Ericksen v. McWhorter

143 S.W. 245, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 780
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 16, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 143 S.W. 245 (Ericksen v. McWhorter) 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
Ericksen v. McWhorter, 143 S.W. 245, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 780 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

For the second time, on appeal duly prosecuted, appellant has cause to complain of a judgment against him for four sections of public school land in Andrews county, Tex. The former judgment was reversed for errors in the court’s charge. See 132 S. W. 847. The evidence is substantially as before. It is undisputed that the four sections of school land in controversy were duly appraised and awarded by the Commissioner of the General Land Office to one B. S. Cox on March 17, 1906, and it is agreed that by mesne conveyances from Cox appellant “on or about the 3d day of March, 1908, became the owner of the land in controversy in this suit as substitute purchaser from the state of Texas.” The Commissioner of the General Land Office certifies that appellant’s deed with his applications and substitute obligations for each of the sections of land in controversy were filed in the General Land Office on October 5, 1908, “whereby the said Ed Ericksen became the substitute purchaser of said lands.” He further certifies “that said four above-described sections of land were forfeited for failure to reside on the land as required by law October 28th, 1908.” After the forfeiture thus stated, the lands were again put upon the market, and appellee became the purchaser. It further appears, as stated in the report of the former appeal, that appellant was a married man, and the head of a family, consisting of himself, wife, and several children, and he and his wife both testified to the effect that at and before his purchase the wife in person went upon the land for the purpose of making a home thereon, and that appellant with the same purpose was thereafter there a number of times and assisted in making certain improvements; that the wife’s settlement and occupancy was sufficient seems hardly to be controverted, and the vital issue in the case, as is agreed, is whether appellant’s occupancy of the lands in question was such as required by law.

[1] Appellant both by himself and wife offered to prove that before their purchase they had a home in Hillsboro, Tex., valued at $3,000,, which constituted part of the consideration given by them for the land involved in the shit, and that they thereafter acquired no other property for a home until the purchase in question was made. This evidence was excluded upon appellee’s objection that the same was immaterial and irrelevant, and error has been duly assigned to the ruling. We sustain the assignments presenting this question. In becoming a substitute purchaser appellant, among other things, was required to make affidavit that *246 lie desired to purchase the land for a home, and that he had in good faith settled thereon without acting in collusion with others for the purpose of buying for any other person of corporation, etc. See Rev. St. art. 4218k. Appellant’s purpose and good faith, therefore, were in issue, as indeed was directly submitted to the jury in the court’s charge, and we think the fact that appellant’s old home had been surrendered for the new, and that it had considerable value, were circumstances both relevant and material on the issue of appellant’s good faith, and illustrative of the purpose and acts upon which he relies as constituting settlement.

[2] As complained of in appellant’s thirteenth assignment of error, it appears that after both appellant and his wife had testified “that they owned the fence on the west side of the four sections in controversy, the first mile on the north side and the next mile down to the northeast corner of said land,” appellee, McWhorter, was permitted to testify over appellant’s objection that one Ratliff claimed “the first mile of the fence on the north side of the land in controversy in this suit.” The bill of exception shows that all appellee knew of the matter was what Ratliff told him, and that neither appellant nor his wife were present at the time of Ratliff’s statement. The testimony is clearly hearsay, and, as against the objection that it was such, it was erroneous to permit a contradiction of the testimony of appellant and his wife on the subject by a mere statement of Ratliff.

[3] For the errors pointed out, we think the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded, but, in view of another trial, we think it also proper to say with reference to the court’s charge, also vigorously assailed, that, if not technically erroneous in the definition therein given of an actual settler, we incline to the opinion that the charge was misleading and prejudicial in reiterating the necessity of a settlement “in person.” The tendency of the reiteration was to exclude from the consideration of the jury the acts of the wife in aid of appellant’s settlement and occupancy, and to those, as well as to all other circumstances, the jury would have the right to look.

In this connection it will, in the opinion of the writer, not be amiss perhaps to call attention to the fact that the act of 1905 (see General Laws 1905, p. 159), which affords the basis of appellee’s insistence that the court correctly defined the terms “actual settler” as one “who actually in person and in good faith settled upon and lived upon the land for the purpose of making the same his home,” does not undertake to. provide the terms upon which the vendee of an original purchaser may become a substitute purchaser in the land office. It prescribes the conditions upon which a person may become an original purchaser of school lands, and, among other things, provides that such intending purchaser shall make affidavit “that he is or will, as the case may be, in good faith become in person an actual bona fide settler upon some portion of the land he purchases,” etc. It has been held in a recent case to be doubtful whether the term “in person,” for the first time required in the affidavit of a purchaser by the act of 1905, added anything to the requirements under previous laws. See State v. Davidson, 132 S. W. 520. But, at all events, as stated, the law of 1905 has particular reference to regulations pertaining to original, and not substitute, purchasers. For regulations and requirements relating to the latter class the law is apparently left as it aforetime was. In the act approved April 1, 1887 (see Gen. Laws 1887, p. 86), which was an act providing for the sale and lease of school and other public lands, it is provided in section 10 that original purchasers under that act might at any time after their purchase sell their lands, and that in such cases .“the vendee, or any subsequent vendee, may file his own obligation with the Commissioner of the General Land Office, together with the duly authenticated conveyance, or transfer, from the original purchaser, and the intermediate vendee’s conveyances or transfer, if there be any, duly recorded in the county where the land lies, or to which it may be attached for judicial purposes, together with his affidavit stating that he desires to purchase the land for a home and that he has in good faith settled thereon, and that he is not acting in collusion' with others for the purpose of buying the land for any other person or corporation, and that no other person or corporation is interested in the purchase save himself; and thereupon the original obligation may be surrendered or canceled and the vendee shall become the purchaser direct from the state and be subject to all the obligations and penalties prescribed by this act, and the original purchaser shall be absolved from further liability thereon.” Another general act on the same subject was passed in 1S95 (see General Laws 1895, p.

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Related

Eriksen v. McWhorter
194 S.W. 588 (Texas Supreme Court, 1917)
McWhorter v. Eriksen
151 S.W. 624 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1912)

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Bluebook (online)
143 S.W. 245, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ericksen-v-mcwhorter-texapp-1911.