited in the land office; but that he ought to issue patents for subsequent locations upon the said lands. The petitioner admits that his plats and surveys have never been delineated upon the map of the said county of Kefngio, but denies that his rights can be affected by a neglect of the county officers to perform their duties; that his titles were all obtained in good faith, and for sufficient consideration, and were regularly located and surveyed by the proper officers of the country at the time, and in strict conformity with all the laws then in force; and that the principal reason why they do not appear correctly delineated upon the map of the county grows out of' the confusion produced in the land office of the said county, by the wars of the revolution, the destruction of its maps and papers, and the impossibility of restoring things to their proper state, by the subsequent almost entire depopulation of the county from the frequent inroads and encroachments of the enemy, thus preventing the transaction of business; and, more especially, the resurveying and plotting of large bodies of wild lands in a. country wholly unprotected and peculiarly exposed to the depredations of the enemy. The [64]*64petitioner admits that the commissioner cannot correctly •delineate upon the map of the county his lands, in consequence of many of his principal calls being for the lands of others, the position of which were well known in the county at the ■time the surveys were made, but the plats and titles of some ■of which have been taken from the country, or were lost and destroyed in the general confusion produced by the wars of the revolution; and is apprehensive that before his lands can be surveyed and delineated on the map of the county, under the late law, patents may be issued upon his said lands, unless the commissioner be restrained by the action of the court, and prays an order to the county surveyor requiring him to resurvey all the lands of the petitioner lying in the said county according to the plats and field notes accompanying his titles to the same, and to make out correct plats and field notes to such résurveys, as will enable the commissioner of the general land office to delineate them upon the general map of the surveys of the said county.

The petitioner prays for a writ of injunction restraining the •commissioner from issuing patents to the said Joseph F. Smith and others for any of the lands mentioned in the petition, where the surveys are known or appear to have beeu made upon the said lands, but which cannot at this time be positively determined, in consequence of the defects in the map of the said county in not representing the lands of the petitioner, until the said lands have been resurveyed and plats thereof represented on the map of the county. Tie further prays that Joseph F. Smith be made a party to this bill, and that he be •enjoined and restrained from prosecuting his suit now pending against the commissioner of the general land office, to compel him by mandamus to issue patents to the said •Joseph F. Smith and others for the said lands, until it can be ascertained whether the lands claimed by the said Smith are not in truth the lands of the petitioner.

"Writs of injunction were ordered to be issued, in accordance with the prayers of the petition, on the 14th August, 1845; and a writ was issued to the commissioner on the 30th October, 1846.

[65]*65On the 6th of the said month of October, Joseph F. Smith, -one of the defendants, filed his answer representing that the plaintiff’s bill was too vague and general to support an action.

2.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Tex. 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-power-tex-1847.