26 Tex. 688 | Tex. | 1863
In her original petition, the plaintiff below alleged that the land in controversy was surveyed by virtue of the'head-right certificate of David Page. She afterwards filed an amended petition, which contained the following allegations, to wit: “She shows that she may have been mistaken in alleging in her original petition that the survey of the land in controversy Was made by virtue- of the headright certificate of David Page, and now shows that she does not know, and cannot state, whether Said survey was made by virtue of the headright certificate of the said Page, or of Charles Smith, hut avers that she was, at the time she was evicted by the said defendant, to wit, on the first day of January, A. D, 1858, and long before that time, and still continues to be, the owner of the land described by the said survey, (meaning the Charles Smith survey:) and she shotys that, from the month of August, A. D. 1835, until she was evicted as aforesaid, she was in the actual, quiet, peaceable, continuous and adverse possession of the land before described, claiming, using, cultivating and enjoying the same as her own property, and paying taxes thereon; wherefore she says, that she Was, at the time of the aforesaid eviction, to wit, on the first day of January, A. D. 1853, and long: before that time, and still continues to be the owner of said land.’*
These allegations, taken in connection with the evidence, show conclusively that the plaintiff below relied solely upon her long possession as giving her title to the land in controversy. The evidence showed no title in herself. The headright of David (or Daniel) Page, her former husband, had been located elsewhere, The Charles Smith certificate, by virtue of which the land in question was surveyed, had not been' recommended as genuine by the local and traveling hoard of commissioners. But it was in evidence that the plaintiff below claimed the land under the Charles-Smith certificate and survey. »
The court below instructed the jury as follows: “If you believe from the1 testimony that the plaintiff, for ten years before the com
The Abraham Jenkins certificate was filed on a part of the same land included within the Charles Smith survey, on the 16th of January, A. D. 1850; and patent was issued to William Davenport, the assignee of the certificate, on the 26th day of March, A. D. 1855. The defendant below claimed under tins title. This suit was instituted on the 7th day of December, A. D. 1855. It will thus be seen that ,jf, in point of fact, the State had not granted the land in controversy to the plaintiff below, the title remained in the State until within less than ten years prior to the institution of this suit. Under these circumstances, it may be doubted whether the first branch of the instruction given by the court below to the jury, in reference to ten years possession of six hundred and forty acres, was correct in its application to this case. Be this, however, as it may, it will be observed that the instruction is not expressed with accuracy, because, in strict obedience to it, the jury might have found a general verdict for the plaintiff, which would haVe required a judgment for the whole of the third of a league claimed in her petition. We think it plain, however, that the jury found the verdict under the second branch of the instruction given to them, viz., that which refers to the possession of the third of a league for fifteen years, by défined boundaries
Neither do we deem it necessary to notice particularly the question of limitation, because the jury might not unreasonably have inferred that the field notes of the Jenkins survey were not returned to the general land office on or before the 31st of August, A. D. 1853, as was required by law, from the fact that the certificate appeared to have been removed from the file, and re-filed' on the 26th of June, A. D. 1854, which facts would point to the last named period as the origin of Davenport’s title.
From what has been said, it will bé seen that the only question presented in the case, which it is necessary to consider, arises upon the second branch of the instruction of the court below to the jury. That part of the instruction (as has been before stated) was to the effect, that if the plaintiff below had been in the peaceable possession of the land claimed in her petition for fifteen years, claiming under defined boundaries, and cultivating, using or enjoying the same, and claiming it as her own, she would be entitled to recover. We are of opinion that the instruction with reference to. the facts of this case was erroneous.
There are few subjects upon which there has been a greater diversity of decisions by the courts than upon the general subject of presumptions, and it is difficult, if not impossible, in the nature of the subject, to lay down any rule that would not be found to require modification or relaxation in its application to the circumstances of particular cases. Some very strong eases are to be found in the books, in which courts of equity, and sometimes courts of law, have indulged presumptions of grants upon possessions comparatively brief; but such cases will be found, for the most. part, to be cases in which the possession is aided by very strong equities in favor of the party in whose behalf the presumption is indulged. When we come to inquire into the general principles upon which presumptions of grants are resorted to by courts of justice, we are told that they are adopted from the general infirmity of human nature, the difficulty of preserving muniments of title, and the public policy of supporting long and uninterrupted possessions. They are said to be founded upon the consideration that the facts are such as could not, according to the ordinary course
The ease of Burke v. Negro Joe, 6 Gill & Johnson, 136, is a well considered case on the doctrine of presumptions. It was a question concerning the freedom of a negro. The court said, “The general doctrine of presumption as applied to patents, deeds, &e., is too well established now to require an examination. Although directed by law to be recorded within a limited time, and to have no legal effect unless such requisitions are complied with; yet, to quiet possession, the courts, upon a proper foundation being laid for it, will direct the jury to presume the existence of such papers, and that all legal requisitions had been complied with to give them effect.” The court then said that a deed of manumission stood upon the same footing as any other deed, and continued: “The presumption of a deed to give freedom must be founded upon acts inconsistent with a state of slavery known to the owner, and which can only be rationally accounted for upon a supposition that he had intended to free his slave.” The court further said, “It cannot be doubted that all cases of presumption may be rebutted or explained, and if you can prove by facts, that the foundation on which the presumption is claimed did not exist, it must fail. In this case, the exercise of freedom by going at large, &c., may have had a lawful commencement, or it may have been an offence under the act of 1787, which would subject the owner to a prosecution. In the absence of all testimony to show it was without right, it will be deemed lawful, for the law will never construe an act tortious, unless from necessity. It will consider the act lawful, the commencement and contrivance of which are not proved to be wrongful.” It may be interesting to state the facts of this ease, that it may be seen under what circum
In the latest edition of his treatise on the law of evidence, Mr. Phillips says: “ Grants from the crown may be presumed,_ but where such a presumption has been made, it has been under particular circumstances, and after a much longer period of time than has been deemed sufficient for raising the presumption of a grant from private individuals.”
