Houston Oil Co. of Texas v. McGrew
This text of 176 S.W. 45 (Houston Oil Co. of Texas v. McGrew) 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.
Opinion
delivered tire opinion of the court.
This was a suit in trespass to try title by the Houston Oil Company of Texas to recover of MeGrew a 640-acre section of land in Tyler County. The defense was a limitation title to 160 acres under the statute, based upon improvements and ten years occupancy of a part of the section and an adverse claim to the whole of it. MeGrew prevailed under this plea on the trial, and the land was partitioned under the judgment, 160 acres, including his improvements, being set aside to him, and the remainder of the section being allotted to the Oil Company.
The land was originally school land belonging to the State, classified as “Timber'Land.” The Oil Company claimed under a purchase from the State by Y. Wiess, who, in 1895, under the Act of 1895, purchased the timber on the section, and thereafter, on June 28, 1899, under the Act of 1895, as amended in 1897 (art. 4218q, Eev. Stats., 1895, and, as re-enacted with modifications and additions, now art. 5430, Eev. Stats., 1911) made the Commissioner of the Land Office due application to purchase the land itself at the valuation fixed by the statute, of $2.00 -per acre, cash. The account of the State Treasurer showed that Wiess, on the same date of his application to purchase the land, June 28, 1899, deposited with the Treasurer the full amount of the purchase money. The latter issued his receipt to Wiess under date of July 13,-1899, and it was filed in the Land Office the following day. The award was made by the Commissioner on July 18, 1899, and the patent was issued on August 15, 1899.
evidence was undisputed that at the time of the trial MeGrew had been living upon the section for about twenty-one years, with improvements upon it consisting of his dwelling house and out-buildings, and an enclosed farm, of about twenty-five acres, cultivating, using and enjoying the premises; and there was evidence of his adverse claim throughout that period to the entire section.
The question in the case is with respect to the date when limitation began to run in McGrew’s favor, which is determined by the time when it may be said that Wiess acquired his right to the land. The suit having been filed on July 13, 1909,.the trial court instructed the jury that in determining the question of limitation they would reckon the time of McGrew’s occupancy from June 28, 1899, which, as has been stated, was the date upon which Wiess made his application to purchase the section and, according to the Treasurer’s account, paid the purchase money to the State,—more than ten years before the institution of the suit. The Oil-Company insisted in the Court of Civil Appeals, and maintains here, that it should have been computed from the date of the award of the *224 land by the Commissioner, which was less than ten years before the suit was filed.
Art. 4218q, Eev. Stats., 1895, under which the timber was purchased by Wiess, after declaring that a purchaser of the timber on the timbered school lands of the State should have five years from the date of his purchase within which to remove the timber, concluded with this proviso :
"Provided that the purchaser or his vendees of any such timber shall have the right to purchase the land upon which such timber so purchased is situated at two dollars per acre, cash, at any time before the expiration of five years from date of purchase of timber under the provisions of this chapter.”
The effect of this statute was plainly to confer upon Wiess a contractual right, as the purchaser of the timber upon the section, to purchase the section itself at the price of $2.00 per acre, cash, at any time within five years from the date of his purchase of the timber. Jumbo Cattle Co. v. Bacon, 79 Texas, 5, 14 S. W., 840; Hooks v. Kirby, 124 S. W., 156; Wing v. Dunn, 127 S. W., 1101 (writs of error refused in both cases). With this true, it follows that when, within the five year period, he made due application to purchase the section and paid the purchase money to the State, he became invested with a right to the land, without any award by the Commissioner, since the latter, under the statute, had no authority to refuse to make the award. Jumbo Cattle Co. v. Bacon; Burnett v. Winburn, 25 S. W., 969; Watts v. Wheeler, 10 Texas Civ. App., 117, 30 S. W., 297.
If'the award was required, and it was also necessary that Wiess make affidavit that the timber had not been removed, and of his sole interest in the purchase, as is contended by the Oil Company in its argument, the filing of such affidavits was clearly a prerequisite to a valid award. On this theory there was no valid award of the land to Wiess and the 011 Company had no title upon which to maintain the suit, for the first affidavit was not filed until after the award was made, and' the other does not appear to have been filed at all.
It was undisputed that Wiess made his application to purchase the section on June 28, 1899; and we agree with the Court of Civil Appeals that the evidence conclusively established that as the date of his payment of the purchase money to the State. The only evidence touching the date of payment was the entry upon the State Treasurer’s account, showing the payment was made to the Treasurer by Wiess on June 28, 1899,—the same day on which he made his application to purchase, and. a receipt for the money issued by the Treasurer, dated July 13, 1899. The receipt in nowise purported that the payment was made on the date of its issue. It did not profess to evidence any date as the date of the payment. It merely acknowledged the receipt of the money. It was therefore not inconsistent with the positive evidence of the payment on June 28, 1899, afforded by the Treasurer’s account. It is altogether improbable that the Treasurer would have charged himself with the payment on his books before the date it was actually made; whereas *225 the issuance of a receipt for the money on a later date was perfectly consistent with the previous payment. The receipt, in other words, in no sense contradicted the entry as proof that the payment was actually made on June 28, 1899. We hardly see how ordinary minds could differ upon the question, and therefore conclude that it was not improper for the court to assume, as was the effect of the charge, that the payment was made on that date.
The date of the payment becomes, in fact, an immaterial question under the actual proposition advanced by the Oil Company in the Court of Civil Appeals and in this court, for its contention entirely repudiates it as a determining factor in the issue of limitation. Its position throughout the case has been that the date of the Commissioner’s award alone fixed the time when limitation began to run in McGrew’s favor. That was the single proposition submitted in the Court of Civil Appeals under its assignments of error challenging the charge that the jury should compute the period of McGrew’s occupancy from June 28, 1899, and is likewise the sole ground of error assigned in this court with respect to the instruction.
The fact that a part of McGrew’s cultivated field lay across one of the boundary lines of the section did not, in our opinion, defeat his right to assert a limitation title to 160 acres of the section under the statute.
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176 S.W. 45, 107 Tex. 220, 1915 Tex. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-oil-co-of-texas-v-mcgrew-tex-1915.