In an action to try the title to land where there is conflicting
evidence as to certain natural objects named in running the lines,
an instruction to the jury that if, after fully considering the
conflicting evidence, they are left doubtful and uncertain, they
will be justified in locating the grant by referring to such of the
natural objects as are certain is not error.
Such is the effect of the instruction to the jury in this
case.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action brought in the Circuit Court of the United
States for the Western District of Texas to try the title to a
large tract land in the County of Dimmitt and State of Texas.
The New York and Texas Land Company, the plaintiff, based its
claim upon patents issued by the State of Texas to the
International and Great Northern Railroad Company, and upon certain
deeds of conveyance from said company through several parties down
to the plaintiff. The defendant's title originated in a grant of
land by the State of Texas to the heirs of one Juan Francisco
Lombrano. This grant appears to have been made by the state in
recognition of a previous Spanish grant made in 1812 to Lombrano,
but the defendant, though reading this Spanish grant as evidence on
the question of the boundaries of the tract in question, relied
wholly on the patent from the State of Texas.
The record presents no question as to the validity of the
title
Page 150 U. S. 25
of either party, nor any bill of exception touching the
admission or rejection of evidence. It was admitted by the
plaintiff that the defendant had a valid title to all of the land
included in the Lombrano grant, and that such title was prior in
time to that asserted by the plaintiffs. The sole controversy was
whether the elder Lombrano grant included the lands subsequently
granted to the International and Great Northern Railroad Company.
This was the issue that was before the court and jury for
determination, and to which the evidence of both parties was
directed.
We are not asked by the plaintiff in error to consider the
evidence in the cause with a view of determining whether it
warranted the jury in their verdict in favor of the defendant. The
errors complained of are found in certain portions of the charge of
the court to the jury, and our only concern with the evidence is to
enable us to perceive whether the court committed error in its
instructions to the jury.
The description contained in the Spanish grant, and which is
followed in the patent made by Texas to the Lombrano heirs, does
not give courses, but the lines are run from one natural object to
another. The controverted lines are the southern and eastern
boundary lines of the Lombrano grant -- that is, the lines called
for in the Spanish grant as running from Tasa Creek, on the Rio
Grande, to the junction of the San Ambrosia and San Pedro Creeks,
and following up the San Pedro Creek and terminating near its head,
and the line running from the head of the San Pedro Creek to the
Carrizo Springs.
Several surveys were made, as well under the grant to the
Lombrano heirs as that patented by Texas in 1883 to the
International and Great Northern Railroad Company. It appears by
these surveys, and by the testimony of the engineers who made them,
that there were either two Creeks used as natural objects in
running the lines,
viz., San Pedro Creek and San Pablo
Creek, or that one creek was known by different persons, and at
different times, by the two names.
In this condition of the evidence, the court instructed the jury
as follows:
"1. You are to determine from the evidence whether the
Page 150 U. S. 26
San Pedro Creek called for in the field notes of the grant is
the creek now called the 'San Pedro,' or whether the creek called
at this time the 'San Pablo' was at the time this survey was made
by the surveyor, called the 'San Pedro' Creek, and you will look to
all the calls along the creek, and from all the evidence adduced
you will determine this, as well as all other questions of fact, by
a preponderance of the evidence, wherever the evidence is found to
be conflicting."
"2. I may here say that if the lower creek, now called the 'San
Pablo,' is the south line of the Lombrano grant, then your verdict
will be for the defendant."
"3. If from the evidence you find that some of the calls for
natural objects in the grant cannot be ascertained -- or, in other
words, if the natural objects are not all identified and some of
them are -- then and in that case you will locate the grant with
reference to those that are made certain, whether course and
distance would reach the natural objects or not; but in case no
natural or artificial objects called for can be found and
established, then artificial monuments would be of next controlling
power; these failing, then course and distance would be the next
best means of locating the true boundary of the grant."
"4. From an established point it is competent to reverse the
calls if by so doing we can better ascertain the true boundary of
the grant."
"5. The map required by law to be returned by the surveyor with
his field notes, upon which a patent is issued, may properly be
considered in connection with the field notes, and is part thereof
in locating the lines of the survey, unless there are calls that
control the same."
"6. The field notes of a survey returned to the General Land
Office for patent, and upon which a patent issues, are to all
intents and purposes a part of the patent, and if a material call
in such field notes is omitted from the patent, a certified copy of
such field notes, duly certified from the General Land Office, will
serve to supply such omission, and you will regard the calls in
such certified copy of field notes the same as if correctly copied
in the patent. "
Page 150 U. S. 27
"7. If you find from the evidence, after applying the evidence
to the calls of the patent, that some or any of the natural objects
called for are uncertain or doubtful and some are certain, the
certain ones will govern you in establishing the boundaries of the
land."
"8. You are not confined to begin the survey at the beginning or
any other particular corner. Any intermediate corner or the last
corner as you find them on the ground may be adopted by you for the
purpose of locating the grant, always giving precedence to the
corner that is best identified and that best harmonizes the various
calls of the patent in the construction of the survey."
All of these instructions are assigned for error, but the third,
fourth, and seventh clauses are those chiefly complained of.
