Heirs of Holliman v. Peebles

1 Tex. 673
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 1 Tex. 673 (Heirs of Holliman v. Peebles) 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
Heirs of Holliman v. Peebles, 1 Tex. 673 (Tex. 1846).

Opinion

Hehphill, C. J.

The argument of this cause has been characterized by signal ability throughout, and by extensive research on some ■of the points discussed; but others, from the want of proper authorities, were not sufficiently elucidated to relieve them from difficulty, or the court from much labor in their investigation.

The principal questions, as presented by the record, are:

1st. Whether a foreign colonist, who had under the colonization law of 1823 received a league of land as the head of a family from the government of Mexico, but who never at any time had a permanent domicile nor introduced his property in the country, and finally abandoned the same, is entitled to hold the lands so received by him under the laws of colonization.

[(482)]*(482)2d. Whether the ayuntamiento had lawful authority to investigate the conduct of colonists under the first contract of the empresario, Stephen P. Austin, relative to the performance of the conditions under which the title to the lands was holden; and whether on the facts as -ascertained by the ayuntamiento and the certificate of the empresario, the commissioner was justified in regarding the lands as vacant and issuing the title to the defendant.

3d. Whether the plaintiffs, under the plea of alienage, were disabled from maintaining the action.

From the proceedings of the ayuntamiento, it appears that Kinchen Holliman had never fixed his domicile in the country, and that all his property was in the state of Mississippi; and the fact of his abandonment of the country having been put in issue by the pleading and evidence, and the judge having charged the jury that if they believed he had abandoned the country they should find for the defendant, we may conclude that, in the opinion of the jury, the deceased intestate had, at the time of the grant to the defendant, domi-ciliated himself beyond the limits of the republic of Mexico.

In examining into the effects of this domiciliation abroad of the deceased, it will be unnecessary to advert to the doctrines and authorities advanced and adduced, in relation to the distinction between conditional and perfect titles, and the respective rights of the government and grantee, under titles of either description; at least so far as these rights are affected by the non-performance or otherwise of such conditions as payment of the price, cultivation of the lands, etc.

The title of Holliman was perfect so far as it could be impressed with that quality by the payment of the dues of the government and the cultivation of the lands. He was vested with a dominion over the property, as absolute as could be acquired by any foreign colonist or new settler, in the lands granted him under the laws of colonization. The price had been discharged before the title issued; and the fact of cultivation was expressly found by the ayuntamiento.

The consideration, then, of the authorities against his title, regarded as a mere permission to occupy lands until, on the performance of conditions, a more perfect grant should be issued, may be waived as inapplicable in a great degree to the real issues in the controversy. The true question is, did the domiciliation of the grantee, in a foreign country, as found by the ayuntamiento, operate as a forfeiture of the-titles to the land granted him under the laws of colonization?

In discussing this point let us for a moment advert to the doctrines on the subject of domicile, so far as they may be applicable in this case. The word domicile is defined in the El Diccionario de Legisla-[(483)]*(483)cion to be-“ the place where one is established and resides with his wife, children and family, and the greater part of his movable property. The place where one resides only certain periods of time (algunas temporadas), according to circumstances as they occur, cannot be called his true domicile, although he may there have some real property,” p. 187. A well established rule on the subject is, that the domicile of origin must prevail until the party has not only acquired another, but has manifested and carried into execution an intention of abandoning his former, and taking another as his sole domicile. Somerville v. Somerville, 5 Ves. p. 787.

It is also a principle that the acquisition of a domicile does not simply depend on the residence of the party; the fact of residence must be accompanied by the intention of permanently residing in the new domicile and abandoning the former. The change of domicile must be manifested animo et facto, by the fact of residence and intention to abandon. De Bouneval v. De Bouneval, English Ecclesiastical Reports, 1 Curtis, 856; 2 Kent, 431.

The domicile of the grantee tested by these rules would be found in the country of this origin, the United States of the north. The ayuntamiento declare that he had no fixed domicile in this country; that all his property more than six years after the grant still continued in the state of Mississippi. He had, therefore, not abandoned the domicile of origin, and the circumstance of his making occasional visits to Texas would not be sufficient to invest him with a new domicile with all its duties, rights and privileges. His declarations abroad that he was a citizen of Mexico — and his refusal to exercise the privilege of voting, are important circumstances in favor of his claim to a domicile in Texas; but these are outweighed by the facts of residence in Texas being only occasional, and that, of the whole of his large property, none was removed from his original domicile in Mississippi. The introduction of his person and family, which in this case constituted his property, to the colony, was the principal consideration upon which the grant was founded, and constituted the evidence of the residence contemplated by the colonization law; and where this is wanting, no declaration of citizenship in Texas or refusal to exercise the privileges of voting in Mississippi (which could not have been denied him had he claimed its exercise) will supply the deficiency.

"Was the grantee, then, under the circumstances, entitled to hold the land derived to him as a colonist from the government of Mexico?

It will be conceded that the primary object of the laws of colonization was the introduction and establishment of settlers who would be[(484)]*(484)come permanent residents of the country. The cultivation of the lands was an appropriate and essential means of sustaining the new community; but this, though a most important condition, was but subsidiary to the great end of expelling the savage and filling the wilderness with a Christian, civilized and laboring population.

To accomplish this paramount object, large bounties were offered out of the public domain —the enjoyment of which was accompanied with some restrictions, but the most important of which, and the most conducive to the accomplishment\of the purposes of the government, was the limitation which deprived the grantee of the property on the instant of his retirement from the country.

The mere culture of the land for a few years was, therefore, rendered insufficient without continued residence in the country, for the preservation of titles to land bestowed upon the colonists as a compensation, not for their removal alone, but for their permanent domiciliation on the soil. The settler had, it is true, after the performance of certain conditions, the power of alienating his lands-.

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1 Tex. 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heirs-of-holliman-v-peebles-tex-1846.