26 Tex. 310 | Tex. | 1862
The incomplete or blank grant by Arciniega, a certified copy of which, from the General Land Office, was read in evidence by the appellee, was doubtless neither received by the-court or offered by appellee as of itself evidence of title to the land upon which the trespass complained of was alleged to have-been committed. It was manifestly offered and relied upon merely as an additional fact, or circumstance in connection with appellee’s claim to and acts of ownership over the land, from which it was-insisted a grant of it should be presumed. In this view, and for this purpose, we think, if otherwise unobjectionable, it was properly admissible; and that appellant’s first ground of objection to it was consequently not well taken. But appellant also objected to its admissibility because it was not executed by Arciniega with either instrumental or assisting witnesses; and his signature-to it was not proved to be genuine. This objection should have been sustained. It has been repeatedly decided by this court that by the instructions of September 4th, 1827, commissioners were directed to execute the titles extended by them with the like solemnities that were prescribed by law for the execution of authentic acts; and if this was not done the title could not be received as evidence until its execution had been duly proved. (Clay v. Holbert, 14 Tex., 189; Ruis v. Chambers, 15 Tex., 586; Andrews v. Marshall, Austin Term, 1862.)
The court most manifestly erred in overruling appellant’s objections to the field notes sworn to by the surveyor Brown in 1848.
The witness, Mays, appears to have been present when the original survey by Brown was made, aryd was examined in regard to it. We do not doubt that he might, if he desired, use this or any other paper that would have given him any aid in refreshing his memory; but then such paper would only have become evidence in so far as his testimony, after his memory was refreshed by it, should have made it so. But here this was not the object or purpose which it was intended it should subserve. We may, also, remark, that had it been shown, in connection with the other facts, that Brown was dead, and the copies of the field notes made by him, as well as his statements about the survey, had been offered with that view, it would be a question worthy of consideration whether they could not have been used, as the declarations of a deceased party, for the purpose of showing ancient boundaries. But no question of this sort arises in the present attitude of the
The court instructed the jury that, “if appellee had claimed or exercised acts of ownership or control” over the four leagues of land referred to in the imperfect title, from its date, June 8th, 1882, until the commencement of this suit, and the four leagues were the same as those delineated on the plat of survey executed •by Brown, the appellee’s title thereto was complete and valid. It will be seen that the charge is framed in the alternative, and the presumption of a grant was thereby made to depend upon the continuous claim of the land by appellee. This is clearly erroneous. The instruction was no doubt hastily drawn by the learned and able judge by whom it was given, and does not accurately express the idea that he intended to convey.
The doctrine of presumed grants has on several occasions been •.discussed in this court; and it must now be admitted as fully-established on principles that cannot be controverted, that, under proper circumstances, a grant of land from the State may be presumed. But what-facts are sufficient to authorize the presumption, or for what length of time they must have concurred, has not as yet been authoritatively determined. It may be, perhaps, that there is no general rule applicable to the subject, and that each case, as it arises, must depend upon its own peculiar circumstances. This would seem more prgjiable if the presumption is one not of law, but, as it is generally said, of fact to be drawn by the jury •from the evidence. Certainly, no one who will give the subject a moment’s reflection, but must conclude that a Very different state of facts should authorize the presumption of conveyances between private parties from those which will justify the presumption of a grant from the State. And here again it should certainly be much more readily presumed when all the facts are shown to exist which -entitled the party to the grant, and the fact sought to be presumed is a mere ministerial act to evidence a pre-existing and established ■right, than when the presumption is asked to be made from the mere fact of continued possession, if in any case it can arise from .this fact alone.
In the present case, the facts as to the possession and acts of
Although it is not necessary that we should at present give any authoritative exposition of this doctrine of presumed grants, we deem it proper, in view of what has been said with reference to the charge of the court upon this subject, that these additional suggestions should be thrown out, in order that there should be no danger of the parties being misled by an omission of all discussion of it. We do not at present see, however, why this controversy should necessarily involve the question of presumed grants. The legislature recognized appellee’s title, and the dispute seems to turn on the mere question of boundaries between the parties; and it is not perceived why that may not *readily and easily be determined. The surveyor who made the survey which was afterwards appropriated by the certificate under which appellant appeal’s to claim, was examined as a witness, and says, that at that time this part of appellee’s line had not been run, and that the line run by him was run as the line of appellee’s land, and of the league which appellant now claims. If this witness is not mistaken in
For the error of the court below in the instructions given to the jury, and in overruling appellant’s exceptions to appellee’s testimony, as shown by the bills of exception, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and- remanded.