Balentine v. Dodge
Balentine v. Dodge
Opinion of the Court
Appellants, as the heirs of J. J. Balentine, brought this suit in trespass to try title to recover of appellees, 1,476 acres of land, patented to the heirs of J. J. Balen-tine by virtue of a certificate issued February 5, 1838, to P. M. Mercer, as administrator of the estate of said Balentine by the board of land commissioners of Washington county. The defendants filed' formal answers and the cause proceeded to trial before a jury. After the introduction of the testimony, the jury, under peremptory instructions from the court, returned a verdict in favor of the ap-pellees for the whole amount of the land. Appellants bring the case before us for review upon two assignments of error, as follows :
First. “The court erred in instructing the jury to return a verdict against the plaintiffs and in favor of the defendants for the land in controversy herein because the plaintiffs’ evidence shows that the land in controversy was granted to the heirs of J. J. Balentine, and the plaintiffs’ evidence shows that they are the heirs at law of the said J. J. Balen-tine, to whom the right to the land in controversy was granted by the state of Texas on account of the said Balentine becoming a citizen of Texas prior to May, 1835, and the defendants did not show any right or title whatever to the land in controversy herein.”
Second. “The court erred in holding that the recital in the headright certificate issued to the heirs of J. J. Balentine to the effect that said Balentine was killed at the Alamo was conclusive of the rights of the plaintiffs to recover the land herein, because the right of the plaintiffs to said land certificate was not based upon the fact that they were thp heirs of a soldier who fell at the Alamo, but is based upon the fact that they are the heirs of J. J. Balentine, and that said Balentine became a citizen of Texas prior to May, 1835, and for that reason he was entitled to a headright certificate.”
The court of Civil Appeals of the Second District in the case of Dick v. Malone, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 97, 58 S. W. 168, decided the identical question raised by appellants in this assignment, and held the recital to be conclusive. The opinion of a majority of the coffirt on this issue is in part as follows: “One of the appellant’s assignments of error complains that ‘the verdict and judgment is not supported by the evidence., in this: That the evidence shows that this land was patented in 1872 to the heirs of William T. Malone, deceased; and the evidence also shows that the William T. Malone, under whom these plaintiffs claim, did not die until 1880, while the evidence further shows that the William T. Malone who was entitled to this land fell at the Alamo in 1836, it also showing that plaintiffs’ ancestor did not take part in the battle of the Alamo.’ This assignment the court sustains, because the evidence is undisputed that the father of appellees, in whose right as heirs they claim title to this land, did not fall at the Alamo, but died in the state of Mississippi in 1880. The certificate or' bounty warrant issued in this case establishes on its face that a William T. Malone fell at the Alamo on March 6, 1836 (Smith v. Walton, 82 Tex. 547, 18 S. W. 217), and for that reason, in part, the bounty of the republic of Texas was extended to his heirs. These facts should be accepted as fully proven in this case. It matters not, then, that his name is not found among the list of those who fell in that cruel massacre, nor that one witness who served in that war never knew or heard of any other person by that name who served in that war except plaintiffs’ ancestor. It was for the Secretary of War to determine the facts upon which the right to this bounty depended, and, having issued the warrant, it is conclusive in this case that it was issued to the heirs of the William T. Malone, who served in the Texas army from September 26, 1835, until March 6,1836, and fell in that memorable battle, and not the father of the appellees, who was alive at that time and continued in the flesh until 1880.”
On writ of error to the Supreme Court, in the same case, Brown, Justice,- said, “We do-not find it necessary to determine whether the recitals in the bounty warrant are absolutely conclusive, because no testimony is presented which contradicts the recital”; but' held that such a recital established a strong prima facie case that the person mentioned in the warrant fell in the massacre of the Alamo, and tfiat the burden was upon the *467 heirs of W. T. Malone to show that the person named in the warrant did not fall at the Alamo, that their ancestor was entitled to the warrant, and that it was issued to him or in his right. And in discussing the weight of such recital said: “We know as a matter of history that in 1855 the office of the adjutant general of the state of Texas, in which the muster rolls of men who fell at the Alamo were placed, was destroyed by fire, and the absence of the name of W. T. Malone from the rolls as subsequently made up and deposited in the land office does not prove that he did not fall at that time and place. The investigation upon which the bounty warrant was issued was made in 1838, when the archives were in possession of the Secretary of War, and when the testimony of living witnesses could be had to prove the facts recited; and it would require strong and convincing evidence to overturn the deliberate conclusion arrived at by the Secretary of War, which may have been based on evidence now lost.” Malone, v. Dick, 94 Tex. 419, 61 S. W. 112.
In this connection it is well to note this difference between the case of Dick v. Malone and the case at bar. In the former the recital that Malone was killed at the Alamo stands uncorroborated, while in this case it appears that one P. M. Mercer, before making application for the certificate in question, had been appointed administrator of the estate of J. J. Balentine, in whose right the certificate was issued; thus strongly corroborating by judicial ascertainment, and decree of a probate court, the recital in the certificate of the fact of the death of the party under whom appellees claim.
Wfe conclude from this that the court below peremptorily instructed the jury upon the theory that appellants had not connected themselves 'with the J. J. Balentine mentioned in the certificate, and in this we think he was correct. There being no error in the record, the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.