Tucker v. Smith

3 S.W. 671, 68 Tex. 473, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 721
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1887
DocketNo. 2100
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 3 S.W. 671 (Tucker v. Smith) 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
Tucker v. Smith, 3 S.W. 671, 68 Tex. 473, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 721 (Tex. 1887).

Opinion

Willie, Chief Justice.

This is an action of trespass to try title, and was brought to recover some three hundred acres of land lying in what was formerly a bend of the Rio Grande river. A large tract of land known as La Eeria grant, consisting of twelve leagues, was in 1843 partitioned amongst its various owners. This grant fronted on the Rio Grande, which is at this point very irregular in its course; and the surveyor who ran the lines for the partition did not meander the river, but ran a base line so as to clear its various bends; and at right angles to this ran the division lines between the different part owners of the grant. The general course of the river here is from west to east, and this was about the direction of the base line. The partition lines were extended to the north boundary of the grant, and their distances from each other on the base line were made such as would have given to each owner his proper proportion of land had the base line been the true southern boundary of the survey. These partition lines were, however, intended to extend to the river, and to embrace such lands as would be included between them south of the base line and between it and the Rio Grande had they been actually extended to the river. Two tracts adjoining each other, which were set apart to part owners of the grants, became the property of one Neale and one Galbert respectively, the former owning the eastern tract [478]*478•and the latter the western. The point on the river at which the division line between these two tracts should end was the disputed question in this case.

It was shown that in 1843 the Rio Grande changed its general course at a place a little west of south from the point where the division line of these tracts intersected the base line made by the surveyor, and ran in a somewhat northerly direction, and then, after making a curve, it ran in a direction south southwest till it reached a point about eighteen hundred varas from where it left, as above stated, its general course, and then turning and makipg a sharp curve, it pursued its usual easterly direction.

The effect of all this was to include a long, narrow strip of land in the bend made by the river taking a northerly and then a southerly direction, as above stated, called in Spanish a zurrón or bolsa, and to form between the lower part of the last line of 'the bend and the river after it resumed its original course, a somewhat triangular shaped piece of land, called in Spanish a ¿potrero. This is the land in controversy. The point where the division line between Neale and Galbert struck the said base line was nearly in a north direction from the curve of the river at the upper part of the zurrón, and it is contended by the appellant who has succeeded to the Neale land, that an extension of their partition line to the Rio Grande would strike that stream at the upper part of the zurrón. He claims that there the division line must stop; and, if this be so, it is clear that the potrero will fall within the Neale boundaries.

The appellee, who owns the Galbert tract, says on the other hand, that the division line must be so extended as to strike the . Rio Grande at a point east of the place where it made the sharp curve and resumed its generally eastern course. If this be so, the potrero will be left to the west of the division line, and will fall within the bounds of the Galbert tract. In 1859, the Rio Grande ceased to flow around the bend which formed the zurrón and ran directly across the other side of it and left it on the north bank of the river.

The defenses of the appellant were not guilty, and the statute of limitations. The cause was submitted to the jury, and they, under the charge of the court, found a verdict for the plaintiff, and judgment was entered accordingly. From this judgment Tucker has appealed; and his assignment's of error are directed to the admission and rejection of testimony, the giving and [479]*479refusal of charges by the court, and the want of evidence to support the verdict.

We shall not notice the first and second assignments of error, as they relate to the introduction of testimony, and the points are not saved by proper bills of exception. (District court rule 55.)

The plaintiff filed, as part of his abstract of title, the judicial survey and partition of the La Feria grant, made in 1843, having attached to it a plat of the same, made for Q-albert in 1847. These two documents had been recorded together in 1848. „ Upon motion of the plaintiff, made at the threshold of the trial, he was allowed by the court to disconnect these two documents, and to put the partition in evidence, without introducing along with it the plat of 1847. To this the defendant objected and reserved a proper bill of exceptions to the action of the court. This bill, however, shows that, whilst the court allowed the papers to be separated, it did not permit either to be taken from the file, and that the privilege was given the defendant of placing the same in evidence before the jury. The map does not appear in the statement of facts, but that shows either that the defendant did not avail himself of the privilege given him by the court, or, if he did, that he did not think the map of sufficient importance to bring it before this court. The defendant, therefore, was not injured by the action of the court.

On the trial, the plaintiff asked a witness the following question: “In running the line of the Llano Grande land, would you not have had to run much further into Mexican territory than you did in running this one between Smith and Tucker’s land?” ' Objection to the question for immateriality was overruled. To understand the object of the question, it is necessary, to state that the La Feria tract was bounded on the north by a tract known as the Llano Grande. Their division line as recognized, ended upon the river at the point which could not have been reached except by crossing the Rio Grande at the head of another zurrón or bolsa into Mexican territory and recrossing again to its left bank and continuing the line to its termination on the river. From the conformation of the zurrón intersected by the line between Ueale and G albert it seems that that line would also cross into Mexican territory if the river ran as it did before the zurrón was cut off by a change in its course. The Llano Grande line was the admitted west boundary of the La Feria grant, and of Galbert’s portion of it. The [480]*480eastern line of G-albert, a part of which is in dispute, was intended to run parallel with the western boundary. The fact then that this western boundary as recognized, apparently crossed the Rio Grande at the head of a zurrón into Mexican territory and then crossed it again to the American side, and was recognized throughout its whole distance as the true western boundary of the La Feria grant was a circumstance of some weight to show that the eastern line did not necessarily stop at the point when it first touched the river* but might be extended to the terminus claimed by the appellee, though in so doing it apparently crossed into Mexican territory. The fact is more 1 otent when we consider that both lines were made by the same surveyor about the same time, who likely pursued the same course in regard to lines, so similar to each other in their manner of intersecting the river and apparently crossing it, each at the head of a zurrón and running into Mexican territory. We think the question was proper, more especially as the surveyor was dead, and the survey was made so long ago, as to almost preclude the possibility of proving anything about it by living witnesses.

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Bluebook (online)
3 S.W. 671, 68 Tex. 473, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tucker-v-smith-tex-1887.