New Mexico Code § 15-1-1

ANNOTATIONS ANNOTATIONS
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Compiler's notes. — The county of Santa Ana, which is referred to in this section, was
created by Act of Jan. 9, 1852, p. 292 (C.L. 1865, ch. 42, § 8), which read: "The
boundaries of the county of Santa Ana are as follows: on the east and north by the
boundaries of the county of Santa Fe; on the south from a point above the last houses
of Bernalillo, where the lands previously known as those belonging to the Indians of
Santa Ana are divided, drawing a direct line toward the east over the mountain until it
reaches the parallel dividing the counties of San Miguel and Santa Fe, from said
dividing point of the lands of the Indians of Santa Ana, drawing a line westward crossing
the Rio del Norte, and terminating with the boundaries of the territory, are the
boundaries of this county."
The county of Santa Ana was abolished by Laws 1876, ch. 8, § 1, which read: "The
county of Santa Ana in this territory is hereby abolished; and all that portion of the
territory of New Mexico heretofore embraced and included within the limits of the said
county of Santa Ana, is hereby incorporated into and made a part of the county of
Bernalillo."
Bernalillo county, which originally touched both the east and west borders of the
territory, has been greatly reduced in size since its creation.
The present boundaries of Bernalillo county may be as follows: commencing at the
southwest corner of section 34, township 8 north, range 5 east; thence east [description
from 4-30-1 NMSA 1978] on the township line between townships 7 and 8 north to the
southeast corner of township 8 north, range 7 east; thence north on the range line
between ranges 7 and 8 east to the northeast corner of township 8 north, range 7 east,
on the second standard parallel north; thence west on said standard parallel to the
southeast corner of township 9 north, range 6 east; thence north on the range line
between ranges 6 and 7 east [description from 4-30-1 NMSA 1978 and 4-26-1 NMSA
1978] to the northeast corner of township 11 north of range 6 east; thence west
[description from 4-23-1 NMSA 1978] on the township line between townships 11 and
12 north to the boundary line of Valencia county [described in 4-1-1 NMSA 1978 as
being on the straight line running from the Quelites del Rio Puerco (an old community
on the Rio Puerco just below its junction with the Rio San Jose) in the direction of the
Canon of Juan Tafoya]; thence in a south-southeasterly direction along said boundary
line to its intersection with a line directly west from the Bosque de los Pinos (township
line between townships 7 and 8 north); thence east along said township line toward the
Bosque de los Pinos to the center of the Rio Grande; thence following the thread of the
river upstream in a northeasterly direction to a point immediately west of a point
[description from 4-1-2 NMSA 1978] on the east bank of the Rio Grande where the
southern foot of the Loma de Isleta strikes the Rio Grande; thence easterly to the
Canon del Infierno; thence following up the Canon del Infierno to the point where it
crosses the section line between sections 27 and 28 in township 8 north of range 5
east; thence, south along section line to the point of beginning. [The Bernalillo-Valencia
line from the Canon del Infierno (Hell canyon) to the old boundary between the two
counties is not defined by law. The accepted boundary seems to be that described in
the last two clauses above.]
A change in the boundary between Santa Fe and Bernalillo counties was also made by
Laws 1891, ch. 55 (Code 1915, § 1063; C.S. 1929, § 33-102; 1941 Comp., § 15-101, n.)
which read: "After February 25, 1891, the dividing line between the counties of Santa Fe
and Bernalillo shall be as follows: commencing at the southeast corner of township 9
north, of range 11 east, on the second correction line north, according to the United
States public land surveys in New Mexico; thence running west along said correction
line between townships 8 and 9 north, to the southwest corner of township 9 north,
range 7 east, and from thence north along the dividing line between ranges 6 and 7 east
to a point due west of the northwest corner of the tract of land known as the Mesita de
Juana Lopez grant, as established by the surveys made by the government of the
United States; thence due east to said northwest corner; thence due north 1 mile to a
point; thence due west to the said dividing line between ranges 6 and 7 east; thence
north along said dividing line to the northwest corner of the county of Santa Fe as at
present established; it being understood that all of the country adjacent to the above-
described lines, from the point of commencement on the south side and the west side
thereof as far north as the present northern boundary of the county of Bernalillo, shall
hereafter be a part of the county of Bernalillo."
The sections in this article were compiled respectively in art. 1 and art. 25 of ch. 24 of
the 1915 Code. They were not reenacted by their inclusion therein, but were compiled
for convenience. See the 1915 Code, p. 1665.
Cross references. — For boundaries of San Miguel county, see 4-25-1 NMSA 1978.
For creation or change of counties, see 4-33-1 NMSA 1978 et seq.
For change of county seats, see 4-34-1 NMSA 1978 et seq.
For prohibition against local or special laws locating or changing county seats or
changing county lines, except in creating new counties, see N.M. Const., art. IV, § 24.
For removal of county seats, see N.M. Const., art. X, § 3.

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