2 Tex. L. R. 150 | Tex. | 1883
This is a suit of trespass to try title brought by the appellant Hanrick against the appellee Cavanaugh. The cause was tried by a jury and resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendant, from which the plaintiff appeals. The plaintiff claims title by mesne conveyance under a concession for eleven leagues of land, embracing the premises in controversy, granted by the government of Coahuila and Texas, the final title to which was extended on the 22d of October, 1833. Only one hundred and sixty acres are involved in this controversy, which the defendant claims under a pre-emption survey dated December 12, 1874, and among other defenses he filed an affidavit impeaching the grant to Rafael de Aguirre for forgery in the final title.
The jury found a general verdict for the defendant, and, under
The verdict of the jury, if supported by the evidence, is conclusive against the plaintiff’s right to recover, unless the court has committed some error to his prejudice in the giving or refusing of charges, or in the admission or exclusion of evidence. The first question presented relates to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict declaring the grant to Rafael de Aguirre a forgery. The plaintiff introduced in evidence a certified copy from the general land office of a translation of the original grant, consisting of the application for the land, the reference to the empresarios for their consent to a selection of the land within their colonial enterprise; their consent; the selection of the land and its survey by the colony surveyor; the return of the field notes, and the extension of the final title. The survey embraces ten leagues on the Gabriel, now in Williamson county, and one league in Cow Bayou, now in Falls county. These instruments were on their face regular, and sufficient, prima facie, to vest title in the grantee to the eleven leagues of land embraced in the grant.
[This statement is made subject to the qualification that while the name of Rafael de Aguirre appears elsewhere in the grant, the name of one Perfecto Valdez appears as the grantee in the granting clause of the final title. This court has heretofore, however, in passing upon this same title, in Hanrick v. Jackson, 55 Tex., 17, treated this instrument as on its face a grant to Rafael de Aguirre, and we see no reason to question the correctness of that ruling.]
The application for the concession upon which this grant to Rafael de Aguirre purports to be issued was made in a single instrument by three parties, to wit, Jose Maria de Aguirre, Rafael de Aguirre and Tomas de la Vega, and the concession, which was also in a single instrument, was attached to the title of another of the parties, and an unauthentic copy only was embodied in the title of Rafael de Aguirre, but that circumstance was, in Hanrick v. Jackson, properly held not to affect the validity of the grant. In support of the issue tendered by his affidavit of forgery, the defendant introduced from the archives of the general land office the original of the grant under which the plaintiff claims, with photographic copies of the same, and' parol evidence relating thereto, from which it appears that a number of erasures, alterations and
The papers connected with this title show that Samuel M. Williams, who was associated with Austin in the colonial enterprise, within the limits of which the grant was located, acted as attorney for Aguirre in soliciting the concession, and for himself and Austin in consenting to the location within their colony; that as attorney for Aguirre he had applied for and received from the alcalde the final title in question, and, as his attorney, had afterwards sold the land to the plaintiff’s remote vendor. The defendant introduced also the original application of Perfecto Valdez for a concession of
The dates of Williams’ several acts in connection with this title .are identical with those performed by him in connection with the title for the grant on tho Gabriel and Cow Bayou which is in controversy in this suit. The defendant introduced also a certified copy of a grant of eleven leagues to Miguel Rabaga, for whom also Williams was attorney, tho field notes of which call for the last mentioned survey for Rafael de Aguirre on the Brazos, and which the maps show to be connected, both being located on the Brazos river. The defendant also introduced in evidence the last page of á certified, translated copy of the Rafael de Aguirre grant, tho certificate being dated in 1855, and a certified copy of the last page of the same title in Spanish, made in 1838, in neither of which is the emendation clause noted at the foot of the title as it now appears. In both copies, however, the body of the instrument is identical with the face of the grant as it now appears, no alteration or interlineation appearing, and it is not improbable that the emendation clause existed at those dates, and was omitted by the copyist because, in giving a clear copy of the instrument, the emendation clause would be meaningless, there being nothing in the copy to which it could
The plaintiff in rebuttal showed, what indeed was not denied by the delendant, that the signatures of the alcalde and of the assistant witnesses to the grant were genuine; the defendant’s theory being that tho alterations constituting the forgery were male subsequent to the execution of the instrument. In this connection is to be considered the extreme strictness of the civil law in guarding against fraudulent alterations of public instruments — a familiarity with which must be presumed on the part of the ollieer who extended the title in question and of those who were intereste l in it.