The argument of behalf of the plaintiff in error concedes, in
effect, that the instructions do, in a general way, and apparently
correctly, state the rules of law pertaining to conflicting
boundaries; but it is contended that the instructions given were
not fairly applicable to the facts in evidence, and presented the
issues to the jury in a manner that must have withdrawn their
attention from the real question. This contention of the plaintiff
in error may be most favorably stated in the following language of
the brief of its counsel:
"It is quite true that the court, in its general charge to the
jury, instructed them that they should determine which of the
creeks was called the 'San Pedro' at the time the survey was made
by a preponderance of evidence, but it is also true that in the
sixth clause of the general charge to the jury, the court there
practically instructed them that they should locate the grant with
reference to the natural objects which were made certain. It is
submitted that in view of the issues presented in this case, and in
view of the evidence which was before the jury, even this sixth
clause of the general charge was not proper to be given, although
the erroneous doctrine is not so clearly stated in this clause of
the general charge as it is in the special charge asked by the
defendant's counsel. It however must be evident that the idea that
it was proper for the jury to disregard any natural object called
for in the grant,
Page 150 U. S. 28
in regard to the true location of which there was any conflict
of evidence must have been thoroughly impressed upon the minds of
the jury when they were practically so instructed in the general
charge of the court and distinctly and unmistakably so instructed
in the special charge given at the request of the counsel for the
defendant in error."
"It is possible, and even probable, that a boundary case might
arise in which it would be proper for the court to instruct the
jury that if any of the objects called for in the grant were not
identified by the evidence, they could look to some other calls in
the grant to determine its true locality. It is, however, difficult
to conceive of a case in which it would ever be proper for the
court to instruct the jury that if any of the objects called for in
the grant are uncertain or called for in the grant are uncertain or
reason that if it were a correct instruction in any case it would
also be a correct instruction in any other case in which the true
location of any objects marking the boundary of a grant was in any
manner rendered doubtful by the evidence; and, as this would be the
situation in every litigated case in which there was a contest in
regard to the boundary or in which there was a conflict of
evidence, it would of necessity follow that this would be a proper
charge to be given in every boundary case in which the object of
the investigation was to determine the boundaries of the grant by
ascertaining the true location of the objects called for as marking
its boundaries. It also follows that it would therefore be proper
for the jury in any contested case to disregard all evidence in
relation to the very object to ascertain the true location of which
the proceeding was had. The very fact that there is a litigation
necessary for the purpose of ascertaining the true location of an
object, in itself, renders it doubtful and uncertain, and, if the
doctrine announced in the charge complained of is correct, being
doubtful and uncertain, the jury will not determine its location;
therefore the litigation would be useless; there would be no need
of litigation with regard to the true location of an object called
for in a grant with regard to which there was absolutely no doubt
or uncertainty, and, if that doubt or uncertainty cannot
Page 150 U. S. 29
be solved by a judicial investigation, it is useless to litigate
over the question."
"It must also be evident that if it were proper to instruct the
jury in a boundary case that they should make up their verdict
without regard to any facts which might be disputed, it would also
be proper to so charge them in any other case, and thus all
litigation would be at an end."
This criticism assumes that the court instructed the jury that
if there was conflicting evidence as to the existence or location
of some of the natural objects called for in the respective grants,
such objects should be wholly disregarded, and that the verdict
should be controlled by the evidence referring to such natural
objects as were certain. Such an instruction would, indeed, as
argued on behalf of the plaintiffs in error, be equivalent to
telling the jury to disregard all evidence in relation to the very
object to ascertain the true location of which the proceeding was
had, and the mere fact that there was contradictory evidence as to
the true location of a boundary line would decide the litigation in
favor of the party in possession.
But we are unable to see that these instructions express so
unreasonable a proposition. Fairly read, and as the jury must have
understood them, we understand these instructions to say not that
if there is conflicting evidence as to certain natural objects the
jury should put such evidence and the controverted facts wholly out
of view, and look only to other and undisputed facts, but that if,
after considering the conflicting evidence, the jury are left
doubtful and uncertain, they will be justified in locating the
grant by referring to such of the natural objects as are certain.
In terms, as well as in substance, the court told the jury that
they should determine the true location and name of the boundary
creek, as well as all other questions of fact in the case, "from
all the evidence, and by a preponderance of the evidence wherever
the evidence was found to be conflicting." The seventh instruction
was explicit that
"if you find from the evidence,
after applying the evidence
to the calls of the patent, that some or any of the natural
objects called for are uncertain or doubtful, and some
Page 150 U. S. 30
are certain, the certain ones will govern you in establishing
the boundaries of the land."
Plainly this does not mean that the jury should refuse to
consider and weigh the evidence if conflicting, but that if, after
so considering it, there should be doubt as to the proper
conclusion to be drawn, such doubts might be resolved by referring
to natural objects whose location was certain.
These observations likewise dispose of the further contention
that the court below erred in instructing the jury that "from an
established point it is competent to reverse the calls if, by so
doing, we can better ascertain the true boundary of the grant." The
argument admits that this instruction is formally correct, and only
expresses a familiar rule of construction in boundary cases. But it
is claimed that, as the court had instructed the jury to disregard
all natural objects with respect to which the evidence was
conflicting, the jury could, in reversing the calls, skip or
disregard such, and run the lines only by objects in regard to
which there was no dispute. But as we have seen, the court had not
instructed the jury to disregard the natural objects as to which
there was conflicting evidence, but that, if they were unable to
reach a satisfactory conclusion from the conflicting evidence, they
should specially regard those facts that were clearly shown. Hence
the jury would not, in reversing the calls of the patent, disregard
the points and objects in dispute, but would determine "from all
the evidence and by the preponderance of the evidence" the true
boundaries of the grant.
We are therefore of opinion that there was no error in the
instructions of the court to the jury, and the judgment of the
circuit court is
Affirmed.