Hart v. Bullion

48 Tex. 278
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 48 Tex. 278 (Hart v. Bullion) 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
Hart v. Bullion, 48 Tex. 278 (Tex. 1877).

Opinion

Moore, Associate Justice.

In November, 1870, appellant, Hart, sold to appellees, Bullion and wife, lots 1, 6, 7, and 8, in block 17, and lots 2, 3,4, and 5, in block 23, in the town of Greenville, for the sum of $6,000, to be paid in land in the State of Texas, situated north of the Brazos river, at $2 per acre. On the 6th of March, 1871, this contract was cancelled by a written agreement, wherein Bullion and wife undertake and agree to transfer to Hart their one-fourth locative interest in thirty-two sections of land, twenty-two sections of which purport, as appears by the contract, to have been located in Fannin land district, by virtue of scrip issued to the Southern Pacific Railway Company, and returned to the General Land Office; and upon eight of which patents had issued to the heirs of Pendleton Murrain The other ten sections, issued to the Memphis and El Paso Railway Company, transferred to one Garrett, seem not to have been then located. In consideration whereof, Hart, on his part, agreed and undertook, so soon as Bullion and wife should make, or cause to be made, to him “ a good and sufficient title ” to their said one-fourth locative interest [283]*283in the thirty-two sections of land “located by virtue of said scrip, to make them a like title to said lots, and certain other lots in the town of Greenville, and fifty acres of land in the vicinity of said town.”

The certificates or scrip belonging to Garrett had been, previous to the date of this contract, or were shortly thereafter, filed or located by Bullion, on land in Benton county. But the land upon which they were so filed having been previously appropriated, these locations were invalid. Garrett thereupon withdrew said scrip from Bullion’s hands, and annulled his contract with him for its location. And it is not pretended that Bullion is, or will be, able to make Hart a title to any part of the land which has been, or was to have been, acquired by the location of this scrip. It is insisted, however, and Hart admits, that he agreed and told Bullion, if he would secure him the titles, as stipulated, on the other scrip, that he would accept other lands in lieu of that lost by his failure to locate the Garrett scrip. And on the 3d of October, 1874, Bullion, as he says, in part compensation for the locative interest in the Garrett scrip, made to Hart a deed for 737-| acres of other land. Hart, however, claims that this deed was not made for this purpose, but was intended to secure him against loss, by his having executed, to Bullion and others, at his request, a deed for a portion of the lots, for which title was not to have been made until the contract had been fully complied with by Bullion and wife.

It is not stipulated in said agreement of March 6, 1871, within what time Bullion and wife were to make Hart the title to the lands as therein stipulated. Nor does it appear, from said instrument, to whom said twenty sections of said scrip issued to the Southern Pacific Railway Company belonged, or with or for whom Bullion and wife had contracted to locate them. It appears, however,—and we must infer that this was known to Hart when the agreement between them was made,—that they claim the locative interest to which they had stipulated to make, or cause to be made, a good and suffi[284]*284cient title to Hart, under and by virtue of a contract which Bullion claims to have been made with him by Mrs. S. E. Murrah, who appellant, in his petition, alleges was the wife of said Pendleton Murrah, to whose heirs eight sections of the land located by said scrip was patented. This contract purports to have been made with Mrs. Murrah by Thomas P. Martin, as her agent, August 31, 1867. It designates and describes the certificates to which it refers by their numbers as given in the contract with Hart, and recites that they were issued to the Southern Pacific Railway Company, and transferred by said company to Pendleton Murrah; but does not show what interest Mrs. Murrah had in them, or by what right or authority she undertook to contract for their location, or could convey an interest in the land when located as compensation to the locator. Nor is her interest in the certificates, or her authority to make the contract, or the authority of Martin to act for or bind her, shown, or attempted to be shown, except as an inference from the contract itself, and the location of the certificates by Bullion, and the issuance of the patents on such location.

It may also be stated, in this connection, that it is expressly stipulated, in said contract, that said certificate should be located, and the field-notes thereof returned to the General Land Office, ready for patents to be issued thereon, within four months from the date of said contract; yet, with the exception of those patented at the date of the contract with Hart, none of the lands located by the “Murrah certificates,” as they are called in the transcript, were patented until after the institution of this suit; and it is by no means certain that patents for any of them were gotten by Bullion. It is true, he testified that he procured all the patents; but it is quite probable that he merely meant that patents had been obtained for them by reason of what had been done by him; for he admits that Martin filed in the General Laud Office a protest against their delivery to him, and failed to produce, on the trial, any patents issued subsequently to the date of the con[285]*285tract with Hart, but merely certified copies of them, to show that the land had been patented. It may be also here noted, that only two sections of the land were patented to Mrs. Hurrah, and five of them were patented neither to her nor the heirs of Pendleton Hurrah, but to the Southern Pacific Bail-way Company.

On the 15th of February, 1873, when there can be no pretense that Bullion and wife had made, or caused to be made, to Hart, title to the land referred to in' said agreement of the 6th of March, 1871, or title to any other lands in lieu thereof, appellee M. D. Martin purchased from them the principal part of the property which Hart was to convey them when they complied with the terms of said contract, and took from them a bond to procure title to the property sold him, by complying with their said agreement of March 6, 1871, and the said ageement made and entered into August 31, 1867, between appellee M. D. Bullion and T. P. Martin, agent for S. E. Hurrah. It is therefore beyond question, that appellee Martin has no better title to that part of the property in controversy claimed by him than his vendors, Bullion and wife. The pretense, that he was induced to purchase the property from Bullion and wife upon the admissions of Hart that they had performed their contract, or that he had waived its performance, or that he (Martin) was ignorant or misled in regard to the matter, is clearly rebutted by his bond for title from Bullion and wife, as well as by his own testimony upon the trial of the case.

The only pretense towards the performance of the contract by Bullion and wife prior to the institution of this suit, shown in the record, is a deed for 737-?,- acres of land, made to Hart by Bullion October 3, 1874, as he insists, in part compensation for the locative interest in the ten Garrett certificates, which had been lost; but, as Hart alleges, as security for the lots to which he had, at Bullion’s request, given him and others an absolute title, to enable him to raise the money to [286]*286fulfill his contract to locate and procure patents on said certificates.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 Tex. 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-bullion-tex-1877.