The following passage, translated from Escriche’s dictionary of legislativo tille to instrument's, will convey an idea of the rules of the civil law relating to this subject. From page 883, second column: “in order that a public instrument he considered authentic and lawful the following circumstances are required:” . . . Page 888, second column. “8. That the document be cleanly written, without blanks, erasures, obliterations, interlineations or corrections, especially in the substantial parts; for example, in the names and surnames of parties, of the notary public and the witnesses, in the terms and the amount, and the thing in relation to which the writing is done, in the compact and conditions, and in the day, month and ycu.tr of tho date, and in the place where the instrument was executed ; and that, in case that any correction, obliteration or addition be made at the time of reading the instrument to the parties, the same be authenticated at tho foot of it by the notary, previous to the signing, in order to prevent suspicion of fraud. Ley III, title 18, part 3; Ley XII, title 18, part 3; Ley I, title 23, title 10, Nov. Rec., and Code de Cem, art. 210.
“ The two laws of the Partidas above quoted characterize as suspicious and unworthy of credit any instrument of writing which has been scratched, corrected, underscored, written over, or torn or out in any of the substantial parts above referred to, unless the party introducing it shall prove that it was done by force or accident; and on the contrary, they require its admission as valid if it bears no such
“ The second part of the provisions of these laws is perfectly just in relation to any instrument, whether a matrix or an original copy, for the rejection of a paper for an unimportant vice or defect would be intolerable. Likewise the first part of the provision concerning the copy called original, introduced or exhibited by a party in support of his' claim, appears to be just; since the instrument in his power, having operated, or having to operate, in his favor, an essential alteration in it, and not authenticated by the notary public, should be attributed to him, and nobody else, unless the contrary be proven. In fact, the laws above mentioned seem to have referred to that class of instruments.
, “But shall we also apply the first part of the provisions to the matrix’ preserved by the notary public among his protocols? If the instrument (the matrix) appears with the obliterations, additions, corrections, or other alterations, not authorized as the law requires, shall it be null and void to the prejudice of either, and perhaps both, parties? We may suppose either that the two instruments were closed and signed after the alterations were made, or, on the contrary, that the alterations were made after the instrument had been perfected and signed. It would be natural to suppose that the instrument was closed and signed without the alteration, for the presumption is that while writing the notary public would conform himself to the requirements of the law, and the law required him to mention and authenticate them before signing, if, in fact, they existed at that time. Therefore an instrument shall not be null on account of the failure to approve or authenticate the alteration that may be found in it, because it should not be in the power of the notary public or anybody else thus to destroy the effects of an authentic document to the prejudice of the parties interested; but on the contrary the alterations shall bear the vice of nullity, the additions, writing over, erasures and the corrections shall be considered as not having been made, and the words unlawfully written over or prased, or altered, shall be considered as existing, and shall have all their effects when their tenor can be ascertained, or an interpretation, or combination of that which precedes, or that which follows, discloses their meaning.
. “ It may objected that this would suppose fraud in the notary public, against the general rule that fraud should not be presumed; and that it is more reasonable to suppose in him mere neglect, and that he overlooked the alterations which were already made. But
“Besides, if the original copy is in existence, the fact of the reproduction or omission of the words written or added may assist to ascertain whether the alteration was made before or after the closing and signing of the principal document, and consequently it will be possible to decide whether there was fraud or a mere omission. From page 888. . . .
“ Sixth. That the day, month and year, and the place or town where the instrument is executed, should be expressed as well as the names, surnames and residences of the parties and witnesses. The names of persons and towns should not be written with their initials alone, nor should any alterations or ciphers that in substantial things may produce obscurity, equivocation, or contention; and that quantities and dates be expressed in letters, and not in numbers and figures, under penalty of nullity of the instrument, and upon the responsibility of the notary public for any damage and injury that by his act may accrue to the parties.” Escriche, Dici Leg., pp. 886-888.
