73 S.W. 1041 | Tex. | 1903
Lead Opinion
On the 5th day of February, 1901, the Attorney-General of the State of Texas instituted this suit against O’Connor in the District Court of the Twenty-sixth District in Travis County to recover from him 19,410 acres of land described in the plaintiff’s .petition and situated in Webb County. The facts of the case are stated by the Court of Civil Appeals as follows:
“The evidence established the fact, that, under the law of 1860, Daniel Ruggles instituted two suits in the District Court of Webb County for the confirmation of the title to two large tracts of land, one of which was designated as the Palafox tract, and the other as the Balconeitas tract. .The suit for the confirmation of the Palafox tract came to trial on the 8th day of January, 1862, and resulted in a judgment in favor of
“The land which was covered by the decree of confirmation of 1862 was patented to Buggies, and the State has not, in any way, questioned the validity of that judgment or of the title of those claiming under Buggies, to the land. The land sued for in this case is located entirely on that portion of the land which the court in its decree of 1862 declined to confirm in favor of Buggies, but it is included within that which purports to have been confirmed to him by the decree of March 13, 1872.”
Upon a hearing before the court judgment was given in favor of the State of Texas for the recovery of the land, which judgment was by the .Court of Civil Appeals reversed and judgment there rendered in favor of O’Connor, from which last judgment this writ of error was granted.
The validity of the judgment entered by the District Court of Webb County on the 13th day of March, 1872, in the case of Buggies v. The State under which defendant in error claims, has heretofore been twice before this court. In the case of Kennedy v. Jarvis, 1 S. W. Rep., 191, the Commission of Appeals reported to the Supreme Court ah opinion in which that judgment was held to be valid, but the Supreme Court expressly declined to approve of that opinion, and subsequently, in the case of Texas-Mexican Railway Company v. Jarvis, 80 Texas, 456, the question was decided by the Supreme Court, holding that judgment to be void. In the latter case the court, speaking by Chief Justice Stayton, said: “In the case of Kennedy v. Jarvis, 1 S. W. Rep., 191, on the judgment now in question, a contrary rule was announced by the Commission of Appeals, but this court declined to express any opinion upon the question and affirmed the judgment of the court below upon some ground not stated.” The unapproved opinions of the Commission of Appeals are not authoritative expressions of the court.
It is claimed that a determination of the question was not necessary to the decision of the Railway Company v. Jarvis, and that the opinion
In Railway Company v. Jarvis, above cited, Chief Justice Stayton announced principles which controlled in the determination of the question then and are equally, applicable now. That opinion rests upon the following propositions of law:
, 1. It was a special proceeding authorized by the statutes to be instituted against the State, and the District Court had no authority except to proceed in the manner prescribed by the Act of 1860.
2. The law of 1860, which alone authorized the proceeding, expired by its own limitations in 1865, and, at the date of the judgment relied upon by defendant in error, there was no law in existence which authorized the proceeding to be had in that court.
3. The District Court under the Act of 1860 had no equity power conferred upon it by which it could after the expiration of the term set aside its judgment of February 8, 1862.
There can be no doubt that the judgment of the District Court of Webb County, of March 13, 1872, was void, nor that the judgment rendered by that court in the former case on the 8th day of January, 1862, was a valid and subsisting judgment, but counsel for O’Connor claims, that the judgment of March 13, 1872, was validated by the following section of the Act of 1881:
“Section 1. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Texas: That, whereas, many suits to confirm land titles for land between the Nueces and Rio Grande rivers were brought within three years from and after the passage of the Act of February 11, 1860, and in compliance with the terms thereof, but, owing to the war and other causes, were not finally adjudicated until after such three years had expired; and, whereas, the Commissioner of the General Land Office has refused to issue patents for titles not confirmed within such three years; and, whereas, it is just and equitable that parties who, in good faith and diligence, have attempted to comply with the terms of said act, should receive the full benefit thereof; therefore, the Commissioner of the General Land Office is hereby authorized and required to issue patents to all lands between said rivers, when suits to establish same under said act have been commenced within three years from the passage of same, and when the proper district court has finally confirmed such titles.”
This is a remedial statute, and if the judgment of 1872 is embraced in the spirit of that act we must sustain the judgment of the Court of
The judgment of 1873 is not embraced in the terms of the validating law, but is excluded by the specific designation of the judgments which the Legislature intended to make valid.’ It could not b¿ validated by the Act of 1881 unless that law had the effect to set aside and annul the judgment rendered in 1863, otherwise there would be two antagonistic judgments operating at the same time upon the same subject. There is no language in the act which would justify such a conclusion.
We conclude that the judgment' entered by the District Court of Webb County in 1863 is a valid and subsisting judgment and determined the rights of Euggles in the land in controversy; that the subsequent judgment entered by the said court was void in every particular in so far as it affects the land sued for, being without power or authority of law, and that the Court of Civil Appeals erred in reversing the judgment of the District Court and in entering judgment for defendant in error. It is therefore ordered that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals be reversed and that the judgment of the District Court be in all things affirmed, and that the State of Texas recover the costs of the Court of Civil Appeals and of this court against the defendant in error Thomas O’Connor.
