15 S.W. 1089 | Tex. | 1891
On March 3, 1882, appellant caused sixty-two alternate certificates, of which it was the owner, to be located on land in Webb County, but the surveyor refused to survey the land, and this action was brought against him and persons claiming the land, with prayer that a writ of mandamus issue to compel him to make the surveys.
The surveyor and his codefendants alleged that the land was titled and owned by the latter through conveyances from one Joaquin Galan, to whom it was claimed the land was granted by the Spanish government some time before the year 1804.
To show such a grant defendants pleaded and offered in evidence judgments rendered in the District Court for Webb County instituted to procure confirmation of the Galan grant.
In the year 1860 persons claiming through Joaquin Galan brought an action in the District Court for Webb County for confirmation of title under the Act of February 11, 1860. (Pasch. Dig., 4481-4491.) That cause came to trial on January 8, 1862, and resulted in an adjudication that at some time prior to the year 1804 the government of Spain granted to "Joaquin Galan a certain large tract of land situated on the east bank of the Rio Grande in this (now Webb) county about forty miles above the town of Laredo, embraced within the following boundaries, viz.: Beginning at a well known place called the Rincon de Galan or the Angostura, on the eastern bank of the Rio Grande, said point being a small distance below the ancient town of Palafox; running front thence in it straight line northeasterly to a well-known point called the Cerrito Prieto, being a prominent solitary eminence; thence in a westerly direction to a well known point called Almudes, that being also a solitary hill or exminence; thence in a southerly direction to the bank of the Rio Grande in a straight line to a noted point called Arroyo de San Pedro where the same empties into the Rio Grande in the center of the same; thence down said river to the starting point, these said noted points forming all the ancient points or landmarks and boundaries to said tract."
The judgment recites, among others, the following facts: "That it appeared to the court by original authentic documents that in the year 1805 said Joaquin Galan sold the said tract of land to Manuel Garza, who settled upon the same and occupied it for many years, and that about the year 1810, the government of Spain being desirous of forming a town on the river bank where the said Manuel Garza had planted *461 his said rancho, the said government did then and there condemn and take from the said Manuel Garza for the use of the government all that part of his said tract lying and fronting on the Rio Grande to the depth of six Mexican leagues, and did then and there lay out and establish the town of Palafox on the eastern bank or the Grande with the ejidos extending across the same, and gave and donated the lands above and below the said town to the settlers of the same in the form and shape of porcions running back for depth six Mexican leagues or 30,000 varas, and that for said condemnation the said Manuel Garza was reimbursed in land lying above the town and jurisdiction of Palafox."
The court further found that the town of Palafox was destroyed by Indians about the year 1818; that action was brought by Daniel Ruggles, under whom the defendants in this action assert title, and it is not denied that they through Ruggles have whatever right Ruggles acquired by his purchase from the heirs of Manuel Garza, except as this may be defeated by the judgment, rendered on January 8, 1862, which in so far as it gave confirmation was as follows.
"It is in consideration of the premises hereby ordered, adjudged, and decreed by this court that the said ancient title of the said Joaquin Galan to the said lands be confirmed to him, his heirs and assigns (except that part which was, condemned to the use of the settlers), in the following manner, to-wit: beginning at a, point on a direct line between the Rincon de Galan and Cerrito Prieto, distant six Mexican leagues of five thousand varas each from the left or western bank of the Rio Grande; thence in a straight line to the Cerrito Prieto; thence westerly to a hill called El Almud; thence southerly in a straight line toward the mouth of the Sun Pedro Creek or arroyo and the center of the same to a point six Mexican leagues distant front the river, meassured by a line drawn parallel to said river, as the rear line of the jurisdiction of said town of Palafox; thence easterly along said parallel to the place of beginning: and that they thus have and recover front the State of Texas all the lands embraced within the aforesaid boundaries, constituting and making __________ leagues of land, to be surveyed by the proper officer, and the field notes be returned unto the General Land Office of the State, with all convenient speed."
It is thus seen that the court confirmed the title only to that part of the grant lying back of a line running parallel with the Rio Grande and six leagues distant front it.
A motion for new trial was filed and overruled, and so the case stood until some time probably in 1869, when a motion was filed by Ruggles seeking construction of the decree of January 8, 1862, which on hearing was overruled.
