27 Tex. 558 | Tex. | 1864
The exception to the deposition of Salazar, was-properly sustained by the court. It was taken by H. B. Fry, who-purported to act in the official capacity of a notary public. He had been at one time a notary public, but the parol evidence before the court, showed that he was subsequently elected and qualified as county clerk, and that for some time previous and at the taking of this deposition, he was well known and generally recognized as-having accepted that office, and was in the open, public and notorious discharge of its- official duties. The constitution declares, that “no person shall hold or exercise at the same-time, more than one civil office of emolument, except that of justice of the peace." (Art. 7, sec. 26.) On the acceptance and qualification of a person to a second office, incompatible with one he is then holding, the first office is ipso facto vacated. (The People v. Carrique, 2 Hill, 93.) A resignation by implication will take place by being appointed to and accepting a new office incompatible with the former one. It is said to be an absolute determination of the original office, and leaves no shadow of title to the possessor; so that neither quo warranto nor amotion is necessary before another maybe elected. (Rex v. Trelawney, 3 Burr., 1616; Milward v. Thatcher, 2 T. R., 87; Willcock on Municipal Corp., 240, 617; Ang. & Am on Corp., 255.)
Having ceased to he de jure a notary public for some time previous to taking this deposition, it can not be pretended that this-single act, which is all that-he is shown to have attempted to de in this capacity, will constitute him a notary public de facto. In Burke v. Elliott, (4 Ind. Law, 355,) it is said by the court, “The acts of officers de facto, are as effectual, as far as the rights of third persons or the public are concerned, as if they were officers de jure. What shall constitute an officer de facto, may admit of doubt in different cases. The mere assumption of the office by
The charge of the court, we are of the opinion, does not require a reversal of the judgment. By an agreement of the parties, read in evidence upon the trial, it was admitted that a grant was made by the officers of the king of Spain, in Mexico in the year 1781, to Jose Salvador de la Garza, of a tract of land known as El Espiritu Santo, “ that this tract included the lands now sued for, and was in the year 1802, and thereafter, vested by devise and descent in Maria Francisca Cabasos,” under whom by other evidence the plaintiff in the court below showed title. The only evidence upon which the defendants below, who are plaintiffs in error, relied to resist or rebut this apparent right to a recovery, was the parol testimony of two or three witnesses, to the effect that the city of Matamoros from the year 1830 until the arrival of the American army upon the Rio Grande in 1846, had claimed and exercised jurisdiction over the locus in quo as a part of the ejidos of said city, and that it had during said time been in the possession of one Miguel Salinas, who leased it as one of the labors (which "the city was accustomed to let within its ejidos to such parties as might desire the same,) at the annual rent of one dollar and fifty cents. Although to some extent every case must stand upon its own peculiar facts, the principles upon which the courts are to be guided in the presumption of grants, may be said to be now well established by the former decisions of this court. (See Taylor v. Watkins, 26 Tex., 688; and Yancy v. Norris, ante, page 40.) The distinction, however, between the presumption of a grant from the government of a part of the public domain, and of the intermediate links in a chain of conveyance has not been overlooked by the
Under the liberal practice which has been recognized in our judicial system, it can not be said that a discontinuance or abandonment of his suit by one of the plaintiffs, in actions of this kind, will abate the entire suit, or preclude a recovery by the other plaintiff. Nor will the fact that there is only a verdict and judg
The petition alleges the use and occupation of the premises in dispute, to he of the yearly value of one thousand dollars, and also charges damages by reason of the wrongful and forcible possession taken thereof by the defendants. The prayer for judgment in the petition embraces both of these grounds. Mesne profits are recoverable in actions of this kind, which are brought as well to try title as to recover damages, as a part of the plaintiff’s damages. That they are not so called in direct terms in the petition, is no reason why they should not be thus denominated in the verdict, and it should not on this account be set aside, when the testimony, as in this case, shows the amount of the money verdict is not larger than the plaintiff was entitled to recover.
There are no other questions in the record which need be considered. The judgment is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.