79 S.W. 1088 | Tex. App. | 1904
Appellant brought this suit to recover two sections of school land, one of which had been awarded to him as his home section, February 16, 1900, on application filed in September of the preceding year, and the other as additional land. The home section had been applied for and awarded as dry grazing land at $1 per acre. This award was afterwards canceled by the Land Commissioner on the ground that the land when applied for and awarded to appellant was classified as dry agricultural and appraised at $2 per acre. Appellant undertook to prove that the change in the classification and appraisement from dry grazing at $1 per acre to dry agricultural at $2 per acre was made after his application had been made and accepted, and in order to do so offered a purported copy of the classification and appraisement record kept in the General Land Office, together with testimony of Ed J. Hamner, his attorney, to the effect that he had made the copy from said record, and that it was a correct copy of page 3 of said record as the same stood when the land was applied for and awarded to appellant; that he knew this from personal examinations made in the Land Office prior to the application and subsequent to the award. The evidence was excluded on the objection that the copy was an examined copy and not a certified copy under the hand and seal of the Commissioner of the General Land Office, *26 and "not therefore the best evidence;" and to this ruling error is assigned.
The rule is both ancient and familiar that public records are provable either by certified or examined copies in the absence of a statute making certified copies the only method of proof. 1 Greenl. on Ev., secs. 91, 508, 509. We have a statute on the subject (Rev. Stats., art. 2306) but it does not change the common law rule, which was thus stated by Justice Wheeler in York v. Gregg,
We can not agree with appellee Lowrance that the judgment should be affirmed, notwithstanding the exclusion of the evidence as to the classification and appraisement of the land, because appellant failed to prove that he was an actual settler when he applied for the land. This fact, if proved, would have been unavailing without the indispensable proof of classification and appraisement. Besides, the making of the award, which was canceled on another ground, would seem to raise an inference of actual settlement, though we would suggest *27 that appellant proceed upon the next trial as if no award had ever been made to him.
For the error discussed the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
The motion is therefore overruled.
Overruled. *28