Ruggles instituted another action about the same time he instituted this action in which the judgment referred to was rendered, and the purpose *462 of that was to have confirmation of title to another tract of land contiguous to and above that in reference to which the decree of January 8, 1862, was rendered; but this action was dismissed by the court on January 4, 1870, for want of jurisdiction.
On October 26, 1871, Ruggles made a motion to redocket those two cases, and this was done, and on the same day lie filed a petition in which lie in effect sought to have the decree of January 8, 1862, set aside and to have confirmation of title to both tracts, and this petition was amended on March 4, 1872, and on the 8th of March the petitions were overruled.
On March 12, 1872, Ruggles filed in the same court another petition seeking to set aside the decree of January 8, 1862, on which the district attorney accepted service for the State, and on the same day the court assumed to set aside, the decree, whereupon on motion the two causes were consolidated, and on March 13, 1872, Ruggles filed an amended petition in which lie sought confirmation of title to both tracts, embracing about sixty-three leagues of land. On the same day a judgment was rendered in his favor confirmation title to both tracts.
It is conceded that plaintiff's locations cover none of the land title to which was confirmed under the Galan grant by the decree of January 8, 1862, and only embraces the land which in that decree, was found to have been expropriated by the Spanish government and granted to the town of Palafox and its inhabitants.
The court below found that the land covered by plaintiff's locations was not vacant public domain and refused the writ of mandamus, and front that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
On the trial of this cause, over the objections of the plaintiff the court permitted defendants to introduce in evidence the pleadings and judgments before, referred to, which were filed and rendered subsequent to the year 1866. The objections to these were that the court had not jurisdiction to set aside the decree of January 8, 1862, after the adjournment of the term at which it was rendered, and further that jurisdiction of the court over the cases for confirmation ended on February 11, 1865.
The purpose of the Act of February 11, 1860, was to confer on the District Courts held within the boundaries named in it jurisdiction to investigate any claim against the State for land which had its origin prior to December 19, 1836, and to confirm the claims when the title was found perfect, or when not perfect, if, under the laws, usages, and customs of the government under which the claim originated, they would have matured into a perfect title had there been no change in the government sovereign within the designated territory.
The eleventh section of that act declared that "this act shall be limited to the term of three years front and after its passage." *463
The act was amended by the Act of January 11, 1862 (printed in Special Laws, 1862, p. 46), and the amendment declares "that the eleventh section of the above recited act shall read as follows, viz.: This act shall continue in force until the 11th day of February, A.D. 1865, and no longer."
Another act was passed on August 15, 1870, for the same purpose as the Act of February 11, 1860, but that conferred jurisdiction on the District Court of Travis County alone to hear and determine such causes between the State and persons seeking confirmation of titles. Pasch. Dig., arts. 7068-7079.
That a State can not be sued by a private person without its consent is well settled, and when such consent is given and a limitation placed on the right to bring such an action and upon the power of the court to hear and determine it, if that limitation be one of time then the jurisdiction of the court ceases when that time has elapsed.
The jurisdiction conferred on District Courts held within the boundaries fixed in the Act of February 11, 1860, was not within the general jurisdiction conferred on District Courts, but was special in its nature and existed solely by reason of the act which conferred it. Commissioners v. Walling, Dall., 526; The State v. Casinova,
The eleventh section of the Act of February 11, 1860, and the amendment thereto fix the period after which the act could have no further effect whatever, except upon claims which had been adjudicated before the act ceased to confer right on persons to bring such actions, and upon the courts power to hear and determine them. Claims adjudged to be valid, while the act gave power to the courts to adjudicate them, are valid simply because the decree of confirmation made while the court had jurisdiction is conclusive of the existence of the facts which gives validity to them.
The act in question did not simply provide within what time actions under it might be brought, but with its amendment fixed a period after which it should cease to be operative.
It presents a case in which the jurisdiction of the courts ceased, stronger, if possible, than in cases in which a statute conferring jurisdiction is subsequently repealed; for parties instituting actions under it did so with full warning that they must be concluded before the period arrived at which under the terms of the act itself it would cease to be operative.
Many cases have arisen in which jurisdiction was conferred by a statute, in which it was held by the highest courts in the land that the repeal of the statute divested the courts of power to hear and determine *464
pending causes. Norris v. Cocker, 15 How., 429; Insurance Co. v. Ritchie, 5 Wall., 541; Ex Parte McCardle, 7 Wall., 512; United States v. Tynen, 11 Wall., 95; Beers v. The State, 20 How., 529; Palmer v. Butler, 1 Hill, 324; Canal Co. v. Chicago,
Many other authorities on this question might be cited, but it is not necessary to do so, for no other conclusion could be reached unless the proposition that the jurisdiction of courts is not dependent upon law could be maintained.
