15 Tex. 453 | Tex. | 1855
This suit was brought by the appellee, as guardian, against the defendants, to recover six hundred and forty acres of land, granted to his wards as the heirs of Edward Dickinson, who was the assignee of George W. Edwards. The title commenced by a constitutional headright certificate
The defendants in the Court below set up possession and permanent improvements in good faith under a tax title for taxes assessed to George W. Edwards for the assessment of 1848. On the trial the Judge charged the jury that they could regard the tax title, on the question of improvements made under a possession in good faith, but not as giving title to the defendants. This charge is believed to be fully as favorable to the defendants as the law would authorize. The defendants, though they assigned this ruling of the Court as error, have not in their brief attempted to sustain the validity of the tax title. The Court erred in this charge, because, if the tax title was invalid, it could give no equity to the holder, and was not a ground on which he could support his suggestion of' improvements in good faith; and so this Court decided in Robson v. Osborn, 13 Tex. R. 298. The plaintiff, however, has not appealed.
It is evident that the tax title wanted validity on several grounds. First, the sale was on an assessment to Edwards, when Edwards never held anything more than a conditional headright certificate for the land ; and secondly the list of defaulters in paying the assessment was not posted up as required by law ; and lastly, the land was not taxable until the uncon
In the assignment of errors it is alleged that the Court ruled the defendant to the burthen of proof to show that the Assessor had complied with the law. It would have been wrong to have so ruled; but we do not find this charge sustained by the record.
The appellants argue that the Court below erred in admitting the patent as evidence, because that, First, it, is.shown on its face, that it was illegal, being issued iivá^or^S^éT^rs of an assignee of a conditional headright teefinncate, law, such certificates were not assignabl^r ffijye ^Aqh uf 4m February, 1854, entitled an Act to authorise the CountynloBros to issue unconditional headright certificaTOsLvj^i^Qg^^iion|l •certificates only have issued, in the 4th Se^fion, expressly Authorizes the issuance to assignees of condition^^ftifimes, •an unconditional one, on the making certain proof, which proof we must presume was made in the case under consideration.
Judgment affirmed.