158 S.W. 208 | Tex. App. | 1913
This is an action of trespass to try title by the appellee for recovery of four sections of free school land in Presidio county, filed May 28, 1912. The premises were sold and awarded by the Commissioner of the General Land Office to Moses Jiner, as an actual settler, on December 8, 1906. By deed dated December 30, 1907, Jiner conveyed the same to Salvador Chavira. The conveyance was duly recorded and forwarded by the vendee to the Commissioner of the General Land Office, together with his affidavit and purchase-money obligations, for filing and substitution as purchaser direct from the state, as provided by article 5436, Revised Statutes of 1911, and article 4218k, Revised Statutes of 1895. These documents were received by the Commissioner on January 4, 1908, and he thereupon filed in his office the conveyance but refused to file the other papers, and on February 18, 1908, returned the affidavit and substitute obligations to Chavira. On February 17, 1908, the Commissioner canceled the sale and award of the land to Jiner for alleged failure to settle upon, occupy, and improve same, as by law required, and indorsed such act of forfeiture upon Jiner's obligations, as provided by articles 5423-5425, Revised Statutes of 1911. Chavira died November 19, 1908, and on August 9, 1911, an affidavit to that effect, in due form, was filed in the General Land Office. No legal action was ever taken by Chavira to compel the Land Commissioner to reinstate the sale to Jiner or to compel him to retain and file the affidavit and substitute obligations aforesaid. In the year 1910 Aniseta Chavira, surviving wife, and the children and heirs of Salvador conveyed the premises to R. R. Smith, who, in turn, conveyed same to appellee by deed dated May 10, 1911. After the forfeiture of the sale to Jiner, the lands were reappraised and placed upon the market by the Land Commissioner, and on March 29, 1912, same were awarded by him to appellant upon his applications to purchase filed February 8, 1912. The cause was submitted upon special issues, and the Jury found that Jiner had settled and lived upon the land, as required by law, until his conveyance to Chavira, and that Chavira settled and lived upon the same, as by law required, from the date of his purchase from Jiner until his death, and upon these findings judgment was rendered in appellee's favor for an undivided one-half interest in the premises; the same being the interest which had been conveyed by the children and heirs of Salvador.
Appellant submits that under the provision of article 5436 a vendee of the original purchaser of free school land, in order to acquire title thereto, must be substituted as a purchaser direct from the state by the Commissioner of the General Land Office, and that since Chavira's affidavit and obligations were not accepted and filed by the Land Commissioner he was therefore never substituted for Jiner, and had no title. In Payne v. Cox, 143 S.W. 336, it was held that the vendee of the original purchaser who bought prior to the expiration of the three years' occupancy need not file his transfer, affidavit, and substitute obligations in the General Land Office; that, if he in fact complied with the law relative to occupancy and improvements, he acquired title, notwithstanding his failure to have himself substituted. Under the view which we have of the law, it is unnecessary for us to pass upon the question decided in that case, and for the purpose of this case it may be conceded that the statute does require substitution when the required occupancy has not been completed, and that third persons as distinguished from the state may properly raise the question and *210
avail themselves of the consequences of such failure. In the instant case the jury by its finding has affirmatively established that Jiner and Chavira both complied with the law relative to occupancy. Unless there had, in fact, been a failure to so occupy, the Commissioner was without authority to forfeit upon that ground; and, the jury having found that there was no such failure, the attempted act of forfeiture had no force or effect whatever. Johnson v. Bibb,
It is suggested that Chavira should have taken steps to compel the Commissioner to retain and file the papers. Waiving the question of whether any adequate remedy exists by which the Commissioner could have been compelled so to do, it Is a sufficient answer to the suggestion to merely repeat that the right of substitution was not dependent upon his retaining and filing the documents, and hence no necessity for Chavira to take any steps to compel him to do so. It is further suggested that Rawls cannot recover and has no title to the land because he has never been substituted as a purchaser from the state, and as a matter of fact could not become a substitute purchaser because he has recovered only an undivided one-half interest in the land and the right of substitution as to such one-half interest does not exist.
