41 S.W. 477 | Tex. | 1898
Lead Opinion
This was an action of trespass to try title, brought by Marie O. Grandjean against the City of San Antonio, to recover a parcel of real estate lying in said city and claimed by the city as a part of a street.
The city pleaded not guilty, and specially, that at one time the property belonged to the community estate of the plaintiff and Ulysses Grandjean, her husband, and that in a regular proceeding instituted against the husband for the purpose, the property had been condemned as a street and the damages assessed and paid. It also pleaded that after the attempted condemnation and assessment, the plaintiff, with a knowledge of the facts, had received one-half of the sum assessed, Ulysses Grandjean having received the other half. The defendant also made Ulysses Grandjean a party, and among other things prayed for, asked that, in the event the plaintiff should recover, it should have a judgment against him for the money paid him upon the assessment.
The case was tried without a jury, and the court gave judgment for the defendant, without filing conclusions of fact and law. Upon appeal, the Court of Civil Appeals reversed the judgment of the trial court and *432 rendered judgment for the plaintiff for the property and for damages and rents, and that the city take nothing by its cross-action.
The Court of Civil Appeals found as a fact that, at the time of the attempted condemnation, the parcel of land in controversy was the separate property of the plaintiff, — whether correctly or not, in the view we take of the case, it is not necessary to determine. It was admitted that the proceedings for the condemnation of the property as a street, as against Ulysses Grandjean, were regular. The value of the property was assessed upon the condemnation, at $35,000. The treasurer of the city went to the husband, and, in the presence of the wife, tendered the money in payment of the property, but the husband, protesting against the taking of the property, declined to receive the compensation. The wife also declined. There was a conflict in the testimony as to what occurred at the interview, which it is not necessary to discuss in this connection. The report of the commissioners appointed to assess the property was made November 22, 1889. After the tender of the money had been declined, it was placed in bank to the credit of Ulysses Grandjean and Marie O. Grandjean. On the 17th day of December, 1889, Ulysses Grandjean accepted one-half of the sum and gave his receipt therefor. On January 4, 1890, the plaintiff drew her check for the other half and had it placed to her own credit in the bank; and subsequently, during the same year, drew it out in varying sums and appropriated it to her own use. In May, 1894, she and her husband were divorced; and in March, 1895, she brought this suit for the recovery of the property. The question is, can she, under these circumstances, reclaim the property?
If the rights of the parties were to be determined upon the principles governing ordinary conveyances of real estate, the separate property of a married woman, the point would not be difficult to resolve. The rule in this State, as in many other jurisdictions, is that the title of a feme covert to her real estate will neither pass nor be affected by her attempted conveyance, except by a deed duly acknowledged by her upon privy examination and duly certified. Neither a deed not duly acknowledged, nor the reception and appropriation by her of the consideration, nor her subsequent acts showing her acquiescence, nor all these together will estop her from asserting her title. A contrary rule would enable that to be done indirectly, which the statute declares shall be done only by a certain method, and would defeat the purpose of the law. But, does the transaction in question stand upon the footing of an ordinary conveyance? The City of San Antonio does not occupy the position of a private person who has contracted for the purchase of the land of a married woman, and who has paid her the consideration and taken possession of the property. Its attempt was to exercise the power conferred upon it by the State to take the property for the purpose of a street. The right to take private property for public use is necessary to government and inheres in every sovereignty. Whatever may be the theory as to the foundation of the right of eminent domain, *433 everyone holds his property subject to that right. Enlightened governments provide always for compensation to the owner, and in our State, as in many others, the payment of the compensation is made a condition precedent to the taking. But, at last, it is essentially a right to take, and does not involve the necessity of any grant or conveyance on part of the owner, or of any judicial decree. Thompson v. Railway Co., 110 Mo., 161. Statutes for the condemnation of private property to a public use, may provide for compulsory conveyance by the owner or for passing the title by the decree of the tribunal authorized to assess the damages. Such conveyance or decree affords more permanent and satisfactory evidence of the expropriation, but the expropriation is complete without it. For example, when a city to which the power of taking property for a public use has been delegated by the State, through its council, ordains that certain property be taken for a street, and when the compensation has been assessed according to law or has been agreed upon between the authorities of the city and the owner, and has been paid by the former to the latter, the easement is established, and the title of the owner to that extent extinguished.
