Fristoe v. Leon & H. Blum

45 S.W. 998, 92 Tex. 76, 1898 Tex. LEXIS 152
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 30, 1898
DocketNo. 666.
StatusPublished
Cited by89 cases

This text of 45 S.W. 998 (Fristoe v. Leon & H. Blum) 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
Fristoe v. Leon & H. Blum, 45 S.W. 998, 92 Tex. 76, 1898 Tex. LEXIS 152 (Tex. 1898).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

Prior to November 23, 1882, 1. M. Bennick was in the actual possession in good faith of the land in controversy, it being section No. 278, Houston & Texas Central Railroad Company survey, in block N o. 1-A in Coke County, Texas, located as an alternate section for the public free schools of Texas under the law granting lands to railroads. On October 8, 1883, I. M. Bennick made application to purchase said section in the form prescribed by the Acts of the Legislature of Texas of 1883 “to provide for the classification, sale, and lease of lands heretofore or hereafter summed and set apart for the benefit of the common school, university, and deaf and dumb asylum fund of the said State.” Bennick made proper proof of occupancy. The land was duly appraised under the law of 1883 at $1 per acre, prior to Benniek’s application. The land was properly awarded to I. M. Bennick on his application November 23, 1883, at the price of $1 per acre. He made the first payment of $21.33 principal, and interest $51.67. September 2, 1891, Bennick and wife in due form of law conveyed the land to D. P. Gay, by deed, which was recorded September 8, 1891. On December 10, 1894, Gay conveyed the land to Leon & H. Blum by deed recorded December 21, 1894.

The interest upon the purchase money of the land under Bennick’s purchase was not paid to the State for the year ending January 1, 1892, and on the 28th day of May, 1895,the Commissioner of the General Land Office declared the contract of purchase forfeited and the land was again appraised under the law, which appraisement was recorded in the office of the clerk of the County Court of Coke County on the 2d day of September, 1895, and the Commissioner placed the land upon the market for sale. J. W. Fristoe applied to purchase the land on November 18, 1895, as an actual settler upon the land under the Act of the Legislature of the State of Texas approved April 16, 1895, and the Commissioner of the Land Office awarded the land to the said Fristoe on his application on the 24th day of December, 1895. Fristoe has made all pa)rment.s of interest and principal required by law since the time of the award made to him.

Leon & H. Blum filed this suit in the District Court of Coke County on November 11, 1896, to recover from Fristoe the 640 acres of land awarded in the first place to 1. M. Bennick, under whom Leon & H. Blum claimed as above shown. The case was tried without a jury before the court, which gave judgment for the defendant Fristoe; from which appeal was taken, and the Court of Civil Appeals for the Third Supreme Judicial District reversed the judgment of the District Court and rendered judgment in favor of Leon & H. Blum for the land.

The sole question presented by this writ of error is, was the Commissioner of the General Land Office authorized by law to declare the for *80 feiture of the contract of purchase made by Bennick from the State of the section of school land involved in this suit? The defendant in error urges the following objections against the existence of the power at the time the forfeiture was declared:

1. That the Act of February 19, 1885, entitled “An Act to prevent the forfeiture of the rights of purchasers of public free school, university, or asylum land,” repealed all power which had been vested in the Commissioner of the Land Office to declare such forfeiture, and especially it repealed section 10, as amended, of the act of the same session of the Legislature, approved February 16, 1885.

3. That section 11 of chapter 99 of the Laws of the Twentieth Legislature, page 83, does not apply to contracts made anterior to its passage, the first day of April, 1887.

3. That if the eleventh section of the law of April 1, 1887, was intended by the Legislature to apply to antecedent contracts, it is unconstitutional, because it would be retroactive and would violate the obligation of contracts of purchase made prior to that time.

A clear understanding of the relation in which the State stands to the purchasers in these contracts will greatly facilitate a proper solution of the questions upon which this case depends. It is well settled that so long as the State is engaged in making or enforcing laws or in the discharge of any other governmental function it is to be regarded as a sovereign and has prerogatives which do not appertain to the individual citizen, but when it becomes a suitor in its own courts or a party to a contract with a citizen the same law applies to it as under like conditions governs the contracts of an individual. State v. Kroner, 2 Texas, 492; State v. Purcell, 16 Texas, 305; Green v. State, 73 Cal., 32; Carr v. State, 127 Ind., 204; 22 Am. St. Rep., 624; State v. Snyder, 66 Texas, 700; State v. Cardozo, 8 S. C., 79; Patton v. Gilmer, 42 Ala., 548; 94 Am. Dec., 665; Danolds v. State, 89 N. Y., 36; 42 Am. Rep., 277; People v. Stepeens, 71 N. Y., 549; People v. Canal Commissioners, 5 Denio, 401; Coleman v. State, 134 N. Y., 564; State v. Dennis, 39 Kan., 509; Morton, Bliss & Co. v. Comptroller, 4 S. C., 448; Davis v. Gray, 16 Wall., 303; Co-operative Ed., book 21, p. 447; Railway v. United States, 14 Otto, 680; Co-operative Ed., book 36, p. 891.

In Carr v. State, 127 Indiana, 304, the Supreme Court of that State said: “As there is a perfect contract, the State is bound to perform it according to its legal tenor and effect, and to redeem the pledge it has declared to be irrevocable. In entering into the contract it laid aside its attributes as a sovereign, and bound itself substantially as one of its citizens does when he enters into a contract. Its contracts are interpreted as the contracts of individuals are, and the law which measures individuals’ rights and responsibilities measures, with few exceptions, those of a State, whenever it enters into an ordinary business contract.”

The Court of Appeals of the State of New York in the case of People v. Stepeens, 71 New York, 549, used the following language: “The State, in all its contracts and dealings with individuals, must be ad *81 judged and abide by the rules which govern in determining the rights of private citizens contracting and dealing with each other. There is not one law for the sovereign and another for the subject; but when the sovereign engages in business and the conduct of business enterprises, and contracts with individuals, although an action may not lie against the sovereign for a breach of the contract, whenever the contract, in any form, comes before the courts the rights and obligations of the contracting parties must be adjusted upon the same principles as if both contracting parties were private persons. Both stand upon equality before the law, and the sovereign is merged in the dealer, contractor, and suitor.”

The Supreme Court of South Carolina clearly announced the same doctrine in the case of Horton, Bliss & Co. v. Comptroller, in the following language: “When a sovereign State enters into a contract or bargain with an individual it assumes to be bound, in all particulars, as an individual under like circumstances would be bound, by what is expressed or properly implied by the terms of such contract. The measure of its obligation is that applied to individuals.”

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Bluebook (online)
45 S.W. 998, 92 Tex. 76, 1898 Tex. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fristoe-v-leon-h-blum-tex-1898.