State of Texas v. Travis County

21 S.W. 1029, 85 Tex. 435, 1893 Tex. LEXIS 206
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1893
DocketNo. 18.
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 21 S.W. 1029 (State of Texas v. Travis County) 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. Travis County, 21 S.W. 1029, 85 Tex. 435, 1893 Tex. LEXIS 206 (Tex. 1893).

Opinion

HENRY, Associate Justice.

This case is before us on a writ of error to the Court of Civil Appeals of the Third Supreme Judicial District, sued out by the appellant.

The county of Travis brought suit in the District Court against L. M. Crooker, as surviving partner of Christian & Crooker, and Matilda Christian, as the surviving wife of the said Christian, to recover $1500, claimed to be due by contract for the rent of a certain block of land in the city of Austin.

The State of Texas intervened in the suit, by petition in the nature of an action of trespass to try title, alleging ownership of the land in controversy and praying for a judgment for its possession and for the recovery of $1500, as damages for its use and occupation.

The defendants consented to a judgment against them, in favor of the party found to be entitled, for $1500.

The case was tried by the judge without a jury, and a judgment was rendered in favor of the county against the State for the land, and against the defendants for the money.

*439 Omitting legislative acts, the material facts found by the Court of Civil Appeals are substantially as follows:

When the city of Austin was originally divided into blocks and lots and platted, the block in controversy, and all other lots and blocks in said city, belonged to the Republic of Texas, and all of them not in some manner dedicated to public uses were subsequently sold by the Republic or the State.

As provided by the statute of the Republic, quoted below, the agent of the Republic designated upon the map of the city the lots and blocks reserved for public uses.

The original map of the city was made in 1840, and is now on file in the General Land Office of the State of Texas. Upon it the block now in controversy is designated as follows: On the north half thereof is written the words “court house,” and on the south half the word “jail.” Upon said map the block immediately north of said court house and jail block is designated by the words “public square.” The said map was made by the agent of the Republic, and has remained on file since it was made as the official map of said city, and all lots and blocks were sold by the government by and according to said map.

In the year 1846 Travis County took possession of the block in controvesy and erected on it a wooden jail, which it used until 1853. at which time it was destroyed by fire. In 1855 the county erected on the north half of the block a rock and concrete house for a court house and jail, which is still standing, and was used for said purposes until 1876, when it was abandoned by the county, and it has not since that time been used as a court house or jail, but since 1877 said block has been rented by the •county to Loomis & Christian, and their successors, the defendants Christian & Crooker, as a lumber yard.

In pursuance of the acts of the Legislature (herein after referred to), Travis County erected in 1875 and 1876 a court house and jail and jail- or’s residence, at a cost of about $220,000, on the north half of block number 123, in the city of Austin, which it has ever since occupied.

The present court house is distant about three-quarters of a mile from the old court house; is more conveniently situated for the inhabitants of the city, and its location is better suited, in every particular, for the uses intended than the old one is.

The present value of the old court house and jail is about $2500. - The present population of Travis County is about 50,000; of the city of Austin 20,000.

The State’s plea of intervention was filed in this cause on the 8tli day of May, 1891, which was the first act upon the part of the State that called in question the title of the county or its right to hold and use the .block in controversy.

*440 The intervention, of the State was by the Attorney-General, under the-direction of the Governor.

A motion by the State for a rehearing, which was refused, presented the following grounds therefor, which are insisted upon in this court:-

“1. Because the court erred in holding that the title to the premises in question did not revert to the State on the abandonment and nonuser of the premises for the purposes for which the dedication was originally made.

“ 2. The court erred in holding that appellee acquired title to the premises in question by virtue of section 3 of special act of the Legislature of the 30th day of May, 1873.”

An act of the Congress of the Republic, entitled “An act for the permanent location of the seat of government,” approved January 14, 1839-(page 161, Special Laws, 1839), provided for the appointment of an agent by the President of the Republic, as soon as he should receive the report of the commissioners appointed to locate the capital, to survey, plat, and sell 640 acres of land out of the site chosen, and that “ said agent shall cause to be made ten plats of said city, one of which shall be deposited-with the President, one with the Commissioner of the General Land Office, one with the Texas Consul at New Orleans, one with the Texas Consul at Mobile, and the remainder of which shall be retained by the agent of said city.”

The act further provided, “ that the said agent, before the sale of said' lots, shall set apart a sufficient number of the most eligible for a capítol, arsenal, magazine, university, academy, churches, common schools, hospital, penitentiary, and for all other necessary public buildings and purposes.”

We are of the opinion that the copy of the plat found in the General' Land Office, on which are written the words “ court house ” and “ jail,” and no other designation or number, on the block in controversy, considered in connection with the said statute and the other facts in evidence, is sufficient to show a dedication of the use of the block to the county of Travis for the purpose of constructing and keeping on it the buildings-designated so long as the county might elect to occupy it for such purposes. The fee never passed out of the State.

It is contended by the appellee, that by the dedication public rights-were acquired in the use of the land, which could not be impaired nor-destroyed by the action of the county nor the authority of the State, and that it is only “ when the use becomes impossible of execution that property dedicated to public uses, without any provision for forfeiture, reverts or the right to such use becomes extinct.” 14 Pa. St., 186; Barclay v. Howell, 6 Pet., 498; 1 Ohio St., 478; New Orleans v. United States, 10 Pet., 662.

We think that the doctrine contended for is correct when applied to-some dedications, but not to all, nor to the one now under consideration-

*441

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.W. 1029, 85 Tex. 435, 1893 Tex. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-texas-v-travis-county-tex-1893.