98 S.W.2d 447 | Tex. App. | 1936
M. T. Cole, as plaintiff, brought this suit in the district court of Gregg county in trespass to try title against W. J. Capíes as defendant. To this action the defendant answered and by cross-action pleaded title to the land involved which is 39.5 acres known as the “Little A. Park Survey” located in Gregg county. The plaintiff answered the cross-action by general demurrer, general denial, and plea of not guilty, and took a nonsuit as to his cause of action for the land. The parties went to trial before the court without a jury upon the cross-action of defendant, and, at the close of the evidence and argument of counsel, the court entered judgment against defendant on his cross-action. From this judgment the defendant has prosecuted a writ of error to this court.
Plaintiff in error’s, as well as defendant in error’s, claim of title to the land is by virtue of an act passed by the Forty-Second Legislature known as House Bill No. 358 (chapter 271 [see Vernon’s Ann.Civ. St. art. 5421c]). By the terms of this act all lands heretofore set apart to the pub-' lie free school funds 'and all the unappropriated and unsold domain of whatever character, except riverbeds, lakes, and bays, are made subject to control and sale according to the provisions of the act. The defendant in error, M. T. Cole, on June 17, 1931, made application to the Commissioner of the General Land Office to purchase the land, and a patent was issued to him on August 19, 1931. Plaintiff in error, W. J. Capíes, on September 10, 1931, filed with the County Surveyor of Gregg County an application for a survey of the land for the purpose of purchasing, or, in the alternative, for leasing it for ’ oil and gas purposes. This application was thereafter filed in the General Land Office on January 7, 1932, and was rejected by the Land Commissioner on Setember 21, 1933, for the reason that( the land had already been patented to M. T. Cole, defendant in error.
Plaintiff in error’s controlling assignment of error is to the effect that at the time defendant in error filed his application with the Land Commissioner and at the time the patent was issued to him
Plaintiff in error makes the proposition that the land involved at the time of defendant in error’s application had not been legally surveyed, and, therefore, was not subject to his application to purchase the land, but was subject to plaintiff in error’s application to lease the land for oil and gas purposes. We do not pass upon the validity of the survey for the reason that the patent is evidence of title to the land in defendant in error, and plaintiff in error could recover the land only upon a showing of a prior legal or equitable right to it, which he has wholly failed to do. Woods v. Durrett, 28 Tex. 429, 430.
Finding no error in the record, the judgment is affirmed.