Texas Mexican Railway Co. v. Jarvis

7 S.W. 210, 69 Tex. 527, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 891
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 27, 1888
DocketNo. 2450
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 7 S.W. 210 (Texas Mexican Railway Co. v. Jarvis) 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
Texas Mexican Railway Co. v. Jarvis, 7 S.W. 210, 69 Tex. 527, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 891 (Tex. 1888).

Opinion

Stayton, Associate Justice.

This action was brought by the appellant to obtain a writ of mandamus to compel Jarvis, who was the surveyor of Webb land district, to receive applications to locate lands, claimed to be unappropriated public domain, by virtue of land certificates of which the appellant was owner, and to compel him to make and return surveys. The persons claiming to be the owners of the lands which the appellant thus sought to appropriate, were joined as defendants with the surveyor.

The defendants denied that the lands which the appellant sought to appropriate were of the unappropriated public domain, and alleged that they were granted by the government of Spain, in the year 1767, to Lauriano Salinas, Jose Antonio Dias and Jose Bartolo Chapa, through whom they severally claim the land. To the answer setting up this defense, a demurrer was filed, and, on hearing, it was overruled. There was no error in this ruling, for if, as alleged, valid grants of the land were made by the Spanish government while it had the ownership and dominion of the land, it was not subject to appropriation under the land certificates owned by the appellant.

Jarvis ceased to be the surveyor pending the action, and his successor was made a party defendant, and it may be conceded that all the necessary parties were before the court to warrant a final adjudication of the questions involved. The cause was tried without a jury, and resulted in a judgment for the defendants. The assignments of error, relate to the admission of evidence and the conclusions of fact and law found by the court, and they will be considered in so far as deemed necessary for the decision of the material questions involved in the case.

On April 24, 1871, an act 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 that purpose,” was passed. (Paschal’s [531]*531Digest, p. 1191.) The preamble and first section of that act are as follows:

“Whereas, many of the lands on the east side of the Rio ■Grande were originally granted by the supreme government of New Spain by good and valid grants; and whereas, many of said lands have been abandoned, and have escheated to the State of Texas, and become a part of the public domain of the State; and whereas, there is not in the general land office, or elsewhere in the State of Texas, any evidence of the extent of said grants, and the same is only to be found in the archives of the towns mentioned in the caption of this act; therefore,

“ 1. The governor is hereby authorized to appoint a suitable person, understanding the Spanish language, whose duty it shall be to proceed to the towns of Reynosa, Camargo, Slier and Guerrero, in Mexico, and to Laredo in Texas, and obtain from the authorities of said towns access to the archives of the same, and make a correct and accurate transcript and translation of all the acts, charters, or grants affecting the lands on ■the east side of the Rio Grande, and who shall obtain from the said authorities a certificate as to the correctness of said transcripts, which, together with the translation, shall be filed in the general land office.” (Paschal’s Digest, 5826.)

In pursuance of this act, J. L. Haynes was appointed to perform the duties prescribed by it. This he did, and, in December, 1871, he filed in the general land office a paper certified tobe “a correct and verbatim copy of the original ‘general visita,’ with all the corrections and amendments as existing in said ‘visita,’ which is now on file in the archives of this municipality,” which was certified by the mayor of Laredo under the seal of the corporation. The agent of the State also filed a translation of that paper, as required by the act. The paper so filed purports to be a record of the proceedings of a sub-delegation or commission in founding the town of Laredo, which was composed of Juan Fernando Palacio, lieutenant captain general of the province of Nuevo Santander, and Jose d Osorio y Lla/ mas, secretary of the royal councils, both commissioned by the Marquis of Croix, then viceroy, governor and captain general of New Spain, which begun its labors at Laredo on June 9, 1767, and continued there until some time after the twenty-fifth of that month, and each days proceedings purport to have been signed by the commissioner?, t-v* persons called upon by them, [532]*532and by the inhabitants to assist them, so far as those persons were able to write, and-by assisting witnesses, as was required by the laws then in force.

After reciting, in effect, that in pursuance of royal orders and recommendations made in the year 1763, they came to establish the town, and to apportion to it lands to be held in common,, and to its inhabitants lands to be held in private right, it evidences that the lands to be embraced in the town were surveyed,, the town laid off with lots for public use and for private appro-. priation by the inhabitants, the exidos fixed, and provision made for the organization of the municipal government.

It further shows that outside of the land surveyed for the town- and its exidos, lands termed porciones were surveyed so that-they might be identified, and these were numbered, and one porción set apart to each of the inhabitants who desired to and was-entitled to have such lands.

The following appears as to porciones numbers thirty-four,, thirty six and thirty-seven.

“34. Another survey was completed with twelve hundred varas on both fronts and thirty thousand in length. It was-marked on the line of the commons and was left to Jose Antonio Diaz, who claimed it.” * * *

“36. Another survey on the river bank with twenty cords, which marks one thousand Mexican varas, which with thirty thousand in length and one thousand on the opposite front, constitute it. It was left to Lauriano Salinas at his request.

“37. Another composed of one thousand Mexican varas, thirty thousand in length and one thousand on the opposite front. It was claimed by Jose Bartolo Chapa and it was left to him.” * * * *

The locality of these, from other parts of the survey preceding, may be fixed.

This instrument shows that thirty-five porciones on this side of the river were set apart each to a particular person, but these were not in consecutive numbers, some of the porciones being left unappropriated but subject to future appropriation by incoming inhabitants, in accordance with instructions therein given, and, in reference to the thirty-fiveporciones set apart to named persons the instrument declares that “this makes thirty-five persons whose porciones they surveyed, marked and adjudicated. as they have determined and stated in writing in every individual case.”

[533]*533Twenty-seven porciones on the other side of the river were •surveyed and set apart to named persons, and, after all these things were done, the instrument has the following declarations: “We declare the adjudication of the sixty-four porciones respectively to the residing settlers of this town and its jurisdiction on this side and the other side of the river, in conformity to and in accordance with our decree of the thirteenth day, and as is stated by the surveyors to have been given to the parties interested at the time of the survey. Sixty-four porciones

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Bluebook (online)
7 S.W. 210, 69 Tex. 527, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-mexican-railway-co-v-jarvis-tex-1888.