Houston v. Administrator of Robertson

2 Tex. 1
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 2 Tex. 1 (Houston v. Administrator of Robertson) 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
Houston v. Administrator of Robertson, 2 Tex. 1 (Tex. 1847).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice HeMphill

delivered the opinion of the court.

The petitioner claims to have been empresario of the colony, known by the name of the Nashville or Robertson’s colony, and gives a historical narration of the contract from its inception in 1825, in the name of Robert Leftwitch, its subsequent transfer to the Nashville company in 1827, to its prolongation for four years in 1831, in the name of the petitioner, as is alleged.

The contract was originally for six years, and expired by its own limitation in April, 1831.

From the exhibits appended to the petition, it appears that the territory within the limits of this contract had been, in February, 1831, assigned to Austin and Williams, as empres-arios, for the purposes of colonization.

That, in consequence of representations made by the petitioner to the government of Coahuila and Texas, supported by documents (the contents of all of which are unknown as copies are exhibited), the contract of Austin and Williams, on the 29th April, 1834, was anulled so far as it embraced the lands within the limits of this colony; and it was declared that the families introduced by the petitioner before the 6th April, 1830 should, and ought to be established in said colony; and by decree No. 285 of the same date, the term of his contract was prolonged for four years. From the decree, it would appear that the contract was extended in the name or for the benefit of the petitioner. It is treated as his contract. The families introduced before the 6th April, 1830, are described as coming in at his expense, and a concession of the corresponding premium is directed to be made to him; and as his right to sue in the character of empresario has been strenuously opposed, we may say at once, that by the terms of the law under which he acted, he is treated as empresario, and regarded the government agent for carrying out the project of colonization.

[14-15]*14-15"We will not enter into a detailed statement of tbe matter shown bj tbe record, but proceed to tbe examination of tbe statute authorizing tbe action, and such questions as are presented by the facts and tbe exceptions, and as arise out of the laws, general or special, by which tbe contract was controlled or affected.

The suit was commenced before the passage of the land law of the 14th December, 1837, and was brought by authority of the act supplementary to an act to establish a general land office for the republic of Texas, p. 263, 1 vol. Laws. The question of the constitutionality of the law of the 11th December, 1837, is not involved in the case, and its discussion may be waived.

The fifth section of the law under which the suit is instituted declares that all empresario contracts having ceased on the day of the declaration of independence, all the vacant lands of Texas are the property of the republic, and subject alone to the disposition of the government of the same.”

The section 8th of the law is expressed as follows: “In order to settle the claims of empresarios, each and every one of the same are hereby authorized to institute a suit against the president of the republic of Texas, and his successors in office, which suit or suits shall be tried in the county in which is situated the seat of government of the republic of Texas, and shall be tried as all other land suits are required by law to be tried; and should any empresario, who should thus sue, fail to establish the claim for which he sues, he shall pay all the costs of such suit; provided, that neither aliens nor the assignees of aliens shall be entitled to the benefit of this act.”

The sections 26 and 27 of the land law of December 14, 1837, p. 71, 2 vol. Laws, are literal copies of the sections above quoted, with an immaterial omission; and the authority to sue being thus in effect reaffirmed by the latter statute, no question can arise as to the effect of the repeal of a law, authorizing suit against the government, being made after the suit was commenced.

There is but one rule laid down in the statute to guide our procedure and decision in the trial of these interest[16]*16ing and important causes, and that is, to try them as all other land suits are required by law to be tried.” It is to be regretted that this rule, is of so vague and enigmatical a character, as scarcely to be susceptible of any definite fixed, meaning; prescribing but very dimly any principles to guide our action, and the true interpretation of which, after all the elucidation it has received from the elaborate arguments of counsel, is still obscure and doubtful.

It cannot be supposed that the principles and rules which govern in actions of ejectment should control suits of this character, or that such as are peculiar to suits for specific performance can, as was contended, be enforced as • applicable to this action. This is a class of suits sui generis, and the facts to be established and the rules to direct the judgment of the court should have been more specially prescribed.

The rights of the petitioner, however, as against the government, having been submitted to judicial cognizance, it becomes our duty, where no special intelligible rules are prescribed for our action, to adjudicate them according to the provisions and principles of such laws or systems of laws and such rules of equity as are applicable to the questions in litigation, so that the rights arising under the contracts with former governments may be secured, so far as they can be, in compatibility with the laws of nations, and the affirmative action of the republic of Texas in relation to the subject matter.

The contract in this case being treated in the lower court as one of undoubted validity, under the laws of Coahuila and Texas, up to the declaration of independence, we will first consider the principles by which actions on contracts, not impeached by the acts of the former government, must be determined.

The statute authorizing this suit to be brought declares that all empresario contracts ceased on the day of the declaration of independence, and that the vacant lands of Texas are the property of the republic, and subject alone to the disposition of the same.

This was but the enunciating of facts arising out of the established rules of the laws of nations, regulating the rights [17]*17of conquest or successful revolution. On the disruption of the ties between the people of Texas and the republic of Mexico, and the formation of the republic of Texas, all the territory within the national limits passed under the control of the new sovereignty, and became subject to its disposition. Such portions as had been previously separated from the public domain, and vested by perfect title in individuals, would not, as an ordinary incident of revolutions, be disturbed. A general annihilation of private rightsg^^n in a country overwhelmed by foreign conquest, would be regarded as an outrage upon the usages of modern warfare; but when a constituent portion of a state or kingdom declares and maintains its separate existence and independence, the security of all just and valid titles to property in which the great mass of the people, the originators and supporters of the revolution, are deeply interested, would, instead of being disregarded, be felt as an object of vital concern, and should be shielded by the most effective guaranties.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Tex. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-v-administrator-of-robertson-tex-1847.