17 S.W. 843 | Tex. | 1891
A re-examination of this case satisfies this court that the disposition heretofore made of it on the report of the Commission of Appeals was erroneous, and the motion for rehearing will be sustained. *488
The action was brought by the heirs of M.B. Skerrett to recover 1209 1/2 acres of land patented to Thomas Price on November 6, 1874, and appellants other than Mrs. Ralston claim through regular chain of title from the patentee.
There is no statement of facts, but from the conclusions of fact found by the court it appears that M.B. Skerrett was a volunteer soldier in the army of the Republic of Texas, and under the Act of December 14, 1837, was entitled to a headright of one-third of a league of land, and that under the right conferred by that act an unconditional certificate issued to him on April 5, 1841. This certificate was issued by the proper authority in Travis County, and was numbered 36, but was never approved by the land board nor established by suit. On July 8, 1849, Skerrett conveyed this certificate, together with the land on which it was then located, to Robins Co., by a deed which warranted the title to the certificate as well as the land on which it was located, and this deed recited a consideration of $500 paid. On May 30, 1866, Robins Co. conveyed that certificate and the land on which it had been located to Horace W. Robins. Under a Special Act of the Legislature passed April 26, 1873, the Commissioner of the General Land Office issued to M.B. Skerrett a certificate for one-third of a league of land as his headright, and this Horace W. Robins conveyed to Thomas Price, on June, 28, 1873.
The certificate last named is that by virtue of which the land in controversy was surveyed and patented to Price, and so much of the special act under which it was issued as has any application to it is as follows:
"Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Texas: That the Commissioner of the General Land Office be and he is hereby authorized and required to issue the following named land certificate, to-wit, * * * to M.B. Skerrett, one-third of a league headright, to which he is entitled as a volunteer, in lieu of No. 36, issued in Travis County."
Under the former decisions of this court that act was inoperative for want of power in the Legislature, under the Constitution then in force, to enact it. Bacon v. Russell,
On March 31, 1883, the Legislature passed the following act:
"Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Texas: That all surveys and patents by virtue of headright or bounty warrants issued under special laws enacted after March 31, 1870, and prior to April 11, 1867, to which there is no valid legal objection other than that such special laws are supposed to be in conflict with the Constitution then in force, are hereby validated and confirmed, and declared to be as binding upon the State as they otherwise would be if such special laws had been permitted by the Constitution; provided, that if such head-right or bounty certificate had been forfeited under existing laws by location and survey on appropriated land, this act shall not be construed *489 to revive the same; provided further, this act shall only apply to soldiers and heirs and actual settlers of Texas and their vendees to whom lands have been granted." Gen. Laws 1883, p. 38.
On the construction of this act depends the rights of the parties. It will be observed that this act validates allsurveys and patents by virtue of certificates issued under special laws enacted between the dates named, in so far as their invalidity depended on want of power in the Legislature to pass the special laws, and they are declared to be asbinding upon the State as they otherwise would be if suchspecial laws had been permitted by the Constitution, unless under one of the provisos they were excluded from the operation of the act.
The effect of this act is to give vitality to such surveys and patents as could be covered by the act from the time it took effect, and there is no fact shown which under the first proviso would withdraw the survey and patent in question from the validating operation of the act. This all parties claiming through M.B. Skerrett must concede, for otherwise none of them have any right. M.B. Skerrett died a short time before the Act of April 26, 1873, was passed, and it did not direct that a certificate issue to his heirs or assignee, but only to him; but it is believed that the Act of March 31, 1883, cures any invalidity which might result from the fact that he died before the passage of either of the acts, for the validating act recognizes the rights of heirs and vendees.
The real question in this case is, To whom does the benefit of the validating act inure? Appellees contend that it inures solely to their benefit as heirs of M.B. Skerrett, and appellants contend that it inures to those who claim through regular chain of transfer the original right M.B. Skerrett had to a headright grant.
In the case of McKinney v. Brown,
In the case of Hines v. Thorn,
The special act in question does not belong to the class first referred to, and the inquiry arises whether there is anything in the Act of March 31, 1883, which shows that it was not intended thereby to vest title in such persons as may have purchased from M.B. Skerrett his original claim to land. There was no legal obligation resting upon the State to give the relief given by the act last referred to, and it may be said that it was in this respect gratuitous; but it does not follow from this that the heirs of Skerrett became entitled to the land patented under the certificate issued under the Special Act of April 26, 1873; and if there be that in the Act of March 31, 1883, indicating that purchasers of the original claim of Skerrett should take under it, then so it must be.
