76 Tex. 69 | Tex. | 1890
The plaintiffs sued as heirs of Matthew
R. Williams, deceased, to recover a tract of 640 acres of land, located and patented by virtue of a certificate issued to him in accordance with the act of Congress of the Republic of Texas, of December 21, 1837. That act granted 640 acres of land to all soldiers of the Republic who participated in the battle of San Jacinto, and provided that the lands granted by virtue thereof should “not be subject to sale or alienation, mortgage, or execution during the lifetime of the person to whom ” tba
There are no conclusions of fact and law in the record, and we are left to conjecture as to the grounds upon which the court based its judgment. If, however, the court held, in accordance with appellees’ contention, that the lease from Williams to Ayers was not in contravention of law, and was a valid conveyance, we do not concur in its opinion. In Ames v. Hubby, 49 Texas, 705, a similar conveyance of a San Jacinto donation certificate was held void. In that case the contract provided that at the end of the term, the lessee, his heirs or assigns, should have the right to hold possession of the land as long as he or they saw fit, upon payment of rent of one cent per annum. That was a very obvious evasion of the law which prohibited an alienation of the certificate, and to our minds the intent to evade the law is equally clear in the present case. It is true that according to the literal terms of the lease the property was to revert to heirs of the lessee at the end of ninety-nine years.
But we do not hesitate to say that a lease of property in Texas during the days of the Republic which was to continue for the average period of three generations of men was considered both by the lessor and lessee as virtually equivalent to a conveyance of the absolute title, and that it should he treated as such an alienation as the statute was intended to prohibit. We conclude, therefore, that the lease from Matthew R. Williams to David Ayers was void, and that it neither conveyed title to the certificate or to the land.
In 1848 the prohibition against the conveyance of the lands granted to
In Ledyard v. Brown, 27 Texas, 393, in speaking of a contract by a colonist to convey his lands before the expiration of six years from the extension of the title, Mr. Justice Moore says: “The title which the defendants who claim under it derive from the contract between Cottle and Brown is one which under the former decisions of this court they can not enforce without additional equities from any that have been presented in this case against the heirs of Cottle. But it has also been more than once decided by this court that in such cases the heirs of the grantee can not enforce their legal title against the parties claiming under such contract without refunding the consideration received by their ancestor. If the question were one of the first instance we might perhaps hesitate yielding it our assent, but it must now be regarded no longer open for discussion.” See also Mills v. Alexander, 21 Texas, 154; Hunt v. Turner, 9 Texas, 385.
In Mills v. Alexander, supra, it was held that in such a case, after a lapse of twenty years, in the absence of any proof of a consideration, it would be presumed that a fair and adequate consideration was paid. In this case the attempted lease shows the consideration, and plaintiffs have made no offer to refund the purchase money. Their failure to do so must be held fatal to their suit;
The assignments of error complain of the introduction in evidence over the objection of plaintiffs of the lease from Williams to Ayers and of the mesne conveyances down to defendants. The lease, though void, authorized the parties rightfully claiming under it to have the purchase money refunded, and was therefore properly admitted. It is no objection to the other conveyances that they attempted to convey an absolute title, although the grantors at best had but a leasehold estate. The conveyances were sufficient to pass whatever right or title the grantors had.
It is complained that the judgment is erroneous because it is a general judgment for defendants, whereas in their pleadings they claimed only a term of years in the land. The plaintiffs brought an action of trespass to try title, and failed to offer to refund the.purchase money and to place themselves in position to demand a judgment; therefore the proper judgment was that they take nothing by their suit, and that defendants go
There is no error in the judgment, and it is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Delivered February 11, 1890.