Donaldson v. Dodd

12 Tex. 381
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 12 Tex. 381 (Donaldson v. Dodd) 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
Donaldson v. Dodd, 12 Tex. 381 (Tex. 1854).

Opinion

Hemphill, Ch. J.

The only question in this case is, whether a Commissioner at Nacogdoches, acting under a commission from the Executive of the State of Coahuila and Texas, had, on the 21st day of November, 1835, authority to issue titles to lands. The title of the appellant was issued on that day; and as it is unobjectionable in other respects, it must be deemed valid, provided the authority of the Commissioner still continued in force. The solution of this question depends upon the time at which the Act of the Consultation closing the Land Offices, took effect, whether immediately or only after promulgation and due notice of the adoption of the Act. The organic provision was ordained on the 13th November, 1835, and if its operation was immediate, the title of appellant is a nullity; if not, its validity depends upon the time at which the notice was or might have been received by the officer issuing the title. The point seems too clear for dispute, but, as it has been argued most zealously, ably and elaborately, it will receive such attention as can, under the pressure of other causes be allowed to its consideration.

The fourteenth Article of the Plan and Powers of the Provisional Government provides, “that all Land Commissioners, “ Empresarios, Surveyors, or persons in any wise concerned “ in the location of land, be ordered forthwith to cease their “ operations during the agitated and unsettled state of the “ country, and continue to desist from further locations until “ the Land Offices can be properly systematized,” &e. The Article further provides “ that suitable persons be appointed [388]*388“ to take charge of the archives in said offices and deposit “them in safe places,” &e.

It is contended by the appellant, that this Act does not contemplate an immediate cesser of the operations of the Land Offices, but that this was to depend on a future event, viz: an order.to be issued for that purpose. The phraseology is somewhat peculiar, and, when taken alone, might possibly admit of two constructions. But when we consider that this was but one of many provisions of an organic law by which in a time of revolution a government was to be organized and put into operation ; that no part of such law was submitted or intended to be submitted to the people; that the exigence of the times required the prompt adoption and immediate enforcement of this fundamental Act; and especially, that it was very important to individuals absent in the army, and to government for financial, purposes, that no further abstractions from the public domain should be permitted, and the reason for such act, viz: “the agitated and unsettled state of the country,” being as cogent at the date of the Act as it could be in the future, we must come to the conclusion that the operation of the Article was intended to be immediate, to be general and uniform, and not in the future or variant or fluctuating, dependent upon the distance of the Empresario or Commissioner from the seat of Government, and. the respective times in which it was or might have been promulgated or made known respectively to the various officers and other persons concerned in the location, survey or passing titles to lands. This interpretation would comport with and-sustain the policy and object of the law, whereas, by the ofher, it would be seriously impaired, and in a great measure defeated.

The supreme authority was expressing their will that land operations should not be continued, and whether they phrased it that they should forthwith cease or be ordered forthwith to cease was immaterial. These phrases, at least under the circumstances, must be considered as equivalent to each other. The difference between them is a matter of style and not of [389]*389substance; at most, the language cannot be taken to mean more than that the operations shall cease forthwith and the officers shall be notified to that effect, and not that a Surveyor or person concerned in the location of lands, although buried in the depth of the woods, may lawfully continue his operations until hunted up and informed of the suspensive clause of the organic law.

But if it were admitted that these views are erroneous, and that the appellant is right in his construction, yet this would not operate any substantial benefit to him or sustain his title. The Constitution presents against it an obstacle more formidable, if possible, than that which exists in the Act of the Consultation. By the Constitution it is declared, that, “ whereas “many surveys and titles to lands have been made while most “ of the people of Texas were absent from home serving in “ the campaign against Bexar, all the surveys and locations of “lands made since the Act of the late Consultation, closing “ the Land Offices, and all titles to land made since that time, “ are and shall be null and void.” Here is an emphatic declaration, annulling all locations and surveys made since the Act of the Consultation, and all titles to lands made since that time. What time is here spoken of? That of the Act of the Consultation, not the time when it went into operation, but the time of Act itself.

It is immaterial when it legally went into operation, whether immediately or on notice to the officer, or whether it never went into operation as against the acts of those who had no notice—the acts of all, from the time of the law, are equally and alike made null and void.

There can be no doubt of the power of the Convention to destroy even valid titles, and in this view an inquiry into the true meaning of the Act of the Consultation becomes immaterial. The only point to be ascertained is the date of the Act closing the Land Offices. That being fixed, the Constitution annihilates and extinguishes all subsequent operations in locating, surveying or making titles to the public lands.

[390]*390It is contended, but we think on no plausible grounds, that the terms in the Constitution “since the Act” do not mean since the date of the Act, but since the respective times at which the Act took effect, that is to say, from the dates respectively at which the several officers or others employed in the land business or Offices received notice of the passage of the Act. The literal import of the terms, as well as the spirit and policy of the provision, repel any such construction. In fact the terms are too plain to admit of interpretation. .They are too positive and precise to allow a doubt of their meaning, or to give any loop on which to hang the construction contended for by appellant. The intention was manifestly to annul all acts and titles, from a particular date, and not some from one date and some from another, and even to permit others to stand on the ground that they may have emanated from some Special Commissioner, with his authority in his pocket, and who consequently may not have been expressly notified of the Act. Were the terms less explicit than they are, yet the appellant’s construction would be inadmissible on the ground of its palpable repugnancy to the object and purpose of the Convention. The design was to benefit those who had been serving in the public campaign against Bexar, and who were said, in the Constitution, to be most of the people of Texas, and to prevent those who, from reasons sufficient or insufficient, had chosen to remain at home, from absorbing the best portions of the public lands. This object would have been defeated, if the land operations had been permitted to continue through the whole period of the campaign. This had opened some time before the Act of the Consultation.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Tex. 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donaldson-v-dodd-tex-1854.