Walker v. Kenedy

127 S.W.2d 163, 133 Tex. 193, 1939 Tex. LEXIS 293
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1939
DocketNo. 7508.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 127 S.W.2d 163 (Walker v. Kenedy) 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
Walker v. Kenedy, 127 S.W.2d 163, 133 Tex. 193, 1939 Tex. LEXIS 293 (Tex. 1939).

Opinion

Mr. Judge Smedley

of the Commission of Appeals, delivered the opinion for the Court.

Defendants in error are the owners of a number of large grants of land in Kenedy County titled under Mexican sovereignty prior to the year 1836 and thereafter confirmed by acts of the Legislature of the State of Texas or by judgments rendered in suits to which the State was á party, and also the owners of a grant of about twenty-five leagues of land known as Barreta, titled in 1804 by the government of Spain and confirmed by judgment in a cause entitled State of Texas v. Spohn, 83 S. W. 1135. These several surveys or grants of land lie west of Laguna Madre and south of Baffins Bay, Laguna Salado and Olmos Creek. They have been owned and possessed for many years by defendants in error as a ranch for stock raising, enclosed by fences to their west and south and by the natural barriers above named to their north and east.

Plaintiif in error Walker in March 1937 filed with O’Dell Douglass, a land surveyor licensed under Articles 5268-5281 of the Revised Civil Statutes of 1925, eight separate applications for surveys of areas “believed to be unsurveyed land belonging to the public free school fund,” with a view to obtaining mineral leases under Section 8 of Chapter 271, Acts Regular Session of the 42nd Legislature approved May 29, 1931, (Article 5421c, Vernon’s Annotated Texas Civil Statutes) . The several areas to be surveyed were described in the applications as lying between certain of the grants owned by defendants in error or as lying between one or more of the grants and the waters to their north and east. When Douglass, the surveyor, undertook to enter the ranch of defendants in error in order to make surveys pursuant to the applications, defendants in error refused to permit him to enter their enclosure for that purpose, advising him that if he did so he would be treated as a trespasser and ejected.

*196 Thereupon plaintiff in error filed this suit to enjoin defendants in error from interfering with or hindering the surveyor in making surveys of the various grants and of the areas covered by the applications. Defendants in error by cross action sought injunction against plaintiff in error, his agents and representatives, to restrain them from making or attempting to make the surveys and from interfering with their peaceable use and possession of the lands. After trial without a jury the district court rendered judgment denying to plaintiff in error the injunction for which he prayed and granting permanent injunction to defendants in error against plaintiff in error in accordance with their prayer. There were incorporated in the trial court’s judgment elaborate findings that none of the areas described in the applications made by plaintiff in error is unsurveyed, unappropriated land, and that each of such areas is within the bounds of one or more of the grants of land owned by defendants in error.

The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed that part of the trial court’s judgment which denied injunction to plaintiff in error but set aside and struck from the judgment that part of the same that awarded injunction to defendants in error. 120 S. W. (2d) 494. Writ of error was granted on the application of plaintiff in error Walker.

The opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals contains the statement, not controverted here by plaintiff in error, that originally there were several alleged vacancies involved in this suit but that the controversy has been narrowed to what is referred to as tract No. 8, alleged to lie between a survey known as “Little Barreta” and another survey known as “Big Barreta.” Thereupon the opinion proceeds to discuss the grounds of plaintiff in error’s contention that there is a vacancy between the two Barreta surveys and announces the conclusion that there is no such vacancy, basing its conclusion upon the judgment rendered in State v. Spohn (83 S. W. 1135) and the patent issued pursuant to that judgment. The Court of Civil Appeals also overruled the contention of plaintiff in error that he was entitled to have the survey made without being required to prove that the area applied for was in fact unsurveyed, unappropriated land, holding that there is no procedure prescribed by statute for the enforcement of such asserted right and that plaintiff in error had failed to show himself entitled to the relief sought under the general rules of equity.

*197 It is our opinion that one who has made a proper application to a county surveyor or to a licensed state land surveyor for the survey of an area believed to be unsurveyed public school land, either under Section 6 of the Act of 1931 for the purpose of purchasing the land or under Section 8 for the purpose of leasing the land for minerals, has the right to have the land surveyed in order that he may proceed to take the other steps prescribed by the act as necessary to accomplish the purchasing or the leasing of the land; that injunction may issue to prevent interference with the surveyor when he is proceeding in a lawful manner and under a proper application to make the survey; and that the applicant should not be required, in a suit to enforce by injunction the right to have the survey made, to prove that the area applied for is in fact unsurveyed public school land.

The foregoing conclusions follow from the construction placed upon the Act of 1931 in Cause No. 7503, Short v. W. T. Carter & Brother, 133 Texas 202, 126 S. W. 953, this day decided, and from the application of the principles announced in the opinion in that case to the question here under consideration. As there held, unsurveyed public . school land is subject to lease under Section 8 of the Act of 1931 even if the area sought to be leased is adversely possessed and claimed by another to lie within a survey owned by him, and even though the area is not visibly shown or designated as unsurveyed land on the official Land Office map of the county. It is further held in that case that Section 8 of the Act of 1931 confers upon the Commissioner of the General Land Office lawful authority to determine, as a basis for his action in executing or declining to execute a mineral lease to an applicant, the question whether the area applied for and described in the field notes is unsurveyed land as defined in the act, and that the courts cannot, when the question is still properly before the Commissioner, take jurisdiction and proceed to decide the question.

Section 8 of the Act of 1931 contemplates and intends that the leasing of unsurveyed public school land for minerals shall be accomplished in the method prescribed by said section, which includes the determination by the Commissioner, after the survey has been made and the field notes filed in the General Land Office, of the question whether the area applied for and described in the field notes is unsurveyed public school land as defined in Section 3 of the Act. That determination cannot thus be made unless the survey is first completed and *198 the field notes prepared and filed. Refusal on the part of a claimant of the land to permit the surveyor to make the survey defeats the right given by the Act to the applicant to have the survey made and effectually prevents the Commissioner from leasing the land in the manner that the Act intends.

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Bluebook (online)
127 S.W.2d 163, 133 Tex. 193, 1939 Tex. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-kenedy-tex-1939.