108 S.W. 1048 | Tex. App. | 1908
The suit was to try the title to the Nancy Gowen survey of one league and one labor of land in Liberty and Hardin Counties. It was commenced by a petition filed in the District Court of Liberty County, September 16, 1903. Some of plaintiffs *449 claimed title as the heirs, and others claimed as grantees of the heirs of Nancy Gowen, deceased. The defendant Arch McDonald claimed title to the northwest quarter of the survey as a purchaser from Nancy Gowen's heirs. As to the remainder of the survey, said McDonald and the other defendants and certain parties who had intervened in the suit claimed title under deeds executed by Isaiah Fields as administrator of the estate of Nancy Gowen, deceased. By agreement of the parties the venue of the suit was changed from Liberty to Harris County, where, by a further agreement of the parties, judgment was rendered for plaintiffs for 600-1151 of the northwest quarter of the survey and for the defendant Arch McDonald for the remaining 551-1151 of said quarter; and where on a trial had February 28, 1907, judgment was rendered in favor of certain of the defendants and interveners for the remainder of the land. From the judgment so rendered appellants, plaintiffs below, prosecute this appeal.
In their carefully and ably prepared brief appellants insist that the certificate by virtue of which the land in controversy was surveyed and patented was not a part of the estate of Nancy Gowen, deceased, but as a donation to was the property of her heirs; and that therefore the conveyances made by her administrator could not pass title to the land to the parties under whom appellees claim.
It appears from the record that Nancy Gowen, then a widow, with her youngest child in 1827 emigrated to Texas, from Louisiana, and in 1832, while residing on the land in controversy, died. It does not appear that while residing in Texas she took any steps towards complying with the laws then in force, under the provisions of which she might have been entitled to a grant of land.
Section 10 of the general provisions of the Constitution of the Republic of Texas, declared that "all persons (Africans, the descendants of Africans and Indians excepted) who were residing in Texas on the day of the Declaration of Independence, shall be considered citizens of the Republic, and entitled to all the privileges of such. All citizens now living in Texas, who have not received their portion of land in like manner as colonists, shall be entitled to their land in the following proportion and manner: Every head of a family shall be entitled to one league and labor of land. . . . Orphan children whose parents were entitled to land under the colonization laws of Mexico, and who now reside in the Republic, shall be entitled to all the rights of which their parents were possessed at the time of their death."
February 1, 1838, the Board of Land Commissions for Liberty County issued a certificate, numbered 94, reciting: "Whereas, proof has been made to us that Nancy Gowen emigrated to Texas in the year 1827, had a family, died in the year 1832, and has heirs now living; therefore, this is to certify that the said Nancy Gowen was entitled under the laws to one league and labor of land." By virtue of this certificate the land in controversy was surveyed and fieldnotes thereof returned to the General Land Office in 1838, and on January 28, 1842, a patent thereto was issued to the heirs of Nancy Gowen.
For the purposes of this suit, the recitals in the certificate must, we think, be regarded as conclusively establishing that Nancy Gowen *450
during her lifetime, as an emigrant to Texas and as the head of a family, had become entitled to the quantum of land specified therein, and that at the date of the adoption of the Constitution she had heirs residing in the Republic. (Walters v. Jewett,
We think it is true, as appellants contend it is, that in the absence of a compliance by her with other requirements of the laws then in force, merely by her emigration to and residence in Texas while it was a Mexican state, Nancy Gowen did not acquire a right to the land of which the courts of the Republic could take cognizance, or which the political department of the Republic was under any legal obligation to respect. As a logical sequence it would follow that her heirs by descent from her took no estate in the land, or the right to it, which the courts or the political department of the Republic were under any legal obligation to respect. But while, because it was an imperfect, inchoate right, the Republic when it succeeded to the sovereign power, lawfully might have refused to recognize her right or the right of her heirs through her, it did not see proper to do so. Instead, when it declared that "orphan children whose parents were entitled to land under the colonization laws of Mexico, and who now reside in the Republic, shall be entitled to all the rights of which their parents were possessed at the time of their death," it recognized as existing and worthy of enforcement the parents' rights and provided for their enforcement in favor of the orphan child. The rights so bestowed upon the child did not rest upon an obligation of any kind to the child, but upon an obligation to the child's parents. The latter's rights accrued upon their emigration to Texas. (Babb v. Carroll,
In Fishback v. Young,
In Pendleton v. Shaw, 18 Texas Civ. App. 439[
The reasoning of the court in the Fishback case seems to be applicable to the facts of this one; and keeping in view property rights which we must take it for granted have accrued on the faith of a decision made so long ago, we think it must be regarded as conclusive of the question here. While the report of the Pendleton case does not so state, the certificate there in question must have been issued under the *452 provision quoted of the Constitution of the Republic. Assuming that it was so issued, we are unable to see how it can be distinguished from this case.