We have not overlooked the fact that the field notes contained in the title to Bafael de Aguirre for the lands on the Gabriel and Cow Bayou purport to have been made by the surveyor, F. W. Johnson, and from his deposition found in the statement of facts it appears that in 1833 he made a survey of the land in question for one Williamson (Williams?). But the answers of the witness, however important to either party, are copied into the transcript without the interrogatories necessary to make them intelligible. The survey made by him and incorporated into the grant by Bafael de Aguirre are without dates. The testimony or duplicate original of the final title to Bafael de Aguirre, which ought regularly to have been issued and delivered to the grantee or his attorney on the extension of the title, is not produced or accounted for. Upon a review of all the evidence submitted by both parties to the jury on the issue of forgery, we are not able to say either that their verdict was without evidence to support it, or that it was so manifestly against the weight of the evidence as to authorize this court, under its well settled rules, to set it aside. The appellant assigns as error the charge of the court submitting to the jury the issue whether or not the
' The court also submitted to the jury a special issue as to whether said original title was in fact forged; all of which is complained of by the appellant, and in support of his views he urges the authority of Hanrick v. Jackson, supra,. It was held in Hanrick v. Jackson that the defendant claiming under a junior grant, and showing no equity existing prior to the issuance of the title to Rafael de Aguirre, could not successfully impeach the grant for fraud or irregularity in its issuance, from which it is argued that in this case the defendant, who also claims under a junior right unconnected with any antecedent equity, ought not to be permitted to question the grant on the ground of forgery. But if the grant is a forgery; if it was in fact never issued by the officer by whom it purports to have been issued, or if by subsequent alterations it has been made apparently to confer rights not conferred by it at the time it was is mod, then it is not voidable only; it is absolutely void, and is subject to attack by any one against whom it is sought to be used. We find no error, therefore, in the submission to the jury upon the issues raised in this case of the question of the genuineness of the title under which the plaintiff claimed, and denying him the right to recover in case the jury should find it to be a forgery.
It is insisted that the court erred in admitting in evidence, and afterwards in refusing to withdraw from the consideration of the jury, the several instruments already referred to, tending to show that Rafael de Aguirre had previously received a perfect title to eleven leagues on the Brazos, based on the same application and concession on which the grant in controversy purports to be based; that other grants, issued about the same time, and with which Williams was also connected, recognized the survey made for Aguirre on the Brazos; that Perfecto Valdez had taken the preliminary steps which would have authorized the extension to him of a final title, such as that under which the plaintiff claims appears to have been before its mutilation, together with the maps and sketches from the
Ww think, however, that on the issue of forgery made by the affidavit, which mint be sustained, if at all, upon circumstantial testimony, the evidence offered, though some of it was remote and entitled to but little weight, was proper to go to the jury and to be considered by them in connection with all the other facts and circumstances bearing on the issue.
The admission of the land office copies of the chain of title from Perfecto Valdez to Mrs. McManus was especially objected to on the further ground that, no final title having issued, they were not properly archivos of the land office; but we think they were properly admitted under the provisions of the Revised Statutes, secs. 2253, 2259 and 3808.
Such assignments and transfers are, under the provisions of the Revised Statutes, made archives of the land office, and are not subject to be withdrawn by the parlies at interest, and the rule and the reasoning in Short v. Wade, 25 Tex., 510, no longer apply. It is further to be observed that the error, if any, in the admission of the certified copies would have been rendered immaterial by the subsequent introduction of the original instruments themselves, which, coming from proper custody, to wit, the land office, and being more than thirty years old, were properly admitted without other proof of their execution.
The appellant assigns as error the refusal of the court to admit in evidence the correspondence had in 1840 between J. P. Borden, then commissioner of tho general land office, and James Howlett, county surveyor of the district embracing the eleven leagues on the Brazos granted to Rafael de Aguirre on the 4th of October, 1833, and relating to that survey, the purport of which correspondence was to show that Williams had satisfactorily explained to the commissioner that a mistake had occurred by which two grants of eleven leagues each had been granted to said Aguirre, and that in the opinion of the commissioner, that which included the ten leagues on the Gabriel, dated October 22, 1833 (the one involved in the controversy), was a genivne one, and that the eleven-league survey on the Brazos was to be considered as subject to location and survey as
The remaining assignments have been incidentally disposed of in the determination of those already considered.
We find no error in the judgment of the court below, and it will be affirmed.
Affirmed.
[Opinion delivered June 22, 1883.]
Chief Justice Willie and Associate Justice West being disqualified, B. H. Bassett, Esq., and N. W. Finley, Esq., were appointed by the governor special justices.