Cowan v. Hardeman

26 Tex. 217
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 26 Tex. 217 (Cowan v. Hardeman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cowan v. Hardeman, 26 Tex. 217 (Tex. 1862).

Opinion

Moore, J.

The main question for our decision in this case, depends upon the construction that must be placed upon the proviso in the fourth section of the act for the relief of James Erwin and others, passed June 3d, 1837, which reads as follows : “Provided, That no lands granted by this government shall be located on salt springs, gold or silver mines, copper or lead, or other minerals, or any island of the Republic.”

By this provision of the statute it is contended, as we understand appellants’ counsel, that the islands and all lands containing minerals, were separated from the mass of the public domain, and were thereby withdrawn! from individual appropriation by the location, thereon of the land script issued by virtue of said act of June the. [220]*220£d, 1837, or by any other character of certificate or claim to land. And that, it appearing from the petition filed by the appellees, who were plaintiffs in the court below, that there was “ a valuable saline” upon the six hundred and forty acres of land, for which suit was brought; the patept therefor, which was granted to appellees as the assignees of a certificate issued to a colonist of Eisher and Miller’s colony, was absolutely null and void.

This proposition, if correct, must lead to startling and unexpected consequences, not less embarrassing to the public than subversive of the titles under which seven-tenths of the lands granted by the government have been hitherto held. If all the lands in the State in which any minerals can be found were withdrawn from location, how much of the public domain was left subject to appropriation? A very superficial observation or knowledge of'the country must convince us that the amount left subject to location would fall far short of satisfying the certificates and scrip heretofore issued by the State. Whose title would be secure ? The homestead of one of the heroes of San Jacinto or Bexar, the seat of honest toil, and held by patent since the first organization of the land office, without the slightest suspicion as to the validity of his title, or that the land was of the least value except for its agricultural products, may to-morrow be found to have beneath its surface a strata of coal or a mine of gold, and his title must consequently be held to be absolutely null and void; having been issued for land which the surveyor had no authority to survey, or the Commissioner of the General Land Office to patent. If this is the true construction of the statute, the great mineral wealth of the State, of which we have so often justly boasted, and to which we have confidently looked as a source of future wealth and prosperity, would prove to be the means of untold evil, and no greater scourge -could befall the State than a geological survey for the development of its mineral resources.

But if the patents are void because minerals are to be found within the lands granted, the patentee as well as the State may take advantage of .it; and any one, who can show that there are any minerals within the land described in his patent, may dqmand his certificate from the Commissioner of the Land Office and have [221]*221it again located, with the utmost confidence that he will he able to vacate the second patent for the- same reason, whenever he may feel inclined to do so.

But is this the correct construction of this statute ? We cannot agree that it is. If the law were clear, explicit and unambiguous in its terms, and susceptible of but the one interpretation, as appellants’ counsel seem to regard it,- its consequences, if evil, could only be avoided by legislative interposition, and nqt by judicial action.But that is not the case; the language of the proviso is contradictory in itself. 'It declares that “ no lands granted shall be located, &o;” but if the land has been “ granted,” the location-has already been consummated. And hence, if we look to the ordinary and usual import of the words and the grammatical construction of the sentence, we are left in doubt as to the true intent and meaning of the legislature. To give it the construction contended for by appellant’s counsel, the proviso should be modified so as to read, “ that no certificates of other claim to land granted,” &c.-, “ shall be located on salt springs,” &c. Btit are we not as-fully authorized, by the- grammatical construction of the sentence1 and tlio object and spirit of it, to say nothing of the uniform and practical construction that has, from the date of its enactment to the present time, been placed upon it by all the departments of the government, to construe it as declaring, that no lands granted shall vest title to any salt spring, gold or silver mines ? &c.

The words of the statute not being, as it is quaintly but forcibly expressed by Lord Coke, “ plain without any scruple, and absolute without any saving,” it becomes necessary", to ascertain its true intent and meaning, that we should resort to the well established fules of statutory construction as our guide; and these require that we should seek to ascertain and give- effect to the thought which the legislature intended to express. (Newell v. The People, 3 Seld., 97.) What object had the legislature in view by the enactment of the proviso in question ? It was not, surely, to prohibit the surveying and patenting of any part of the public domain until the impossible and never attempted task should be performed by the legislature of ascertaining and designating the tnineral lands. Neither could they have intended to leave it as a [222]*222Blatter of doubt and uncertainty with the surveyors and commissioner what land they should survey and patent; nor after a patent had been granted, that no one should be able to say that it might not at some future day be shown to be void by the discovery of a mine or mineral there hidden within the bowels of the earth.

The object and purpose of the legislature was simply to reserve to the Republic the islands and the salt springs, gold and silver mines, copper and l^ad and other minerals, as corporeal hereditaments out of the public domain; and thus, Avhile the mineral resources of the country that Avere then known to exist or that might afterwards be developed were thereby secured to the government, no embarrassment AVas placed in the way of the citizen in acquiring the fee in the quantum of land to which Ms certificate or scrip entitled Mm. it is a well established doctrine from the earliest days of the common laAV, that the right to the minerals thus reserved, carries with it the right to enter, dig and cany them away, and all other such incidents thereto as are necessary to be used for getting and enjoying them. (The Queen and Earl of Northumberland, Plow. 310, 336; Earl of Cardigan v. Armitage, 4 Barn. & Cres., 197.) And this is also the civil law. (Rockwell’s Spanish and Mexican Law, 49, 53, 83.)

Nor does the reservation of its minerals and corporeal hereditaments out of granted lands, create any unusual or novel estate, It is a doctrine as old as the common law that all royal mines, that is to say, those of gold or silver, throughout the kingdom, belonged to the sovereign; and it is said, that though the King grant lands in Avhich mines are, and all mines in them, yet royal mines will not pass by so general a description. (Plow,, 336.) And we think it is evident that the legislature intended to do nothing more in this statute than to secure by an express reservation the same right to all minerals, when it granted land, that was by the common laAV impliedly reserved to the King as to royal mines.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Tex. 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cowan-v-hardeman-tex-1862.