Judgment of Court of Civil Appeals reversed. Judgment of District Court affirmed.
Rehearing
Defendant in error sought to remove this case to the United States Circuit Court upon the ground that he was, at the time the suit was instituted “an alien and the subject of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and a resident of the State of Tamaulipas in the Republic of Mexico.” The application for removal was properly denied. The Act of Congress of the United States passed on the 13th day .of August, 1888, prescribed the ground for removal of causes which is applicable to the facts of this case to be a controversy ‘^between citizens of a State and foreign States, citizens or subjects.” Texas is not a citizen of a State, therefore does not come within the terms of the statute. Postal Tel. Cable Co. v. Alabama, 155 U. S., 487.
O’Connor insists that the State of Texas is estopped by the recitals in the decree of the District Court of Webb County entered on the 8th day of March, 1862, in the suit by Daniel Ruggles v. State of Texas, that the government of Spain “gave and donated the land above and below the said town (Palafox) to settlers of the same in the form and shape of porciones.” It is claimed that the recital is sufficient to establish an outstanding title as against the State. It is a settled rule of law that to operate as an estoppel against a party to a judgment the decision must be of a fact .directly involved in and necessary to the determination of the issue presented to the court. Black on Judg., sec. 611; Horten v. Hamilton, 20 Texas, 610; Lewis & Kelson Appeal, 67 Pa. St.,. 153. The proceeding in that case presented the issue to the court that Daniel Ruggles claimed title to the land by virtue of a grant made by the Spanish government to some person from whom Ruggles derived his title, and this fact being established, another issue arose, which was, that after making the grant the Spanish government in the exercise of its sovereign power expropriated or condemned the land and thereby restored it to the ownership of the government.
The incidental question which is presented by the recital in the judgment, that after resuming the title to the land the Spanish government made a donation of a part of it to other parties, neither tends to support the title asserted by Ruggles nor to defeat the claim by the State that the government had extinguished that title by the legitimate exercise of its power, therefore, the recital is of an immaterial fact which derives no force from being stated in the judgment.
The motion for rehearing is therefore overruled.
Opinion filed June 8, 1903.
Lead Opinion
On the 5th day of February, 1901, the Attorney-General of the State of Texas instituted this suit against O'Connor in the District Court of the Twenty-sixth District in Travis County to recover from him 19,410 acres of land described in the plaintiff's petition and situated in Webb County. The facts of the case are stated by the Court of Civil Appeals as follows:
"The evidence established the fact, that, under the law of 1860, Daniel Ruggles instituted two suits in the District Court of Webb County for the confirmation of the title to two large tracts of land, one of which was designated as the Palafox tract, and the other as the Balconcitas tract. The suit for the confirmation of the Palafox tract came to trial on the 8th day of January, 1862, and resulted in a judgment in favor of *489 Ruggles for the confirmation of the title to a large tract of land, the southwestern boundary of which was six leagues of 5000 varas each from the western bank of the Rio Grande and parallel with it. In 1869, a motion was filed by Ruggles, seeking a construction and modification of the decree of the 8th of January, 1862, but it was overruled. In 1871 the other suit, the one for the Balconcitas tract, was dismissed by the court for want of jursdiction. In 1871 Ruggles made a motion to redocket the two cases, which was granted; and, at the same time, he filed a petition in which he sought to have the decree of 1862 set aside, and have a confirmation of the title to both the Palafox and Balconcitas tracts, but on the 8th day of March, 1872, these motions were refused. On March 12, 1872, Ruggles filed in the same court another petition, seeking to set aside the decree of the 8th of January, 1862. The court set aside the decree and consolidated the motions. On the 13th of March, 1872, Ruggles filed an amended petition, in which he sought a confirmation of the title to both tracts, and upon which judgment was rendered in favor of Ruggles on the 13th of March, 1872.
"The land which was covered by the decree of confirmation of 1862 was patented to Ruggles, and the State has not, in any way, questioned the validity of that judgment or of the title of those claiming under Ruggles, to the land. The land sued for in this case is located entirely on that portion of the land which the court in its decree of 1862 declined to confirm in favor of Ruggles, but it is included within that which purports to have been confirmed to him by the decree of March 13, 1872."
Upon a hearing before the court judgment was given in favor of the State of Texas for the recovery of the land, which judgment was by the Court of Civil Appeals reversed and judgment there rendered in favor of O'Connor, from which last judgment this writ of error was granted.
