41 S.W.2d 412 | Tex. | 1931
After mature consideration, the Supreme Court has decided that the opinion in this case of Presiding Judge Harvey for Section A of the Commission of Appeals was entirely correct. *55 Judge Harvey's opinion states the case and recommends that it be determined as follows:
"On February 1, 1838, a certificate for one labor of land was issued to A. Huston. By endorsement in writing, dated July 13, 1839, signed by Huston, and acknowledged by him on July 15, 1839, he transferred the certificate to Robert Carradine. The certificate and transfer were on file in the General Land Office when the patent issued, and still are on file there. But they never were recorded in Sabine County. On September 15, 1848, patent was issued, on the certificate, to 'A. Huston and his assigns forever,' for one labor of land in Sabine County. On January 3, 1888, the administrator of the estate of A. Huston, deceased, conveyed the land to S.W. Blount, under proper court orders. Blount paid a valuable consideration for the land, without notice of the transfer of the certificate by Huston to Carradine, unless the fact of the instrument of transfer being on file in the General Land Office charged him with such notice. The plaintiffs in error are the heirs of Robert Carradine, and seek to recover the land from Blount in this suit of trespass to try title. Blount defends upon the ground of innocent purchaser.
"Whether the certificate was located before or after its transfer to Carradine does not appear from the evidence. If it had already been located, its transfer was a conveyance of land (Simpson v. Chapman,
1 "We are of the opinion, however, that if the certificate remained unlocated at the time of its transfer to Carradine, and therefore effected a transfer of a mere personal right not then subject to registration, that fact is of no material effect here. The certificate certainly was located at some time prior to the issuance of the patent in 1848. When located it ceased to be a chattel and became an instrument evidencing title to land. As said in Simpson v. Chapman, 'Instead of being merely personal property of itself, it is, like a deed, the evidence of title to the land upon which it was located.' When the patent issued, the written transfer of the certificate to Carradine *56
became evidence of the legal title being in him, by virtue of that transfer, as well as the equitable title which had vested in him when the certificate was located. Cagle v. Sabine Valley Timber Lumber Co.,
"The facts of the case of Bogart v. Moody, 35 Texas Civ. App. 1[
"It would seem that the decision in the case of Leonard v. Benford Lumber Co.,
"We conclude that the transfer of the unlocated land certificate from Huston to Carradine, conveying as it did an inchoate right to land, took on the character of a conveyance of land, within the purview of Article 6824, when the inchoate right matured into an equitable title to specific land by the location of the certificate. The instrument then became evidence of title to the land itself; and subsequent purchasers of the land were not charged with constructive notice of the instrument by virtue of its being in the Land Office Files.
"The case of Dodge v. Littler,
"The opinion of the Commission of Appeals in the case of Kenley v. Robb,
"The writ of error in the present case was granted because of alleged conflict of the holding of the Court of Civil Appeals herein, with the decision in the case of Dodge v. Littler and that in Kenley v. Robb. For this reason, we have taken pains to show that no conflict really exists, when the facts in those cases are considered.
"We recommend that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals,
We deem it necessary to add but little to the above opinion.
2 The substance of article 6627 of the Revised Statutes has been the law of Texas since the enactment of section 4 of the act approved February 5, 1840. 2 Gammel's Laws of Texas, p. 328. By this article "all bargains, sales and other conveyances whatever of any land * * * shall be void as to all creditors and subsequent purchasers for a valuable consideration without notice, unless they shall be acknowledged or proved and filed with the clerk, to be recorded as required by law." After the land in controversy was located, a transfer of the certificate on which the patent issued was such an instrument as the statute permitted and required to be recorded by the county clerk. Unless duly recorded in the office of the county clerk, such a transfer was therefore void as to subsequent purchasers for value and without notice, under the plain terms of the statute. Leonard v. Benford Lumber Co.,
The Supreme Court has consistently construed the statute as not requiring patents and grants to be recorded, saying in one opinion: "While patents are admitted to record, there is *58
no law that requires them to be recorded in the county where the land is situated. Patents and grants from the government are neither embraced within the language nor spirit of article 4988, Paschal's Digest, which declares deeds and other instruments void, as against creditors and subsequent purchasers without notice, unless they shall have been acknowledged or proved and lodged with the clerk for record. * * * A patent is notice to the world; the record of it is in the general land office." Evitts v. Roth,
"If, under these circumstances, a purchaser from the patentee must at his peril examine into the old records of the general land office to ascertain if there be any latent defects in the chain of title to the certificate upon which the patent issues, then this, the highest character of our land titles, will prove but 'a mockery, a delusion, and a snare.' " Wimberly v. Pabst,
The court adhered to these earlier decisions in Lewis v. Johnson,
"The statute nowhere makes the filing in the general land office of the transfer of a land certificate, or of land, to have the same effect as registration in the proper county, and in the absence of a statute giving such effect to the filing of such a paper in the general land office, such effect can not be given to it. To meet such a case, and to give persons who have filed in the general land office any deed or other paper affecting title to land, a means by which such papers may be placed on record in the county in which the land is situated, the law provides that copies of such deeds or other conveyances may be recorded. * * * The sole claims of the appellants on this appeal are, that the appellee had notice of the conveyance to W. C. Adams, from the fact that it was filed in the general land office and that he is not entitled to protection as a bona fide purchaser, and as neither of these can be sustained, the judgment of the district court will be affirmed. It is so ordered." *59
Following Judge Stayton's opinion in Lewis v. Johnson, supra, the Texarkana Court of Civil Appeals stated:
"It is also the law that the mere filing in the General Land Office of a conveyance of the land or of the certificate by virtue of which it had been or was to be surveyed will not operate, as would the filing of such conveyance with the county clerk of the county in which the land is situated, as constructive notice thereof to a subsequent purchaser." Clark v. Hoover, 51 Texas Civ. App. 181[
Not only did the Supreme Court deny a writ of error in Clark v. Hoover but in the following cases wherein identical holdings were made: Bogart v. Moody, 35 Texas Civ. App. 1[
3 In view of the repeated re-enactment of the statute, after its construction by the Supreme Court, we are bound to continue that construction and apply the statute as heretofore.
The expressions in the opinion of the Commission in Kenley v. Robb,
The judgments of the district court and Court of Civil Appeals are affirmed.