In the case of Kennedy v. Jarvis 1 S.W. Rep., 191, on the judgments now in question, a contrary rule was announced by the Commission of Appeals, but this court declined to express any opinion upon the question, and affirmed the judgment of the court below upon some ground not stated.
The objection to all the proceedings had in the District Court for Webb County after February 11, 1865, should have been sustained; for that court then lost all jurisdiction over the case dismissed on January 4, 1870, as well as over the case in which a final judgment was rendered on January 8, 1862, whether relief was sought through a petition in the nature of a bill of review or otherwise; and all jurisdiction over such cases vested in the District Court for Travis County alone after August 15, 1870.
While the court below declined to express any opinion as to the legal effect of the several judgments referred to, it is impossible to ascertain how far they may have influenced his judgment when considered in connection with all proceedings in the two cases.
It therefore becomes necessary to consider whether under the evidence properly admitted the judgment of the court below is correct.
The judgment of January 8, 1862, was properly received in evidence, and that establishes the fact that the owners of the Galan grant were not entitled to confirmation of title to all the land which was claimed to have been originally granted to him; and upon that judgment alone, so far as the record before us shows, rests all the right any of defendants can assert to lands embraced in the petition filed in the case in which that judgment was rendered.
The plaintiff there shows that the defendants have no such right in the land on which it made its locations as will deny to it the right to appropriate, unless some of them have acquired title to the porcion confirmed to Joaquin Galan by the Act of February 10, 1852,
Defendants claim under Ruggles, and whatsoever right appellant has comes through the State, and therefore all parties to this action except the surveyor may be said to hold in privity to those who were parties *465 to the action in which the judgment was rendered on January 8, 1862, and an inquiry might be made whether all the recitals in that judgment, made nearly thirty years ago, ought not to be held binding on all parties to this action, or at leastprima facie evidence of the facts recited.
If these recitals be taken as true it is evident that all the land described in the petition on which the judgment of January 8, 1862, was based was once granted to Joaquin Galan; but that about the year 1810 the Spanish government, as might then lawfully be done, reacquired title to so much of the land as is involved in this action, after which it regranted this to the town of Palafox and its inhabitants.
The reinstitution of title in the Spanish government would defeat the right of any person claiming through Galan, and had not that government, or some succeeding one, sovereign within the territory, made other grant or grants of the land, then it would have been subject to plaintiff's locations; but if on expropriating the land the Spanish government regranted it to the town of Palafox and its inhabitants, then the land stands as titled land, and under the provisions of the Constitution would not be subject to location, even though on account of the destruction of the town and the loss of its organization the State may now be entitled to assert its right to so much of the land as may not have been granted to private persons.
It does not, however, become necessary now to consider what effect should be given to the recitals in that judgment, in view of another question which is decisive of this controversy.
It was agreed that the Legislature of this State by the Act of February 10, 1852, relinquished to Antonio Guerra three porcions of land and to Joaquin Galan one porcion, all within the jurisdiction of Palafox; and in support of the Galan grant to which confirmation proceedings related the court found: "That the Legislature of the State of Texas, by Act of February 10, 1852, which took effect, April 17, 1852, recognized the Joaquin Galan grant by confirming a portion thereof to his heirs and assigns. That said Galan was also recognized by the aforementioned judgments, of January 8, 1862, and March 13, 1872."
The act referred to declares that "the State of Texas hereby relinquishes all her right and interest in the following described lands to the original grantees thereof, their heirs and assigns, to-wit:" Then follow the names of original grantees, with statement of lands relinquished, which were in several counties. In the county of Webb three porcions to Antonio Guerra, jurisdiction of Palafox, and one porcion in same jurisdiction to heirs and assigns of Joaquin Galan (Pasch. Dig., art. 4461). But we do not think that this law bears the construction put upon it by the court.
It, is a recognition of the fact that one porcion, prior to the date of the act, had been granted to Joaquin Galan, but this would rather militate, *466 against the recognition of the fact that a grant of many leagues of land had been made to him, within which this smaller tract was situated; and the residue of the finding shows that the court gave some weight to the judgment of March 13, 1872.
