57 Tex. 621 | Tex. | 1882
The only question involved in this cause is whether the land sued for, and patented to B. C. Wallace and E. J. Lowery, is covered by the older grant made to T. J. Chambers; for if so, the defendants claiming under that grant must prevail.
The time when the grant to T. J. Chambers was made does not appear in the record, but it is evident therefrom that it was made prior to the grants to S. Rice, John Hobson and John Morrow’, which were made, or at least located and surveyed, as early as 1848.
The field notes of the three grants last above named each give the northern boundary of the grant to Chambers as its southern boundary, and if this be true, there was no vacant land between the grant to Chambers and the grant to Rice which, could be granted to Wallace and Low’ery or their assigns. The patents to them were issued upon surveys made some time since 1871, the exact date not appearing in the record.
The plaintiffs in error base their position that the grant to Chambers was not contiguous to the grants to Hobson, Morrow and Rice, upon the fact that, upon actual measurement, from the south line of the Chambers grant, as recognized by persons owning parts of that grant and by persons owning parts of the grant below, it is found that the distance from that line to the south line of the grant to
The rules for the ascertainment of boundaries have been so often announced by this court that it is not deemed necessary here to repeat them. It is true that, if there were no natural or artificial objects called for in the Chambers grant by which its boundaries could be established, then the same would be established by course and distance; but if a survey was made (and we are to presume that it was), and natural or artificial objects were called for for its identification, the first inquiry in determining the boundaries of the grant is, where did such objects stand? If they are found and identified, although short of or beyond the place at which course and distance would place the boundary, they must control.
It appears that the northeast corner of the Chambers grant was established by bearing trees which were described in the face of the grant, and which cannot now be found, for the reason that they have been destroyed, and the place where they probably stood covered by a thriving city. The surveyor who, about the time of the trial, or some time before the Wallace and Lowery surveys were made, made search for the upper line of the Chambers grant, testified that, he found none of the bearing trees called for in the grant, and that he “ had never seen any marked line for the upper line, next the river; it was right in the city of Waco; and out of the city it was in' the prairie;” but he says that the south line of the Morrow grant had marked trees on it, and that he could not tell whether they were surveyor’s marks or not.
Course and distance, in the absence of some more certain means . of establishing boundary, are resorted to for the purpose of establishing where the line was originally run and established, and is evidence of that fact which ought to prevail in the absence of other evidence, in a case tending with reasonable certainty to establish a different result.
In this case the southeast corner of the Morrow grant is called for as the northeast corner of the Chambers grant. The locality of this corner of the Morrow grant seems not to be controverted; the line running away from the river from that point runs in the same
When we take into consideration the fact that all these surveys Weré made many years ago, and that the surveyors who made them in all probability saw the country when the natural objects called for iii the Chambers grant still existed, we are not authorized to believe that they made statements under their official oaths which they did not know to be true, upon proof of the simple- fact that to make the upper line of the Chambers grant where it was so declared to be, the grant would be to a trifling extent wider than stated to be in the field notes.
It rested with the plaintiffs in this cause to show that the call for the northern line of the Chambers grant as the southern boundary of the Eice grant was a mistake, and We are of the opinion that the court did not err in holding that this evidence was not sufficient to show such mistake.
As was held in the case of Freeman v. Gerald, 2 Tex. Law Jour., 744, a mistaken call for the line of an older survey, when such line is in the open prairie, and unmarked or undefined, should not prevail over a call for course and distance from an established corner.
In that case there was proof of facts which showed that the call for the line of an older survey was a mistake, and how and where the lines of the junior survey were actually run and established. In this case there is no evidence of such mistake, save that to make the call for the line of the elder grant correct, that grant will have a slight excess of land.
He who at this late day when lands have become valuable, and those who originally surveyed them have passed away, makes a location between grants which surveyors who originally surveyed them, more than thirty years ago, under their official oaths, declared to be contiguous, should come prepared with evidence which will clearly show that such declarations were made in mistake, and such testimony must consist of something more than that one or both of the grants will be slightly in excess of the area called for, to make such declarations good.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
.[Opinion delivered November 29, 1882.]