Findings of Fact.
The following map will aid-in understanding the facts in this case:
owner of a portion of the Del Valle grant, including the land indicated by the above map. April 12, 1852, Horton executed to Hugh Tinnin a'deed to 400 acres of the land described as follows: “That certain tract or
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parcel of land lying and Being situated in the county of Travis on the west bank of the Colorado river below the city of Austin, being part of the 11-league grant made by the government of Coahuila and Texas to Santiago del Valle and described according to the survey made thereof as' follows, to wit: Beginning at a stake set on the extremity of the sand bar of the Colorado river at the foot of the high river bottom, and corner made for Mrs. Chalmers, from which a cluster of willow trees brs. S.
It is apparent from the face of this deed that the closing call, “N. 30 - 3,420 vrs. with said Chalmers tract to the place of beginning,” was intended to read “N. 30 E.,” as no other course would lead to the beginning, whether such beginning be at the place claimed by appellant or at the place claimed by appellee. It is also apparent that the second call, “S.
The issue in this case is as to whether or not the deed above set out includes the land in controversy. If so, the judgment of the trial court should be reversed; if not, the judgment should be affirmed.
Appellee claims under a deed made by A. G. Horton to James B. Shaw and Jas. H. Matthews September 1, 1856, wherein is conveyed: “That certain tract or parcel of land lying on the Colorado river below the city of Austin, in said county of Travis, being all the land binding immediately upon the west bank of the Colorado river not heretofore sold by me and not embraced within the true lines of any surveys heretofore made for the tracts of land owned by Hugh Tinnin, Dennis Walsh, the heirs of Mrs. Chalmers and Thomas E. Chapman, and in fact including, all the land that may be vacant on said west side of the river, commencing at the lower corner of a tract owned by Samuel Stone, and running thence down the river with its meanders to the lower corner of said Horton survey as designated in the field notes thereof on the Colorado river, and including all the islands in the river rightfully belonging to the said Horton survey and lying between the points above expressed.”
If, however, the land described in this deed, and marked “sand bar” on the above map, was included in the prior deed from Horton to Tinnin, the grantees obtained no title, and appellant, as one of the heirs of Tinnin, is entitled to recover in this suit. Appellee by mesne conveyances became the owner of the Shaw and Matthews title to the lower half of the “sand bar” tract, and Mrs. Tinnin, the mother of Mrs. Roberts, in 1878 purchased the Shaw and Matthews title to the upper half of the “sand bar tract.” The Shaw and Matthews title has never been called in question by Tinnin or his heirs until after this suit was filed, which was originally a suit for a right of way by necessity.
If a survey be begun at the original north- ’ west corner of the Tinnin tract, marked on the map “elm tree,” and run thence S.
From these facts we find, as a fact, that the northeast corner of the Tinnin tract is at the iron pin at the willow tree; that the Tinnin deed does not include the sand bar tract, but that the division line between the Tinnin tract and the sand bar tract is, as found by the trial court, beginning at said iron pin, and running thence west 423 vrs. and N.
Opinion.
Though there be no apparent ambiguity upon the face of the grant, at what particular place the calls locate the grant can be ascertained only by parol evidence. For instance, a patent to a section of land may call for natural or artificial monuments at each of its corners. Whether or not those monuments can be found and identified and, if so, whether the lines located by such monuments include the land in controversy cannot be told by reading the grant, but only from the oral testimony of those who know the facts; hence testimony as to such facts is always admissible. The lines of a survey as originally run are its boundaries as a matter of law, but where such lines are is a matter of fact to be ascertained by oral testimony showing the application of the calls in the grant to the facts found on the ground. Bolton v. Lann,
Finding no error of record, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
