Blum v. Johnson

66 S.W. 461, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 10, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 28
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 18, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 66 S.W. 461 (Blum v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blum v. Johnson, 66 S.W. 461, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 10, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 28 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

STEPHENS, Associate Justice.

Barbara J. Blum, joined by her husband Anthony Blum, sued W. V. Johnson and wife, Lily Johnson, to recover the purchase money, with interest, paid the latter by Mrs. Blum out of her separate estate for a section of land in Borden County, Texas, No. 227, block 97, located for the Houston & Texas Central Bailway Company within the Texas & Pacific reservation, which it has been decided rendered the location void. The land, after being so located and alienated by the Houston & Texas Central Bailway Company, was conveyed to Mrs. Blum by Mrs. Johnson, joined by her husband, July 16, 1885, by deed with covenants of general warranty. H. L. Adams, I. Adams, and W. A. Holloway had made a like conveyance of it to Mrs. Johnson in her separate right, April 22, 1885, and were consequently impleaded by the Johnsons and recovery was sought against them in behalf of Mrs. Johnson for the amount of purchase money paid them for the land out of her separate estate. The Blums recovered judgment against W. V. Johnson, but were denied any recovery against Lily Johnson on the ground that a married woman could not bind herself personally by a covenant of warranty, as was in effect held in Wadkins v. Watson, 86 Texas, 194; 24 S. W. Rep., 385.

The recovery sought in behalf of Mrs. Johnson was denied because no recovery was allowed against her. The Johnsons alone have appealed, making all other parties payees in the appeal bond. The Blums, however, have assigned errors, complaining of the judgment in so far as the court refused to allow them a recovery against not only Mrs. Johnson, but also Adams, Adams, and Holloway. But as they neither sued the three parties last named nor perfected any appeal from the judgment in their favor, no relief can be given them on that branch of the case. Anderson v. Silliman, 50 S. W. Rep., 576; Harter v. Herndon, 35 S. W. Rep., 80; Stevens v. Insurance Co., 62 S. W. Rep., 824.

Whether they are entitled to assign errors to the judgment in favor of Mrs. Johnson is not so clear, but it would seem from the opinion of *12 Justice Williams in Woeltz v. Woeltz, 57 Southwestern Reporter, 35, that they are, since the appeal of the Johnsons appears to have been taken from the whole judgment.

The questions to be determined, then, are: First, whether or not the Blums were entitled to judgment against W. V. Johnson; second, whether or not they were entitled to judgment against his wife; third, whether or not Mrs. Johnson was entitled to judgment in her separate right against Adams, Adams and Holloway, for Mr. Johnson did not ask any judgment in his own behalf against them.

Neither in the pleadings of the Blums nor in the pleadings of the Johnsons was any recovery sought upon the ground of mutual mistake as to the fact and effect of the conflict between block 97 and the Texas &. Pacific reservation, afterwards determined by courts of final jurisdiction to exist and to leave the title in the State; but breach of warranty and the bare fact that the subject matter of the sales was a part of the public domain were in each instance made the grounds for the recovery of the purchase money with interest. We need not, therefore, stop to inquire what the rights of the parties would have been if a case of equitable cognizance had been made. Doubtless both pleaders, in shaping the issues, had in mind the decision of our- Supreme Court in the case of Lamb v. James, 87 Texas, 485, 29 Southwestern Reporter, 647, in which it was held that Lamb, who had purchased public school land from James, was entitled to recover the full purchase price paid James, who acted in good faith and warranted the title, merely because it afterwards turned out that James had never acquired any title from the State, although title was acquired by Lamb from the State after his purchase from James, and at a reduced price. The learned judge who wrote the opinion in that case, Justice Denman, evidently undertook, it seems to us, to place the decision mainly, if not entirely, upon the ground that contracts for the sale of public school land before the title has to any extent passed out of the State are against public policy and void, for in announcing that public school lands were not the “lawful subject matter” of private contracts, the words just quoted were italicised, and the following clear statement' of the grounds of the decision was made: “The making of such deeds by private parties would tend tn. embarrass the State in the disposition of its public lands; would incumber the homes of the purchasers with liens, not only to the State for real purchase money, but also in favor of a stranger to the title, for such sum as he might charge the settler for his pretended right, thereby rendering the settler less able to perform his contract with the State; and is therefore contrary to public policy. The public lands are not a lawful subject of a private contract, and an attempted conveyance thereof by one private person to another passes no interest whatever in the land, and does not create the relation of vendor and vendee, and therefore can not be held to furnish a consideration for the payment, the promise of payment, or the recovering of the supposed consideration of such conveyance.”

*13 No such view of the law, however, was entertained when that case was before this court, for it was then held that Lamb’s remedy, the charge of fraud not being sustained and no other ground of equity being alleged, was an action on the warranty, and that the measure of recovery was what it had cost him to acquire title from the State. Lamb v. James, 21 S. W. Rep., 172; 27 S. W. Rep., 178. To sustain this ruling McClelland v. Moore, 48 Texas, 355, involving a sale in part of a void location of public land, was cited; to which might now be added the case of Dillahunty v. Railway, 27 Southwestern Reporter, 1002, since decided, in which precisely the same ruling was made by the Supreme Court of Arkansas with reference to a sale with warranty of title of a part of the unappropriated public domain of the United States, made by the railway company to Dillahunty, who afterwards acquired title from the government, the cost of which was 'held to be the measure of damages for breach of the warranty.

When the case of Raynor Cattle Company v. Bedford, 91 Texas, 643, 44 Southwestern Reporter, 410, came before us, while we could not approve as sound the view above expressed in the opinion of Justice Denman, we nevertheless felt constrained to accept it as an authoritative statement of the position of our Supreme Court on that question, as will be seen from the opinion of Justice Hunter in that case; but the decision refusing a writ of error was placed upon a different ground, as will be seen from the opinion of Chief Justice Gaines (45 Southwestern Reporter, 554), in which the learned court deemed it expedient to state that it seemed to them that the opinion of this court had proceeded upon a misapprehension of i what was decided in Lamb v. James, 87 Texas, 485, in effect, because the judgment rendered by the Supreme Court in that case, which allowed the recovery of the purchase money, would have been erroneous, as subsequently held by them in Beer v. Landman, 88 Texas, 450, if the contract between Lamb and James had been illegal. Then follows this statement: “The gist of the ruling in the Lamb case was that the vacant unappropriated public domain which was attempted to be sold by James to Lamb and Edwards furnished no consideration for the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.W. 461, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 10, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blum-v-johnson-texapp-1902.