Dutton v. Thompson

19 S.W. 1026, 85 Tex. 115, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 827
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1892
DocketNo. 7353.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 19 S.W. 1026 (Dutton v. Thompson) 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
Dutton v. Thompson, 19 S.W. 1026, 85 Tex. 115, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 827 (Tex. 1892).

Opinion

STAYTON, Chief Justice.

— This action was brought by appellant to recover the southeast quarter of alternate section number 182, State school lands, patented to her on November 26, 1889, as assignee of J. A. Brooke, who contracted with the State for the land on February 26, 1877.

Appellee disclaimed all interest in the land sued for, except two small tracts, which he described by metes and bounds, and as to them he pleaded “not guilty,’’ asserted title under the statutes of limitation based on five and ten years possession, and he also asserted claim for improvements made on these tracts in good faith.

One of the tracts to which appellee asserted title contained 9.733 and the other 27 acres; but on hearing judgment was rendered in favor of appellant for all the land sued for except the tract containing 9.733 acres, which the court evidently held appellee was entitled to hold under *117 his plea of statute of limitation based on adverse possession under recorded deed and the payment of taxes.

It is claimed on this appeal that limitation would not run in favor of appellee until the patent issued; but appellant, and the person through when she acquired the right to a patent, had such interest in the land as would have entitled either of them to have maintained an action of trespass to try title to the land against any person entering upon it during the time of their respective ownerships, and we see no reason why limitation would not run against a person having such interest in land, although the State could not be thus barred.

This was the holding in reference to University lands in the case of Parker v. Brown, 80 Texas, 557.

It is urged further, that the evidence was insufficient to prove the payment of taxes by appellee on the land adjudged to him, and that for this reason the judgment in his favor, based on five years adverse possession, was not authorized.

Appellee, as a witness, made the broad statement that he entered upon the land in October, 1882, and that he continuously occupied the tract claimed by him from that time until the trial, and that he “ paid all the taxes thereon up to and including 1888; ” " that he has paid taxes on other lands;” but it was agreed by the parties, “that the assessment list, as rendered by defendant, shows that he rendered 9|- acres of section 180 in name of M. C. Dutton, and that the tax rolls for 1884, 1885, 1886, and 1887 show the same; that the section number and abstract number of said section 180 are different from section 182, upon which the land in controvesy is situated.”

This is all the evidence bearing on the payment of taxes, except that it was agreed that the person under whom appellee claimed paid taxes in the years 1881 and 1882.

This evidence shows that appellee may have intended to pay taxes on the 9|- acres claimed by him, but does it show that he paid taxes on the land which was adjudged to him ?

With a view to secure the payment of taxes on all lands within the State subject to taxation, the Legislature has passed laws requiring the Commissioner of the General Land Office to furnish each assessor with an abstract of all the surveys of land, and number of acres therein, in their respective counties, and with reference to this assessments are required to be made. Rev. Stats., art. 4710a, sec. 1.

By another law the Commissioners Court of each county is required to provide its assessor with books containing certain forms, in which, when an assessment or listing is made, the assessor is required to enter in the proper column the district number, name of party to whom the certificate issued, the number, class, and character of the certificate, the name of the parly to whom the patent issued, number of volume of patent, the month. *118 day, and year it was issued, and the number of acres each survey contains, which whole survey shall stand as a debit against the assessor. Rev. Stats., arts. 4710a (sec. 2), 4710a (sec. 7).

Every person rendering a list of property for taxation is required to ‘ ‘ subscribe to the following oath or affirmation, which shall be written or printed at the bottom of each inventory, to-wit: " do solemnly swear (or affirm) that the above inventory rendered by me contains a full, true, and complete list of all taxable property owned or held by me in my own name in this county, subject to taxation by the laws of this State,’ ” etc. (Revised Statutes, article 4702); and the inventory therein referred to is required to give the name of the owner, abstract number, number of survey, name of original grantee, and the number of the certificate, as well as the number of acres claimed. Rev. Stats., arts. 4680, 4681.

The purpose of these laws is manifest, and ought a person who has made a rendition of his property, presumably under oath, to be heard to say that he paid taxes on property in a given year, and then claimed it under a deed duly recorded, when his rendition shows that for tax paying purposes he made no such claim ?

Ought it not rather be held that he paid taxes on what he listed, though it may have been his intention to pay taxes on some other land ?

If he had offered his tax receipts, they evidently would have shown that he paid taxes only on the land he rendered for taxation; for the tax roll, which is but a transcript of renditions, is the officer’s warrant to collect taxes, and his receipt must, and will if it be true, describe the property on which taxes are paid as the same is described in the tax roll. Rev. Stats., arts. 4737, 4741.

If under the renditions made by appellee, the collector of taxes had seized and sold any property of his to enforce the payment of taxes on the land in controversy, the sale would have been void, because the officer would have been without authority on rendition of property as a part of section 180, to sell the property of appellee to satisfy taxes due on a part of section 182.

Mere intention to pay taxes on the land in controversy can not make that such a payment which was'not so in fact, when tested by his rendition made by appellee.

Questions similar to that involved in this case have arisen in other cases. In Stephens v. Wells, 6 Watts, 325, a party sought to have an assessment and payment of taxes on a tract of land designated in the assessment as a part of the “ Mason survey,” appropriated to a tract of land actually on the “ Guinip survey,” upon the ground that he believed the land to be on the former survey at the time of assessment and payment; but the court said, “ The circumstance of Goodyear’s having been impressed with a conviction at the time the taxes were assessed, which purported to be assessed on the Mason tract, as also when he paid them, *119 that the land in dispute was included in the Mason survey, but now .found to be contained in the Guinip survey, and not in -the Mason survey, can neither give direction to nor change the application of the payment of the money made by him, so as to appropriate it to any other land than that which is found to be within the original Mason survey.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W. 1026, 85 Tex. 115, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 827, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dutton-v-thompson-tex-1892.