A private easement, as for a private right of way, even at common law, could only be conveyed by grant; and besides, being an interest in land, it is within the statute of frauds and must be conveyed in writing. Not so with a public way. The owner of land may dedicate a way over it for the use of the public. No writing is necessary to effect this result. When the owner by words or acts has clearly evinced an immediate intention to devote the way permanently to the use of the public, and the offer of dedication has been accepted, however informally, the dedication is complete, and he cannot revoke it. In such a case, it seems to us that there is no conveyance in the proper sense of the word; there is no express grantee, and we think it a fiction to assume, as is assumed by some authorities, that the city, county or quasi-corporation which may be by law entrusted with the control of the way or other easement is the grantee. It is generally said that the dedication operates by way of estoppel. In many cases the law of estoppel applies without doubt. A grantor, by conveying to his grantee a lot in a town or city, and in the description calling for a street upon which it is asserted to abut, may estop himself to deny, as against his grantee, that such a street exists, although the town or city may never accept it as such. On the other hand, we understand the law to be, that when a dedication is offered and accepted, it is complete, even before any act is done by the representative of the public which changes the position for the worse. If work be done upon the way or other easement, there is ground for holding the owner concluded. But it is hard to see how the use by the public of a road which has been tendered for such use, but upon which no labor has been expended, operates to the detriment of the public, and hence it is difficult to find in the facts any element of estoppel. Yet we understand the authorities to agree, that if the tender be unequivocal and the easement be used by the public, even without *434
formal acceptance by the proper authority, the dedication becomes irrevocable. In Oswald v. Grenet,
In cases in which there has been an attempt to condemn, but the proceedings are invalid for want of a compliance with the statute which authorized the condemnation, it is held that the owner, by accepting the condemnation assessed, makes the transaction effectual. Hartshorn v. Potroff,
The fundamental principle we have announced as applicable to this question is involved in those decisions which hold that where a railroad company, without either the consent of the owner or the condemnation of the property, has constructed its track over land of another, and subsequently seeks to condemn it, the owner is not entitled to compensation for the structures placed thereon by the company. Preston v. Railroad Co., *435
Let us apply these principles to the present case. If Mrs. Grandjean had been sui juris when she drew the $17,500 out of the bank, it is clear that she could not reclaim the property. Does the fact of her cover-ture make a difference? Under our law, a married woman's separate property is hers in her own right. This right, except where restrained by statute, carries with it the power of alienation. Under the first section of the Act of April 30, 1846 (Pas. Dig., art. 1003), which applied to the land, slaves and other effects, the separate property of the wife," it was held that the wife, with the consent of her husband, might make a sale of her personal property without formality, provided the contract was not made in writing. Ballard v. Carmichael,
As to the question whether or not a married woman may dedicate *436
her land to a public use, the authorities are not quite clear. Judge Elliott, the author of the work on Roads and Streets, and formerly an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Indiana, says that the decisions of that State leave the matter in doubt. Elliott on Roads and Streets, 102. Some of the cases from that court seem to hold, that, as a general rule, a married woman cannot be estopped to claim her real estate in the absence of an intentional fraud, but in the case of the City of Indianapolis v. Kingsbury,
"That a tenant for years cannot bind his reversioner, by a dedication to public use, must be admitted, but it is not to be maintained that a, married woman may not dedicate her land for a public highway. Joining with her husband she may convey, and, therefore, a dedication, which is but a limited conveyance, may be presumed against her and her husband. Nor is it necessary to a dedication that there has been twenty-one years of adverse enjoyment, though it is to the presumption of a grant, when time alone is relied upon to raise it. Whenever there is an actual giving of land for a public highway, accepted by the public, though there be no deed, the dedication is complete. The period of twenty-one years of enjoyment, after which a presumption of a grant is made, is fixed from analogy to the statute of limitations; and for the same reason for which it is not permitted to add coverture to infancy, in order to avoid the running of the statute, must the fact of Mrs. Schenley's coverture after the expiration of Garrard's lease be of no consequence. The facts of the case, as proved and assumed by the defendants, are, that the street was opened in 1830, and devoted to use as a public highway. Grant that the dedication did not then bind Mrs. Schenley. The street continued open and in constant use until 1851, when the tenant's term expired. Then, instead of disavowing what be had done, instead of closing the street, and resuming her rights as the reversioner, she permitted the street to remain open and used by the public, four or five years longer, until after the grading and paving had been done, until after the costs and expenses had been incurred, and never, until the trial of this cause, has she pretended that it was not a permanent street. Under these circumstances, we cannot doubt, that the jury should have presumed a valid dedication, and that the court was right in so instructing them."
In New York, they have a statute which attempted to authorize the *437
City of New York, in cases in which by the opening of streets fractions of lots were left, to condemn such fractions. The courts held that the statute, if intended to authorize a compulsory taking of such parcels, was unconstitutional; but that the Legislature had the power to authorize the taking by the city, with the owner's consent; and the latter construction was put upon the act. Under that construction it was held, that a married woman had the power to consent to the taking, and that no deed was necessary in such a case to operate a transfer of her property. Embury v. Conner,
If the owner may dedicate his property for a public use by parol without compensation, he may certainly so dedicate it for a consideration paid at the time of the transaction. Rees v. The City of Chicago,
We conclude, that since Mrs. Grandjean elected to take one-half of the sum at which the property had been assessed, which half bad been tendered to her by the city, in satisfaction of her right, she cannot now reclaim the property, and that therefore, the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals ought to be reversed, and that of the District Court ought to be affirmed, and it is ordered accordingly.
