Yocham v. McCurdy & Daniels

67 S.W. 316, 95 Tex. 336, 1902 Tex. LEXIS 167
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1902
DocketNo. 1083.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 67 S.W. 316 (Yocham v. McCurdy & Daniels) 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
Yocham v. McCurdy & Daniels, 67 S.W. 316, 95 Tex. 336, 1902 Tex. LEXIS 167 (Tex. 1902).

Opinion

GAINES, Chief Justice.

This case comes to us upon certain questions certified for our determination by the Court of Civil Appeals for the Second- Supreme Judicial District. The statement and questions are as follows:

“On May 1, 1894, appellant made actual settlement upon the 116 acres of land involved in this suit, in all particulars complying with the law conferring upon the head of a family the right to acquire a homestead upon unappropriated public lands. He was evicted therefrom by *340 appellees claiming to own the land as a part of the 0. O’Connor survey, of which appellees were the owners, and appellant thereupon instituted this suit.
“In the trial court the judgment was for appellees, McCurdy & Daniels, which judgment on appeal before us was reversed at a former day of this term because of an error, as we held, in a charge of the-court hereinafter set out, as will more fully appear from the original opinion by us filed October 19, 1901.
“The controversy arose and was determined upon the following further state of facts: As claimed by appellant, the land in controversy constitutes part of the unappropriated public domain of Texas, situ"ated between the O’Connor 320-acre survey on the west and the Henry Billings survey on the east. Appellee Daniels was an actual settler upon adjacent land, which, together with the O’Connor survey and the land in controversy, had been continuously inclosed by him as a pasture prior to and ever since appellant’s settlement as stated. Appellees prayed that if it should be found that the land in controversy was public land and not included within the boundaries of the O’Connor survey,' as claimed by them, that appellee Daniels be decreed to have six months-from the rendition of the judgment within which to purchase the same, and that his right to do so within such time be declared prior to the right of appellant to acquire a homestead donation thereon.
“As called for in the field notes, the O’Connor was a rectangular survey of 320 acres, its north and south lines being 950 varas long and its east and west lines 1900 varas in length. The beginning comer was its southw.est corner, which alone seems to have been identified as originally established. From the beginning corner, the calls were as follows: ‘Thence FT. 60 E. 895 vrs. to a branch 950 vrs. to the S. E. corner in prairie; thence N. 30 W. 260 varas to a branch 1900 vrs. to the N. E. comer a mound; thence S. 60 W. 635 vrs. to a creek running south 950 vrs. to the H. W. corner in prairie; thence S. 30 E. crossing a creek running south 1900 varas to the place of beginning surveyed Sept. 28, 1846.’
“The south and east lines can not be identified by any marks of the original surveyor, the principal contention being whether, as insisted upon by appellant, there was a branch 895 varas from the beginning corner as called for in the field notes, or whether, as contended for by appellees, the branch called for on the south line was to be reached only by an extension oi said line to a point 1295 varas from the beginning corner. We think it evident from the record that the conclusion reached on the trial was that the land in controversy is included within the boundaries of the O’Connor survey; and we also think it likewise evident that the jury, in fixing the south and east lines of the O’Connor survey so as to include the land in question, was controlled largely by the call for the branch on the south line. The evidence as to the identity of this branch was sharply couflicting, if in fact not strongly preponderating in favor of appellant’s contention. If the contention of *341 appellees and the verdict of the jury as to the true boundaries of the O’Connor survey be sustained, it results in a large excess.
“In this condition of the evidence, the trial court, among other things, instructed the jury before whom the case was tried: “That the fact that the lines and corners of the O’Connor survey as originally run and marked upon the ground include a greater or less quantity of land than is included in the field notes of the patent, becomes wholly immaterial further than as a circumstance to be considered by you for what you may deem the same worth to aid you, if it does so, in connection with .all the evidence in the case, in following the footsteps of the original surveyor and in fixing the eastern boundary of said survey as originally located.’
“To which charge error was duly assigned in behalf of appellant Yocham, and which, as before stated, on the original hearing, we concluded, on authority of Scott v. Pettigrew, 72 Texas, 321, was erroneous and prejudicial; and the material question is thus presented, whether we were in error in so concluding,—that is to say, was the ■charge quoted and so given erroneous as a matter of law and was it prejudicial under the facts stated, and this question we certify to your .honors for determination.
“Appellees also urgently insist that we certify a further question of law arising upon the court’s charge and the evidence in the cause, and which question we have concluded to certify to your honors, should you ■deem it proper to consider it, the cause having already been reversed by us and motion for rehearing overruled.
“Appellant Yocham’s right was predicated upon the facts stated in the beginning of this certificate. There was also evidence to the effect that one of appellees, Y. H. Daniels, was an actual bona fide settler in Bosque County, .Texas, upon patented lands adjacent to the O’Connor ■survey, which together with the O’Connor survey, with boundaries as ■claimed by appellees in this suit, was inclosed by said Daniels. Upon the evidence and appellees’ asserted right to purchase the land in controversy in the event it was found to be vacant and not part of the O’Connor survey, as asserted in the pleadings of appellees, the court _gave the following instructions:
• “ ‘9. Although you may believe that the land in controversy is vacant land and not part of the O’Connor survey, still, if the defendant Y. H. Daniels is and has been an actual settler upon said tract of land or upon land adjacent thereto in good faith, and that said land has been and is •actually inclosed by the fence of defendant, and that defendant has been .and is claiming same as part of the O’Connor survey, and that he has not believed same to be vacant land, then, in such case, he would have the right to purchase same from the State within six months from the ■date said land is ascertained to be vacant.
“TO. If, therefore, you have found said land to be vacant, and if jou further find, from the evidence that said land has been and is situated within the inclosed lands of the defendant Daniels, and that said *342 Daniels is an actual bona fide settler in Bosque County, Texas, upon the lands adjacent to the said O’Connor survey, and that he has heretofore claimed and now claims same as part of the O’Connor survey, and that he has not heretofore believed nor recognized the same to be-vacant land, then you will find that defendant Daniels has the right to-purchase said land within six months from this date from the State.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 S.W. 316, 95 Tex. 336, 1902 Tex. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yocham-v-mccurdy-daniels-tex-1902.