The legitimate inference is that the commissioners, on whose report the relinquishments or confirmations were made, found no valid claim in favor of Joaquin Galan within that territory for more than one porcion, or that the Legislature on investigation found that this was the extent of his claim; and the fact that three portions were confirmed to Antonio Guerra, but not as an assignee, would tend to negative the belief of the Legislature that such a grant as is claimed to have been made to Joaquin Galan was ever made in that locality.
To entitle appellant to the relief sought it must clearly appear that it has the legal right to have the surveys made, for unless this be shown the court will not compel the surveyor to perform the service, and especially so when to do this the surveyor would violate the law. The burden of showing the existence of such a right rested on the plaintiff. If all the parties were before the court who assert right to the land, or who are shown to have claim, then it may be, if no effect be given to the recitals in judgment of January 8, 1862, that plaintiff would be entitled to the writ it seeks, if it had shown that none of these persons are the owners of any of the land covered by its locations; for as the land was once vacant, when such proof is made, a plaintiff seeking mandamus it would seem might rest.
Has the plaintiff shown such facts? Both the parties seem to concede, and it is the reasonable inference from the admitted facts, that four porcions of land within the boundaries covered by plaintiff's locations were confirmed by the Act of February 10, 1852, one of them to the heirs and assigns of Joaquin Galan and three to Antonio Guerra, and neither Antonio Guerra, nor any person shown to have acquired his right, is a party to this action.
The land which plaintiff seeks to have surveyed is the entire tract which in the judgment of January 8, 1862, was declared to have been expropriated by the Spanish government and subsequently granted to the town of Palafox and its inhabitants; and waiving all questions as to the effect of the recitals in that decree, the fact remains that there is land within the boundaries located, to the extent of four porcions at least, three of which are held by Antonio Guerra, or some person holding through him, by valid claim as against the State, and there is no exception of these lands in the prayer that the surveyor be commanded to survey all the lands located.
Ruggles claimed through a conveyance made, it seems, in 1805, but it does not appear whether this would pass title to the porcion Joaquin Galan may have subsequently acquired through grant made after the land in controversy may have been expropriated. *467
If it be not conceded that these porcions are within the limits of plaintiff's locations, then from the facts admitted and the laws referred to this is the presumption.
This court judicially knows that the town of Palafox existed, and when it is said that a porcion of land was granted within its jurisdiction we can only understand to be meant a tract of land such as was granted to an inhabitant of the towns established by the government within their limits, but beyond the town proper, its ejidos, dehesas, and proprios, and these tracts were more usually called suertes.
This will be seen by an an examination of the various grants confirmed by the Act of February 10, 1852. Pasch. Dig., art. 4461.
In the face of the fact that these four porcions must be held to be within the limits of plaintiff's locations, in the absence of evidence other than that found in the record the writ prayed for could not be awarded; and especially so when neither Guerra nor any person asserting his right has had an opportunity to be heard, unless it be the law that in actions such as this a peremptory writ of mandamus may issue, and still leave to the surveyor the right to disregard it in part, to judge for himself how far he must obey it, what particular land he must survey or refrain from surveying; or otherwise in obedience to the writ do an act in violation of law and of the rights of persons who have not been heard. When such a writ issues it must be obeyed in every particular, and this furnishes a reason why it will not be directed to issue until the applicant shows that he is entitled to have the respondent do the very act which it is claimed to be his legal duty to do, and such a writ can not issue when the relator shows that he has the right to have done only a part of that which he seeks, and does not show what part, less than the whole, he is entitled to have performed.
As said by Lord Campbell in Queen v. Railway Company, 16 American and English Corporation Cases, 30: "Before we can grant a peremptory mandamus the prosecutor is bound to satisfy us that there is a legal duty imposed upon the defendant to comply with all that is commanded in the writ. We consider it quite settled that if any part of what is commanded by a peremptory mandamus goes beyond the legal obligation the whole writ must be set aside."
To the same effect are the following cases: Queen v. Docks, 2 E. B., 473; Chance v. Temple,
"A mandamus proceeding can not be used as a 'drag net.' The party seeking relief by that proceeding must specify just what he wants, nothing more or less" (80 Mo. 194); and in this case plaintiff not showing itself entitled to all the relief sought, if entitled to any on proper *468 showing, the court below had but one course to pursue, which was to refuse the peremptory writ of mandamus; and having done so on sufficient grounds, although that court may have considered some evidence that ought not to have been considered, this court must affirm the judgment.
It is so ordered.
Affirmed.
Delivered March 27, 1891.