The validity of the judgment entered by the District Court of Webb County on the 13th day of March, 1872, in the case of Ruggles v. The State under which defendant in error claims, has heretofore been twice before this court. In the case of Kennedy v. Jarvis, 1 S.W. Rep., 191, the Commission of Appeals reported to the Supreme Court an opinion in which that judgment was held to be valid, but the Supreme Court expressly declined to approve of that opinion, and subsequently, in the case of Texas-Mexican Railway Company v. Jarvis,
It is claimed that a determination of the question was not necessary to the decision of the Railway Company v. Jarvis, and that the opinion *490 in that case is not authority upon the issue as now presented. It is true that the case then before the court might have been disposed of without passing upon the validity of the judgment, but the issue arose upon the facts and was presented to and decided by the court. It is frequently the case that a court discusses and decides questions presented which might be omitted in a final determination of the case, but that does not affect the weight of the opinion as authority. We follow the case of Railway Company v. Jarvis, because of its authoritative character, and because we unqualifiedly approve of the conclusion reached by the court upon this question.
In Railway Company v. Jarvis, above cited, Chief Justice Stayton announced principles which controlled in the determination of the question then and are equally applicable now. That opinion rests upon the following propositions of law:
1. It was a special proceeding authorized by the statutes to be instituted against the State, and the District Court had no authority except to proceed in the manner prescribed by the Act of 1860.
2. The law of 1860, which alone authorized the proceeding, expired by its own limitations in 1865, and, at the date of the judgment relied upon by defendant in error, there was no law in existence which authorized the proceeding to be had in that court.
3. The District Court under the Act of 1860 had no equity power conferred upon it by which it could after the expiration of the term set aside its judgment of February 8, 1862.
There can be no doubt that the judgment of the District Court of Webb County, of March 13, 1872, was void, nor that the judgment rendered by that court in the former case on the 8th day of January, 1862, was a valid and subsisting judgment, but counsel for O'Connor claims that the judgment of March 13, 1872, was validated by the following section of the Act of 1881:
"Section 1. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Texas: That, whereas, many suits to confirm land titles for land between the Nueces and Rio Grande rivers were brought within three years from and after the passage of the Act of February 11, 1860, and in compliance with the terms thereof, but, owing to the war and other causes, were not finally adjudicated until after such three years had expired; and, whereas, the Commissioner of the General Land Office has refused to issue patents for titles not confirmed within such three years; and, whereas, it is just and equitable that parties who, in good faith and diligence, have attempted to comply with the terms of said act, should receive the full benefit thereof; therefore, the Commissioner of the General Land Office is hereby authorized and required to issue patents to all lands between said rivers, when suits to establish same under said act have been commenced within three years from the passage of same, and when the proper district court has finally confirmed such titles."
This is a remedial statute, and if the judgment of 1872 is embraced in the spirit of that act we must sustain the judgment of the Court of *491
Civil Appeals. The spirit of the law is "the intent, the real meaning" of the Legislature, to be ascertained from the language used. From the language of the law it is manifest that the Legislature did not intend to validate all judgments that might have been entered by any district court confirming titles of the character now in question. We must therefore look to the terms of the statute to see if the judgment of 1872 is embraced within the purpose and meaning of the Legislature as expressed in that law, which prescribed that the judgment to be validated must have been entered in a suit that was begun in the District Court of the county where the land was situated within three years from the 11th day of February, 1860. The suit in which the judgment in question was entered was an independent proceeding commenced in the year 1872, many years after the time limited by the law of 1860 for the commencement of such actions. Goss v. McClaren,
The judgment of 1872 is not embraced in the terms of the validating law, but is excluded by the specific designation of the judgments which the Legislature intended to make valid. It could not be validated by the Act of 1881 unless that law had the effect to set aside and annul the judgment rendered in 1862, otherwise there would be two antagonistic judgments operating at the same time upon the same subject. There is no language in the act which would justify such a conclusion.
We conclude that the judgment entered by the District Court of Webb County in 1862 is a valid and subsisting judgment and determined the rights of Ruggles in the land in controversy; that the subsequent judgment entered by the said court was void in every particular in so far as it affects the land sued for, being without power or authority of law, and that the Court of Civil Appeals erred in reversing the judgment of the District Court and in entering judgment for defendant in error. It is therefore ordered that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals be reversed and that the judgment of the District Court be in all things affirmed, and that the State of Texas recover the costs of the Court of Civil Appeals and of this court against the defendant in error Thomas O'Connor.
Judgment of Court of Civil Appeals reversed. Judgment of District Court affirmed. *492
O'Connor insists that the State of Texas is estopped by the recitals in the decree of the District Court of Webb County entered on the 8th day of March, 1862, in the suit by Daniel Ruggles v. State of Texas, that the government of Spain "gave and donated the land above and below the said town (Palafox) to settlers of the same in the form and shape of porciones." It is claimed that the recital is sufficient to establish an outstanding title as against the State. It is a settled rule of law that to operate as an estoppel against a party to a judgment the decision must be of a fact directly involved in and necessary to the determination of the issue presented to the court. Black on Judg., sec. 611; Horten v. Hamilton,
The incidental question which is presented by the recital in the judgment, that after resuming the title to the land the Spanish government made a donation of a part of it to other parties, neither tends to support the title asserted by Ruggles nor to defeat the claim by the State that the government had extinguished that title by the legitimate exercise of its power, therefore, the recital is of an immaterial fact which derives no force from being stated in the judgment.
The motion for rehearing is therefore overruled.
Opinion filed June 8, 1903. *493