State of Texas v. Gallardo

166 S.W. 369, 106 Tex. 274, 1914 Tex. LEXIS 66
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 29, 1914
DocketNo. 2296.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 166 S.W. 369 (State of Texas v. Gallardo) 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
State of Texas v. Gallardo, 166 S.W. 369, 106 Tex. 274, 1914 Tex. LEXIS 66 (Tex. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice PHILLIPS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The suit was an action by the State in trespass to 'try title against Jose L. Gallardo and numerous other defendants, to recover two leagues of land in Hidalgo. County, referred to in the petition as all of the certain tract known as “Los Ejidos” that lies on the north side of the Rio Grande River. W. A. Boswell, L. D. Brooks, J. P. McDonald and F. Spaeth were included as defendants under an allegation that they were asserting some character of claim to the land, which, according to their answer, was a claim of right to have the land awarded them by the State based upon applications to purchase. Against several of the defendants who had not answered an interlocutory judgment by default was rendered. On the trial judgment was rendered against the State and in favor of all the defendants except Boswell, Brooks, McDonald and Spaeth, as to whom the suit was dismissed upon the court’s finding that the State had never had any title to the land, and, accordingly, there was no issue between them and the State to be determined. On the appeal of the State the judgment was in all respects affirmed by the Honorable Court of Civil Appeals, except as to the defendants who had not answered; the judgment being reversed in that respect and rendered for the State.

The findings of the Court of Civil Appeals set forth in the able and exhaustive opinion of Chief Justice Key reveal a history of the title that may, be summarized as follows:

The land in controversy is the portion King on the north side of the Rio Grande River of four leagues granted by the government of Spain, in 1767, to the town of Reynosa as “Ejidos,” or town commons; the town being upon the south side of the river and the “Ejidos” extending across it and lying in part upon its northern side. At a time not definitely shown but probably in the year 1801, on account of the danger from floods of the river, upon petition of its citizens the municipality of Reynosa was removed by the government to another place about six leagues away that became known as “Hew Reynosa.”

On August 31, 1836, when the land was within the territorial boundaries and under the political jurisdiction of the Mexican State of Tamaulipas, the alcalde of Hew Reynosa addressed a letter to the Governor of Tamaulipas, recommending the sale of the “Ejidos” of Old Reynosa, stating, among other reasons therefor, that disputes had arisen, among the owners of certain tracts adjacent thereto as to their respective boundaries; that upon the removal of the town the “Ejidos” had been abandoned and left to the exclusive use of the few who remained *283 living there, and could be easily sold to the owners of abutting porciones which had no river front on account of such location. The letter was referred to the departmental junta at the City of Victoria, which body recommended the sale by public auction to the highest bidder. On October 5, 1836, such sale was ordered by the Governor of Tamaulipas. Pursuant to his order the sale of the “Ejidos” was made, on November 9, 1836, at public auction by the alcalde to Eruto de Cardenas, the highest bidder, for $310, which was paid on the same day. In making the purchase Cardenas was acting for ninety-six inhabitants of Old Reynosa. On November 10, 1836, the alcalde who made the sale ordered that a deed of conveyance be made to the ninety-six purchasers. On July 34, 1837, the alcalde ordered the land surveyed before the issuance of title. After the survey, and payment of the surveyor’s fees on September 33, 1841, a testimonio of title was issued on September 34, 1841, by the alcalde to the ninety-six purchasers for whom Cardenas had acted in bidding in and paying for the land. It is conceded that Gallardo and his associates hold title under this sale.

In the year 1871 Noberto Garza, holding a title under this sale and relying upon it, brought a suit against the State for confirmation of such title under the Act of August 15, 1870, in which judgment was rendered for the State and later affirmed by this court. 64 Texas, 670. This judgment was made the basis of a plea of res judicata urged by the State against the defendants’ title.

While no occupancy of the land at the time of the sale of November 9, 1836, was established, the proof showed that many of the defendants, Gallardo and others, had been paying taxes each upon a specified number of acres of the land, ranging from 30 to 1500 acres, from 1879 .to the time of the trial in 1909; that some of them, and their ancestors ■under.whom they claimed, had been in possession of the land, some on the Texas side and others on the Mexican side of the river; for forty or fifty years; that for many years two or three villages had been upon the land composed largely of claimants under this sale and their families ; and that there was a tradition in the locality that the ancestors of these defendants had, from the date of the sale, claimed and held possession of the land under it.

' An official map of Hidalgo County, dated April, 1880, designates the land involved as “Los Ejidos de Reynosa,” with delineation of the various porciones granted to individuals and adjacent to it; and also designating the old town .of Reynosa immediately across the river on the Mexican side. Another official map of the county, dated April, 1896, contains substantially the same designations, with certain characters indicating that at some time certificates had been filed on the land. Both maps are on file in the General Land Office of the State.

The Court of Civil Appeals has further found that there was proof tending to show the Commissioner of the Land Office for 1903-1909 had treated the land as titled land; that in 1905 the defendants Brooks, Boswell, McDonald and Spaeth had each made application to purchase four sections of the land from the State, and that the county surveyor *284 of Hidalgo County had made surveys upon each application and returned them to the Land Office, but the Commissioner had taken no action on the claims asserted under these applications.

Other than its resistance through its Attorney General of the suit filed against it by Roberto Garza in 1871, seeking confirmation of a title to land asserted under the sale of November 9, 1836, the State had never contested the validity of the title held under this sale until the institution of the present suit in 1908.

As affecting the validity of the sale of November 9, 1836, under the Mexican law, the Court of Civil Appeals has further found as a fact that at that time the old town of Reynosa had been abandoned and the municipality of that name removed and established at a different place, which is supported by the proof; and that there was evidence affirmatively showing that the Mexican government had acquiesced in the validity of the title under the sale as it is related to that part of the “Ejidos” lying on the Mexican side of the Rio Grande River.

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Bluebook (online)
166 S.W. 369, 106 Tex. 274, 1914 Tex. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-texas-v-gallardo-tex-1914.