19 Tex. 209 | Tex. | 1857
The defendants do not deny that the plaintiff had his land surveyed by the Deputy Surveyor within the
We are therefore of opinion that the case does not come within the meaning of the Act, of 1852 ; that the field notes were returned in time ; and that it was not a ground to reject them that the Deputy Surveyor did not sign and make return of them until his term of office had expired. The rights of parties cannot be defeated by the neglect of the officer in such matters as the return to his principal of the work he had done, when the rights of third persons are not thereby affected. The The material fact is, not, when he signed or returned to the office the field notes, but that he made the survey when he had competent authority to do so ; and that is not denied.
It was the duty of the Surveyor to receive and record the field notes when they were returned ; and upon the case made by the petition and answer, the Court ought to have awarded a mandamus to compel the performance of that duty. - There was no issue for a jury to try, and the submission of the case to a jury was unnecessary. If the field notes had been rightly excluded, it was error to direct an original survey ; it would have been too late, if no legal survey had been previously made. (Hart. Dig. 2135.) But there was error in excluding the field notes. They were competent evidence of a legal and valid survey, and the Court should have awarded a mandamus to compel the Surveyor to receive and record them. The judgment will therefore be reversed, and such judgment be here rendered as the Court below ought to have rendered.
Reversed and reformed.