Judgment of Court of Civil Appeals reversed. Judgment of District Court affirmed.
Opinion delivered June 24, 1897.
DENMAN, Associate Justice, did not sit in this case.
Counsel for defendant in error filed a motion for rehearing, supported by brief and argument, upon which the written opinion following was rendered.
Addendum
The defendant in error in her motion for a rehearing complains of inaccuracies in the statement of the case made in the opinion of this court, which we deem it proper to correct. The statement complained of is as follows: "On the 17th day of December, 1889, Ulysses Grandjean accepted one-half of the sum and gave his receipt therefor. On January 4, 1890, the plaintiff drew her check for the other half and had it placed to her own credit in the bank and subsequently during the same year drew it out and in various sums and appropriated it to her own use." The statement of the Court of Civil Appeals, from which the above was extracted, is as follows: "Early in the morning of December 3, 1889, the Street Commissioner of the city of San Antonio, acting for and in behalf of the city, tore down and removed the buildings, and the premises were appropriated by the city to its use as a part of St. Mary's street, and have been used by the city exclusively for that purpose continually ever since. The City Treasurer, upon the *438 instruction of the City Attorney, placed the money ($35,000) in the bank to the credit of both parties. This deposit seems to have been made on December 31, 1889, although the following receipt was given for the money, viz: 'San Antonio, Dec. 17, 1889. Received of Ferdinand Herff, City Treasurer of the City of San Antonio, the sum of thirty-five thousand dollars, being the amount deposited to my credit by the said City of San Antonio for the damages allowed me for the condemnation of my property, situated on the northeast corner of Commerce St. and St. Mary's St., and taken for the purpose of widening said St. Mary's Street; said amount being in full of all my claim therefor. (Signed) Ulysses Grandjean.' Appellant was not present when the receipt was given, nor when the deposit was made. The treasurer of the city was not induced to do anything, nor was he in any way misled by what appellant at any time said or did. On January 4, 1890, after the receipt was executed, and the money deposited in bank, the appellant went to the bank, and complained to Mr. Herff, the city treasurer, stating that her husband would squander the money, and she wanted to get her half of it. Upon being informed by Herff that she could draw it if she wanted it, she thereupon drew her check on the bank for $17,500, which was honored by the bank, and the sum of money for which the check was drawn was, by the bank, placed to her individual credit. She afterwards, by a number of checks, drew all this money out; the last check upon it being dated August 1, 1891. The balance of the money was drawn from the bank by appellant's husband."
The case was tried without a jury and the court gave judgment for the defendant without stating the conclusions of law and fact upon which the judgment was based. Under a well-established rule the trial judge must be deemed to have found every fact necessary to support the judgment which there was evidence to establish. The Court of Civil Appeals reversed the judgment and rendered judgment for the appellant — basing their conclusion on the broad proposition, that without a legal condemnation, or a legal conveyance joined in by the husband and duly acknowledged by the wife, the title of the appellant was not divested. If they had reversed the judgment upon any matter of fact upon which the evidence was conflicting the cause should have been remanded for a new trial.
The documentary evidence shows, that the money was drawn from the city treasury to pay Ulysses Grandjean and Marie O. Grandjean; that on the 3rd of December, 1889, it was deposited in bank payable to the order of "Marie Grandjean and Ulysses Grandjean." This is shown by the certificate, issued on that day by the assistant teller of the bank, of a deposit made by the City Treasurer. This certificate was endorsed "credit account of Marie Grandjean or Ulysses Grandjean." But it appears from the books of the bank, that the credit was not entered on the books of the bank until December 31, 1889. This indicates, we think, that the funds were held by the bank as a special deposit, until the parties for whose benefit it was made had agreed to accept the *439 money. The receipt of Ulysses Grandjean of December 17, in connection with other evidence, shows that it was not for money then paid, and there was no evidence of any change of credit on the books of the bank on that date. On December 31, 1889, the deposit was entered to the credit of Ulysses or Marie O. Grandjean," and on the 4th of January next thereafter one-half was drawn out by the husband, and on the same day the wife drew a check for the other half and the same was placed to her credit on the books of the bank. She subsequently drew out the amount at different times; and whether this was within one year or two years after the deposit was made to be her separate credit, is wholly immaterial.
Having made the desired correction with the foregoing additional statement, we have only to add that the difference between the facts as found by the Court of Civil Appeals and the facts as stated by this court should, in our opinion, make no difference in the result of the case. The motion for a rehearing is overruled.
Motion overruled.
Opinion delivered February 7, 1898.
DENMAN, Associate Justice, did not sit.