The same ruling seems to have been made by the court in Soye v. Maverick,
Having reached the conclusion that appellant's contention that the certificate and the land patented by virtue of it was not assets of Nancy Gowen's estate and as such subject to administration, must be overruled, it would be useless to enter into an extended discussion of the authorities relied upon to support it. It is believed no case will be found where it has been held that a certificate issued by a Board of Land Commissioners under the provision in question of the Constitution of the Republic was not assets of the decedent's estate, and as such subject to his debts.
But briefly reviewing the cases relied on by appellants, we may say that in Leonard v. Rives,
By a deed dated November 5, 1840, I. S. Fields as administrator of the estate of Nancy Gowen, deceased, undertook to convey the east one-half of the league and labor of land to Barkley Townsend. This deed was admitted as evidence over appellants' objection on the ground (1) that it did not appear that the probate court had authorized the administrator to make the sale, and (2) that the sale as made did not appear to have been reported to and to have been confirmed by said court.
The deed objected to contained this recital: "Whereas by an order of the Hon. Probate Court for the County of Liberty, empowering Isaiah Fields, administrator of the estate of Nancy Gowen, deceased, to sell and convey land belonging to the estate of the said Nancy Gowen, deceased, for certain purposes in said order and fully to do and perform the things therein specified and set forth," etc.
It was admitted on the trial that the court house in Liberty County, where the administration on Nancy Gowen's estate had been pending, with all the deed and probate records of that county, had been destroyed by fire in 1874.
It seems from a certified statement made by the Comptroller, forming a part of the record, that appellees and their vendors claiming under the administrator's deeds had rendered the land for taxation since 1850. It does not appear that appellants before the institution of this suit had made any effort to enforce their claim to the land. Fields, the administrator, was a son-in-law of Nancy Gowen, having married her daughter. The date of his death is not shown in the record, but it appears that at the date of the trial of appellants' suit he had been dead many years.
On the facts stated we are of the opinion that the deed properly was admitted as evidence, and that it was sufficient to pass to Townsend the title in Nancy Gowen's estate to the east one-half of the league and labor of land. The failure to recite in the deed that the sale as made by the administrator had been reported to and confirmed by the court, even if such confirmation under the laws then existing had been necessary to its validity, would not have affected the validity of the sale. Its validity did not depend upon recitals in the administrator's deed, but upon the existence of facts authorizing it as made. Those facts properly would have been shown by the probate records of Liberty County, and, if those records had been in existence, must have been shown in support of the deed. But without fault on the part of appellees those records had been destroyed; and had every requirement of the law to validate the sale been scrupulously complied with, they had been deprived of the means of showing such compliance. During the thirty-four years following the date of the administrator's sale while those records were in existence, no question as to the validity of the sale appears to have been made, and more than sixty years had elapsed from the date of that sale before appellants' suit attacking it was instituted. Under such circumstances we think it ought to be presumed *454
in the absence of proof to the contrary, that every requirement of the law necessary to the validity of the sale was complied with. (White v. Jones,
By a deed dated April 1, 1848, Fields as administrator, undertook to convey to Chas. L. Cleveland the southwest quarter of the league. This deed was admitted as evidence over appellants' objection, on grounds similar to those urged to the admissibility of the administrator's deed to Townsend. The deed recited the order of the probate court of Liberty County directing the sale to be made, the administrator's report of the sale as made by him, and the order of the court directing him to make a deed conveying the land to the purchaser. The orders of the court were not as full and specific as properly they might have been, but nevertheless we think furnish sufficient support for the administrator's deed as against the collateral attack made on same by the plaintiffs.
In view of the conclusions reached, that the land was assets of Nancy Gowen's estate and as such subject to administration, and that the administrator's deeds were sufficient to pass to parties under whom defendants and interveners claimed, title to the east half and southwest quarter of the survey, the other objections urged by appellants to the judgment need not be noticed.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Writ of error refused.