Board of Land Commissioners v. Riley

3 Tex. 237 | Tex. | 1848

Mr. Chief Justice Hemphill

delivered the opinion of the court.

This application for a league and labor of land is based upon an order of survey, issued by a regularly authorized, commissioner, previous to the closing of the land offices by the consultation, and upon the field notes of survey made in conformity with said order.

On the rejection of the claim by the board, an appeal was taken to the district court, and judgment rendered for appellant.

This judgment was brought to the supreme court of the republic for revision, when the same was reversed and remanded; and, on anew trial, judgment was again rendered against the board of land commissioners, and the case now under consideration is an appeal from this last judgment in favor of the appellee.

The order of survey and field notes attached were then introduced, as was also an agreement between the appellee and district attorney in relation to facts admitted, and points which were to be presented, and this was all the evidence offered to substantiate the claim. This agreement had been offered at the former trial in the district court, and is fully set forth in the opinion delivered on the former appeal, and is to be found in Dallam, p. 381. The facts and questions presented by the record are identical with those presented, reviewed and adjudged on the former appeal. We then decided, in substance, and the decision has been frequently affirmed, that applicants for headright certificates must comply with all the requisites pointed out by the land law of 1837, in order to sustain their *240claims. The conditions on which claims are to be approved are limitations upon the authority of the tribunal acting under the law, and without a compliance with the requisites of the statute the legal power to grant a certificate 'of the claim is not vested in the court. [ Vide Walling vs. The Board of Land Commissioners; The State vs. Casinova.]

At the decision of the former appeal, it was supposed that the appellee might, possibly, be able to establish his claim in conformity with the requisitions of the land law of 1837, and this induced the award of a new trial, instead of a reversal and dismissal of the cause.

Ifi seems, however, that no attempt was made to sustain the claim in the mode, and with the proof, required by the statute.

The evidence offered at the former trial was again introduced, notwithstanding that its irrelevancy and insufficiency to support the issue had been previously adjudicated.

Not one of the facts required to be proven by the statute was established at the trial, if the fact of the appellee’s being the attorney or assignee of the original grantees be excepted, and that was proven only by the admission of the district attorney.

The court below should have excluded the agreement, and, in fact, all the evidence offered, as not conducing to prove the facts required by law to be established.

No question in relation to the legal effect, relevancy or sufficiency of the facts admitted by the agreement was before the district court at the new trial. These had been adjudicated on the appeal, and it had been decided, in effect, that the facts, supposing them to be proven, were immaterial, and could not, in any degree, support the issue,before the court.

The cause had been remanded to give the claimant an opportunity of establishing his claim in the mode pointed out by law, and no evidence was admissible except in proof of such facts as were necessary and indispensable under the statute regulating the subject matter.

The verdict and judgment being unsupported by evidence, it is ordered that the judgment be reversed and cause dismissed.