Wilcox v. Chambers

26 Tex. 180
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 26 Tex. 180 (Wilcox v. Chambers) 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
Wilcox v. Chambers, 26 Tex. 180 (Tex. 1862).

Opinion

Bell, J.

On the 2-lst day of December, Anno Domini eighteen hundred and twenty-nine, one Vicente Padilla, representing himself to be an actual resident of the town of San Felipe de Austin, made application to the government of Ooahuila and Texas for the sale to him of eleven leagues of land, of the vacant domain of the State, in accordance with the provisions of the twenty-fourth article of the colonization law of the 24th of March, A. D. 1825. On the 5th day of February, Anno Domini eighteen hundred and thirty, the supreme government of the State granted the favor solicited by the said Vicente Padilla, and ordered the Commissioner-General, appointed by the State, to put the applicant in possession of the land, and extend to him the corresponding title. On the 8d day of March, A. D. eighteen hundred and thirty, Vicente Padilla made application to Juan Antonio Padilla, the Commissioner-General for the State, to have the lands which the Government had agreed to sell to him, surveyed, .and to have the corresponding titles extended. On the 28th day [182]*182of March, A. D. eighteen hundred and thirty, the Commissioner, Juan Antonio Padilla, extended title to the said Vicente Padilla, to five of the eleven leagues, according to the survey made by Bartlet Sims, on the eastern margin of Galveston Bay, and between Turtle Bayou and Double Bayou. Upon the testimonio thus issued by the Commissioner-General, and beneath the signatures of the Commissioner and of the assisting witnesses, is endorsed the approbation of Vidaurri, the Governor of the State, under date of June 17th, A. D. 1834; and following the Governor’s signature is the signature of J. Antonio Padilla, who was at that time Secretary of State. There also appears in the same connection the impress of the great seal of the State. Attached to this testimonio is the certificate of Charles S. Taylor, Chief Justice of Nacogdoches county, made in the month of March, A. D. 1838, as follows: Personally appeared before me, &c., Juan Antonio Padilla, who being duly sworn sayeth, that he is acquainted with the signatures to the annexed title for five leagues of land situated between the mouths of Turtle Bayou and Double Bayou, on Galveston Bay; that he knows them all to be genuine that said title was made by himself as Commissioner-General of Colonization, as therein set forth, and previous to the circulation and his reception of the order of the government prohibiting the location of concessions of land within the limits of the colonies, without the consent of the respective empresario, commonly known as the additional article to the instructions of commissioners ; • that the ratification of the Governor, Vidaurri, placed at the conclusion of said title, was made and signed by said Vidaurri, as therein expressed, as Governor of the State; that the seal upon said ratification was the one used by the Executive of the State, and that it was placed upon said title by his order.”

The five leagues of land thus conveyed to Vicente Padilla, were by him conveyed to' Thomas J. Chambers, on the 23a day of June, eighteen hundred and thirty.

This suit was instituted by the appellee, Thomas J. Chambers, claiming the land as his own by virtue of the grant to Padilla, and the sale by Padilla to himself; and alleging that the appellant, Wilcox, is a trespasser upon the land..

[183]*183A question is made whether of not the land is contained within the twenty border leagues; but it is admitted by the appellee, and clearly shown by the proof, to be within the ten littoral leagues.

This case was decided at the fall term, A. D. 1849, of the District Court, before the 3d volume of the Texas Reports, containing the cases of Goode v. McQueen’s heirs, Edwards v. Davis, and the Republic v. Thorn, w'as published. Since the trial of the cause in the District Court, the main questions involved in it have been much considered by the bar and by this court, and we are now called upon, not so much to investigate, as to say whether or not the former decisions of this court shall be followed. The learned appellbe, in the very able argument which he has presented in this case, has not sought to distinguish it from other cases which have been decided by the court, so much as he has labored to show that the former decisions proceeded upon a narrow and erroneous view of the Mexican laws and customs relating to such titles as the one now under consideration. And while I do not feel at liberty, in view of all the considerations involved, to decline to follow a long train of decisions, which have established a rule of property in the State, I feel that it is due to candor, and not improper, to declare that if the question were an original one, I should feel bound as a judge to say that a title such as the appellee presents in this ease ought to be held to be valid; that the consent of the Federal Executive of Mexico to the grant to a native Mexican of land within the border or littoral leagues was never necessary, but that such consent was only necessary to a grant to a foreigner, or to a contract to colonize, whether the contractor was a foreigner or a Mexican; and that, even if it could be shown to be true that the consent of the Federal Executive was necessary to the location within the border or littoral leagues of a grant, in sale, or otherwise, to a native Mexican, such consent, in a case like the present, is sufficiently shown, and ought to be conclusively presumed from the legislation of the General Government and of the Government of the State of Coahuila and Texas, from the correspondence of public functionaries of both Governments, from a policy clearly indicated by such legislation and correspondence, and (in this case) from the character of the officer [184]*184who extended the title, and the subsequent ratification of the title by the Governor of the State.

But these questions have been several times decided, and have been declared to be no longer open for discussion. I shall content myself, therefore, by stating the manner in which the questions in this case were presented, and wherein the rulings of the judge who tried the case below are at variance with the law, as settled by the former decisions of this court.

The objection taken upon the trial below to the admissibility in evidence of the testimonio to Vicente Padilla does not seem to be relied upon in this court, and we are of opinion that it was properly admitted in evidence.

We do not deem it necessary to consider the objection taken to the admission in evidence of the act of sale1 from Vicente Padilla to Chambers. The deposition of Taylor seems to have been taken to prove the execution of that instrument; and it is contended by the appellee that Taylor’s deposition was read to prove its execution, while the counsel for the appellant says that Taylor’s deposition w,as not read. As the case will be reversed upon other grounds, we deem it unnecessary to consider this point further.

Heither do we esteem the ruling of the court below upon the question of the admissibility of the deposition of Bartlet Sims material to be considered in the view we take of the case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Tex. 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilcox-v-chambers-tex-1862.