In the learned notes by Cowen & Hill (and other annotators,), to the work just quoted, there is. a very careful analysis and review of the numerous cases on this subject. It is there said
Mr. Greenleaf, in his work on the law of evidence, treats of the class of presumptions which are now under consideration, as presumptions of fact. He says, “ Although lapse of time does not of itself furnish a conclusive legal bar to the title of the sovereign, agreeably to the maxim, rjullum tempus occur rit regi; yet, if the adverse claim could have had a legal commencement, juries are instructed or advised to presume such commencement, after many years of uninterrupted adverse possession or enjoyment. * ■ * * * * In regard, however, to crown or public grants, a longer lapse of time has generally been deemed necessary, in -order to justify this presumption, than is considered sufficient to authorize the like presumption in the case of grants from private persons.” (1 Greenl. Ev., sec. 45.)
A careful examination of the cases will show that courts have been more willing to presume conveyances between private individuals, than they have been to presume grants from the crown or State. Yet Mr. Greenleaf, in treating of presumptions of conveyances between private individuals, concludes by saying, “ It is sufficient that the party who asks for the aid of this presumption, has proved a title to the beneficial ownership, and a long possession not inconsistent therewith; and has made it not unreasonable to believe that the deed of conveyance, or other act essential to the title, was duly executed. Where these merits are wanting, the jury are not advised to make the presumption.” In a note to this passage, the learned author refers to several cases to show the length of possession to which the rule has, at different times,
A very large proportion of the cases, both in England and America, in which courts have indulged the presumption of a grant, are cases in which the subject matter of the grant to be presumed, was an incorporeal hereditament, and it was long questioned whether the doctrine of presumption ought to be applied to. land. And it has happened that general expressions respecting: presumptions of grants, employed in cases where the question was.,
In the case of Doe v. Cooke, 6th Bing., 174, Ch. Justice Tindal said, “No case can be put, in which any presumption has been made, except where a title has been shown, by the party who calls for the presumption, good in substance, but wanting some collateral matter necessary to make it complete in point of form. In such case, where the possession is known to have been consistent with the fact directed to be presumed, and in such cases only, has it ever been allowed.”
In Fenwick v. Reed, 5 B. & A., 79, Abbott C. J., said, “In my opinion, presumptions of grants and conveyances have already gone to too great length, and I am not disposed to extend them further.” And in the same case, Holroyd J. said, “In cases of rights of way, &c., the original enjoyment cannot be accounted for, unless a grant has been made, and therefore it is, that, from long enjoyment, such grants are presumed. But even in these cases, evidence to rebut such a presumption would be admissible.”
In Livett v. Wilson, 3 Bing., 64, Best, C. J., said, speaking of a right of way, “I do not dispute that if there had been an uninterrupted usage for twenty years, the jury might be authorized to presume it originated in a deed; but even in such a case, a judge would not be justified in saying that they must, but that they may presume a deed. If, however, there are circumstances inconsistent with the existence of a deed, the jur'y should be directed to consider them, and to decide accordingly.”
The case of Hurst’s Lessee v. McNeil, 1 Washington’s C. C. Rep., 70, was a case in which the party in whose favor the jury-presumed the existence of a deed, had been in possession for fifty-eight years, under circumstances strongly favoring the presump
I draw the conclusion, from what has been said,, that the question whether a grant will be presumed or not, is a question for the jury; in other words, that the court ought always to leave it to the jury to presume a grant or not, according to the evidence and the circumstances of the case; that the presumption of a grant does arise from long and uninterrupted possession, where the possession is consistent with the presumption, and that the jury may properly
In reference to the former decisions of this court, while I cannot assent to all that is said in the opinion of the court in the case of Lewis v. The City of San Antonio, I think the substance of that opinion, and the opinion of the same learned judge in the case of Paul v. Perez, and also the opinion of the present Chief Justice in the case of Herndon v. Casiano, will be found to be in accordance with the views which I have now endeavored to present. Bi Paul v. Perez, Mr. Justice Lipscomb said, “We are fully satisfied that the record in this case fairly presents the question for a jury to determine whether they would presume a valid grant to sustain the defendant’s rights,” thus assuming that the question was one for the jury. In Herndon v. Casiano, it was said, “It will be seen by reference to the opinion of the court, in the case of Lewis v. The City of San Antonio, that, although certain rules have been established on the subject of the presumption of grants, the question will still depend, in some degree, on the particular circumstances of the case.”
The language employed by Mr. Justice Lipscomb, in the concluding paragraph (or in the last but one) of his opinion in the case of Morris v. Byers, 14th Tex., was not necessary to the decision of that case, and does not therefore carry with it, in its fullest extent, the weight of authority.
It is said that, in all cases of presumptive payment at law or in equity, the pleadings must contain an averment of payment, otherwise the presumption cannot be raised. (Tibbs’ Heirs v. Clark, 5 Munroe, 526.) This would seem to be an elementary principle. And in a case like the present, the pleadings ought always to be so framed as to lay a proper foundation for proof of a grant, otherwise the presumption of a grant cannot be raised. Therefore, if a party does not allege a grant, or alleges anything at variance with the fact of a grant, a grant cannot be presumed.
In the present case, the plaintiff in the court below proved that she claimed the land in controversy, by virtue of the headlight survey and certificate of Charles Smith. It. was only by connecting her possession with a claim under the Charles Smith survey,
Reversed and remanded.