Wilbarger County v. Robinson

T. Windsor Robinson and others, being the owners of the south half of section 18 and the north half of section 64 of block 12 of the Houston Texas Central Railway Company surveys in Wilbarger County, undertook to divide it into lots, blocks, and streets suitable for a town thereon, but made a mistake as to the location of their east line, and surveyed a portion of their town on the land of their neighbors on the east, and left an equal amount of their own undivided on the west. This was a strip 366 varas wide. After this, and before the mistake was discovered, Robinson and his associates executed to J. Doan, as county judge of Wilbarger County, their bond for title, by which they agreed to convey to him and his successors in office, for the use of said county, 130 of the lots, being two front and two rear lots in each of the even numbered blocks of said town laid off as aforesaid, so soon as patent should be obtained from the State therefor.

Thereafter, the patent to the land having been obtained, but the mistake in the location of the line not yet discovered, Robinson and his associates, in compliance with their said bond, executed their deed, the material part of which is as follows: "Have granted, bargained, sold, and conveyed, donated and transferred and set apart, and by these presents do bargain, sell, convey, donate, transfer, set apart unto J. Doan, county judge of Wilbarger County, Texas, and his successors in office, for the use and benefit of said county, all of our right, title, and interest in and to block 4 for court house; block 51 for a jail; also, in and to the following described lots and parcels of land being situated in the town of Vernon, in said county, as follows, to-wit, two front and two rear lots in every even numbered block, as is shown by the town plat of said town now on record in the county clerk's office of said county, to which reference is hereby made for a more particular description as follows." Then follows a description of the lots conveyed, by numbers, making 130 in all, and concludes with the covenant of general warranty of title.

The consideration of this title bond and deed was a proposition made to the voters of the county for the location of the county seat at the town surveyed as aforesaid, which had been done at an election held between the date of the proposition and bond for title. A part of the lots conveyed to appellant were in that part of the town laid off east of the land owned by Robinson and his associates, and its title thereto having therefore failed, it seeks in this case to have compensation out of the 366 varas strip that was left undivided as above set forth.

We think it plain from an inspection of this deed and bond for title, that the land intended to be conveyed thereby is correctly described therein, and it is therefore an ordinary case of a grantor conveying land to which he has no title. In such case, the grantee must look to his covenant of warranty for money compensation, and can not have other land *Page 12 of his warrantor set aside to him. Arnold v. Cauble, 49 Tex. 527 [49 Tex. 527]; Koenigheim v. Miles, 67 Tex. 113 [67 Tex. 113]; Willis Bro. v. Robinson, this day decided by us [ante, p. 7].

The judgment of the court below is affirmed.

Affirmed.