The death of Chavira dispensed with further occupancy, and, as intimated above, it is not necessary that a substitution be effected after the maturity of the occupancy. Taylor v. Burke,
What has been said disposes of all the various contentions predicated upon the theory that there was no privity between the state and Chavira, and that there is none between the state and Rawls. We are referred to the Acts of 1905 (articles 5458-5459, Revised Statutes of 1911), and various decisions of our Supreme Court construing the same, but we are unable to perceive the applicability in any respect of the statute and authorities cited, under the facts disclosed by this record.
Upon the trial certain witnesses by depositions testified where Jiner and Chavira resided during the time they were the owners of the premises in controversy; their answers to the interrogatories propounded being that they lived in the town of Marfa. To the answers of the witnesses it was objected that the same was a conclusion, and the objection was sustained. Ordinarily there would be no objection to a witness being permitted to state where a party's residence was; but, where the controlling and decisive issue in the case is the place of residence, then necessarily to permit a witness to so testify would be to permit him to state his own conclusion as to the very issue which it was the duty of the jury to decide, and the court properly excluded the answers.
It appears from the evidence, and in response to a special issue submitted, the jury found that prior to his marriage with Aniseta the said Salvador had married one Petra Mata, who, it also appears, was living at the time of trial. The question of whether or not there had been a dissolution of this *211 prior marriage, therefore, became a material inquiry, but no issue in this respect was submitted to the jury and no such submission was requested. No evidence was offered to show that there had been no divorce.
Upon special verdict an issue not submitted and not requested to be submitted is governed by article 1985, Revised Statutes of 1911, which provides that: "Upon appeal or writ of error, an issue not submitted and not requested by a party to the cause, shall be deemed as found by the court in such manner as to support the judgment; provided, there be evidence to sustain such a finding." It appears that about 1884, which was some years after the separation of Salvador and Petra, Aniseta and Salvador were married in due form by a Catholic priest, and that they lived together as man and wife until Salvador's death in 1908, and that he recognized as his own the children born of Aniseta. Under such circumstances, the presumption is that the prior marriage of Salvador and Petra had been dissolved by divorce, and that the second marriage was valid and the children begotten by the parties their lawful heirs. If there had been no divorce, the burden of proving this negative fact was upon appellant. Carroll v. Carroll,
Appellee pleaded his title specially, and averred that he claimed under the heirs of Salvador Chavira. The premises belonged to the community estate of Salvador and Aniseta and the interest of Aniseta was in her own right, and not as an heir. Deed from Aniseta, however, was offered in evidence. Judgment was rendered in appellee's favor for an undivided one-half interest, the same being the interest acquired from the children and heirs of Salvador, and it was further ordered that he recover possession of the entire premises. By cross-assignment appellee contends that he should have recovered the entire title as well as exclusive possession. As we understand the correct rule, the owner of an undivided interest in lands as against a trespasser is entitled to the exclusive possession, and upon recovery of his undivided interest he is entitled to judgment further for such possession. We can conceive of no theory upon which judgment could properly be rendered in his favor for the complete title when, in fact, he is not the owner thereof. In certain cases cited by appellee there are expressions broad enough to support such a view, but they are regarded as being somewhat loose and inaccurate, and it is not believed that it was intended to hold that more should be permitted than recovery of the interest owned together with exclusive possession of the whole. Whatever may be the proper construction of these authorities, they are inapplicable here. Appellee having pleaded his title specially, he was by a well-defined rule confined and restricted to the title pleaded, and in the judgment he was therefore properly limited in his recovery to the one-half interest in the title acquired from the children and heirs, together with exclusive possession of the whole. In the cases cited no such question of pleading was involved, and they are therefore not in point, even if it be conceded that they are authority for the broad proposition that the owner of an undivided interest as against a trespasser can recover the entire title as well as exclusive possession.
The principle here recognized would not be applicable if the land had been patented. In such case the entire legal title would have been vested in Salvador, subject to the wife's equitable title to an undivided one-half interest, and the children and heirs of Salvador would have inherited the entire legal title. Patty v. Middleton,
The cross-assignment of error is therefore overruled, and the judgment is in all respects affirmed.