The body of the act last referred to refers only tosurveys and patents by virtue of headright and bounty warrants, which at all times were issued only to soldiers and actual settlers; and it may be conceded, for the purposes of this case, if nothing further appeared in the act, that as the act confirmed by it directed the certificate to issue to M.B. Skerrett alone, mentioning neither heirs nor vendees, that the latter could not take under it.
The last proviso is as follows: "This act shall only apply to soldiers and heirs and actual settlers of Texas and their vendees to whom lands have been granted." The purpose of this was not to declare the character of claims the act was intended to confirm, for this had been done *491 in the former part of the act, but was for the purpose of determining who should be beneficiaries under the act, as well as to require proof, outside of the acts confirmed, that the persons who were to take benefit were either soldiers or actual settlers of Texas, or the heirs or vendees of such soldiers or settlers.
In Blum v. Looney,
The word "vendees," used in the proviso, we are of opinion means vendees of a soldier, actual settler, or of the heirs of such soldier or actual settler, and there is nothing in the proviso which confines the word to such persons as may have purchased from the soldier, actual settler, or the heirs of either, after the passage of the Act of April 26, 1873. The validation or confirmation is to the vendees of those "to whom lands have been granted; " or, in other words, to the vendees of those to whom the acts validated declared lands should be given, if the vendor was shown to have been a soldier or actual settler of Texas entitled to such grants at one time under the laws regulating that matter, or the heir of such soldier or actual settler.
In an act validating a grant to a person once entitled to such a grant, who had lost that right when the grant was made, the declaration that it should inure to the benefit of the person originally entitled, his heirs, or vendees, would necessarily give title to the vendees of the person through whom the heir could take by inheritance, for the sale would *492 leave nothing for the heir to inherit; and under such an act the vendee of an heir would of course take.
There is further in the Act of March 31, 1883, that which shows that it was intended thereby not only to bestow a gratuity in validating a grant which the beneficiary had no legal right to demand, but to recognize and revive the original right, and this the Legislature had power to do. Blum v. Looney,
If we may look to the Act of April 26, 1873, for the intention of the Legislature, which it would seem proper to do, because the confirming act in effect validates that, except that it imposes the conditions and restrictions found in the latter act, then the intent of the Legislature in this respect would be clear, for the former act directed a certificate to issue "to M.B. Skerrett (for) one-third of a league headright to which he is entitled as a volunteer, in lieu of number 36, issued in Travis County." The original certificate numbered 36, and issued in Travis County, evidenced the original right, and it would seem that a certificate in lieu of that would but evidence the same right.
In Bacon v. Russell, it did not appear that the latter under any law, prior to the act under which the certificate issued, was ever entitled to land; but prior to the passage of the Act of March 31, 1883, the land which had been patented to Russell by virtue of the certificate issued under the special law was sold under execution against him. And in the case of Bates v. Bacon,
It was suggested in the opinion in that case that the Act of March 31, 1883, did not confer right on assigns, and there would be good reason for holding that the Legislature never intended to confer on purchasers at sales under execution something that could not pass thereby directly nor by estoppel; and it was said, that "it was probably considered that the title would pass to the assignee by estoppel without legislation in all instances in which it was wise that it should pass. It certainly was not politic to pass to the purchaser at execution sale any *493 claim the defendant in execution may have had on the charity or liberality of the sovereign."
In the case before us, Skerrett conveyed by a deed with general warranty the original certificate, and we are of opinion that persons holding through that conveyance are entitled to hold as vendees, and that his heirs can not recover.
Mrs. Ralston has not appealed; but had she, it is evident she would not be entitled to recover, for she caused the land to be located by another certificate after it had been patented to Price.
The judgment of the District Court will be reversed; and as the case was tried without a jury, judgment will be here rendered that plaintiffs take nothing by their action, and that defendants recover costs of the District Court as well as of this court. It is so ordered.
Reversed and rendered.
Delivered December 11, 1891.