Sullivan v. Solis

114 S.W. 456, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 464, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 394
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 2, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 114 S.W. 456 (Sullivan v. Solis) 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
Sullivan v. Solis, 114 S.W. 456, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 464, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 394 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

FLY, Associate Justice.

— This is an action of trespass to try title instituted by Adolfo Solis, J. B. Monroe and F. W. Seabury, herein styled appellees, against D. Sullivan, appellant, the land involved being 1280 acres out of porcion Ho. 107, originally granted to Juan Jose Solis by the Spanish Government in 1767. A trial before the court resulted in a judgment in favor of appellees.

The trial judge filed the following conclusions of fact, which are sustained by the statement of facts, and are adopted by this court as its conclusions of facts:

“The tract of land in Starr County, Texas, known as and being porcion Ho. 107, of the ancient jurisdiction of Camargo, Mexico, was originally granted by the Spanish Government in the year 1767 to Juan Jose Solis, in and by valid grant in writing known as ‘The Act of General Visit of the Boyal Commissioners to the Town of Santa Anna of Camargo in 1767/ embracing this and other lands, and that lawful possession of said tract of land was duly given to said Juan Jose Solis in the year 1768 by the captain and chief justice of said town of Camargo, thereto duly authorized, and evi *466 denced by the act of such possession attached to the said ‘Act of General Visit.’

“Said ‘Act of General Visit’ and the act of such possession were duly archived "under the Spanish Government in said year respectively, and that a copy of all of the same was filed in the General Land Office of Texas in the year 1871, by the virtue of an Act of the Legislature of Texas, approved April 24, 1871, entitled: ‘An Act to provide for the obtaining and transcribing of the several Acts or charters founding the towns of Reynosa, Camargo, Mier and Guerrero in the Republic of Mexico, and of Laredo, in Texas, and making an appropriation for the purpose,’ and that same has ever since constituted, and now constitutes, an archive of said General Land Office, under article 62 of the Revised Statutes of Texas.

“Plaintiff Adolfo Solis is a lineal descendant of said Juan Jose Solis, and that the other plaintiffs are lawful assignees of other lineal descendants of said Juan Jose Solis, and that the plaintiffs own undivided shares of interests in and to the whole of said porcion from and under the said Juan Jose Solis, and that their cotenants are not parties to this suit.

“The 1280 acres of land, more or less, sued for in this suit, are within the true and well defined boundaries of and form a part of the said porcion No. 107, as so granted, possessed and known.

“The said porcion No. 107, as such porcion No. 107, was surveyed for the heirs and legal assigns of said Juan Jose Solis in the year 1879 by the district surveyor of Starr County, and was resurveyed for them by the same officer in the year 1880; that the metes and bounds of said porcion No. 107, as described in each of said surveys, include the land in controversy herein, and that the field notes of said two surveys were duly certified, filed and-recorded in the years 1879 and 1880, respectively, in the public surveyor’s records of said Starr County, and have ever since remained on the said records.

“The said porcion No. 107 was, in accordance with said survey, duly platted in the official map of said Starr County on, file in the General Land Office, and that said map was in use, and was the authentic and official map of and archive of the General Land Office from 1880 to 1900, and that said, porcion No. 107 was in the year 1880 entered and thereafter carried on the official abstract of land titles of the General Land Office of Texas as and under the number of abstract No. 348 for Starr County, in the name of Juan Jose Solis as original grantee.

“Plaintiffs, and those whose estate they have, were in possession of said porcion No. 107 for a long time prior to the location of any certificates on said tract, by one - Yzaguirre, who held same for the Solis heirs, until it was located by certificates described herein, and that for the eleven years last past they have had the actual, continuous and exclusive possession of said porcion No. 107, claiming and holding same under said grant and under said well defined boundaries.

“In the year 1882 one George W. Lowe, whose rights in the premises have passed by mesne conveyances to and are vested in the defendant, D. Sullivan, located Confederate Scrip No. 799, issued to *467 L. Jane Benton, on the land in controversy herein; that by virtue of said location same was surveyed in 1882 as survey No. 729 of Starr- County, and that said land so located and surveyed was patented to said Lowe on November 26, 1886, by patent No. 427 of vol. 36.

"At the time of said location, survey and patenting of the land in controversy herein the said porcion No. 107, upon which said location was made and patent obtained, was land titled, and was equitably owned by plaintiffs under color of title from the sovereignty of the State, and that the evidence of the appropriation of said land was in the General Land Office and also on the county records of Starr County, and also evidenced by the occupation of the owners of said porcion, who were the plaintiffs in this suit and those whose rights plaintiffs now have.

"Said location, survey and patent were made and issued since the Constitution of 1876 went into effect.

“The defendant has never had actual possession of the land in this suit.”

The first assignment should not be considered at all, as it is not followed by such a statement as is contemplated by the rules. It is based on a bill of exceptions, which is not referred to in the statement) and the labor is entailed upon the court of discovering it in the record. (Bule 31 for Courts of Civil Appeals.) We have considered it, however, and conclude that it is without merit. The "Translation of the Act of the Visit of the Boj'al Commissioners to the town of Santa Anna of Camargo in 1767” showed a division of certain lands among the citizens of the town, porcion 107 being allotted by the commissioners to Juan Jose Solis. The document in question purports to be a "record of proceedings practiced in the town of Camargo in the year 1767, are to be found the adjudications and possessions to the citizens of this town,” made by “Bon Juan Fernando de Palacios, vowed knight of the order of St. James, Commander of the Shield in the same, Field Marshal of the Boyal Armies of his Majesty, Governor and Lieutenant of the Colony of the Mexican Gulf Sierra Gorda, their missions, garrisons and frontiers, and Bon Joseph de Ossorio y Llamas, Advocate of the Boyal Councils, commissioned to visit the same by his Lordship, the Marquis of Croiz, Viceroy Governor and Captain General of the Kingdom.” They began their labors at Camargo, on August 2, 1767, and concluded them on August 31, 1767, partitioning the land and setting apart 111 porcions to different citizens by lot, among the number being porcion No. 107.

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Bluebook (online)
114 S.W. 456, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 464, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sullivan-v-solis-texapp-1908.