Huggins v. Robison

10 S.W.2d 710, 118 Tex. 82, 1928 Tex. LEXIS 109
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 21, 1928
DocketNo. 4825.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 10 S.W.2d 710 (Huggins v. Robison) 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
Huggins v. Robison, 10 S.W.2d 710, 118 Tex. 82, 1928 Tex. LEXIS 109 (Tex. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Judge CRITZ

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section A.

The pleadings in this case and the records of the General Land Office show the following:

“That S. H. Huggins filed application with the surveyor of Armstrong county 23rd August 1914, for a survey of public domain under the act.of 23rd February 1900, as amended in 1905 and 1907, which application, together with the field notes, was filed in this office 22nd September 1914, covering 96.3 acres, known as survey 82, block HD SF 11182 Donley county;

“That corrected field notes of said section 82 were filed in this office 11th November 1914, and approved for 111 acres, which claim was classified as grazing and appraised at $2.00 per and awarded S. H. Huggins on said classification and appraisement, 8th January 1915, on his application filed in this office 26th December 1914, without condition of settlement, which sale was forfeited for nonpayment of interest 22nd September 1925, and the file wrapper endorsed ‘Land forfeited, 22nd September 1925, J. H. Walker, Acting Commissioner’ of which forfeiture the county clerk of said county was advised 24th September 1925 ;

“That mineral permit 10792 was issued 4th May 1926, to Theo. W. Carter on his application filed with the county clerk said county 11th February 1926, at 8:00 A.M., to prospect for oil and gas in said section 82, which application, together with the required affidavit, payment and fees, was filed in this office 11th March 1926, and said permit 10792, containing said section 82, 111 acres, stands on the records of this office in the name of Theo. W. Carter;

“That the firm of Eckhart & Turpén, by R. M. Turpén, deposited in this office 29th April 1926, a check" for $42.53, for the purpose *85 of paying the interest to date and reinstatement of said section 82 in the name of S. H. Huggins, which check was transmitted to the Treasurer 4th May, 1926, for collection and deposit to the credit of the proper fund ;

“That this Department instructed the refund of this amount 6th May 1926, for the reason the land had been forfeited, and the amount could not be applied.”

The relator prays judgment of this court compelling and requiring the Commissioner of the General Land Office to cancel the mineral permit issued to Theo. W. Carter, and to either rescind the forfeiture endorsement on the wrapper pertaining to this land, or to re-instate said land, upon relator paying all past due interest, fees, and penalties.

It is the contention of relator that under Article 5311 of the Revised Civil Statutes of Texas, 1925 (formerly Article 5408), that the giving by the Commissioner of the General Land Office of notice by wide publicity and general information as to forfeiture and the time and terms of resale, referred to under Article 5311, is a prerequisite of the exercise of the power of forfeiture by the Commissioner as against relator, and that such notice is essential to the validity of the intervening rights of the mineral permittee.

On the other hand, it is the contention of the Commissioner that relator is not entitled to a re-instatement or a rescission of the forfeiture endorsement because the prior rights of the respondent Carter, as mineral permittee, had intervened, and that the giving by the Commissioner of notice by wide publicity and general information as to forfeiture and the time and terms of resale referred to in said Article 5311, is not a prerequisite of the exercise of the power of forfeiture as against relator, nor is such notice essential to the validity of the intervening rights of the mineral permittee.

We are in accord with the latter construction.

It is admitted that the Land Commissioner mailed notice of forfeiture to the county clerk on September 24, 1925, after entering the forfeiture on September 22, 1925, and that the Commissioner in all things complied with Chapter 94 of the General Laws of the 39th Legislature, known as the Relief Act, and that the relator did not attempt to-in any way comply with said act.

A decision of the issues of this case must turn on a proper construction and interpretation of Article 5311, Revised Civil Statutes of 1925, which reads as follows:

“In cases where any land included in this Act may be leased and the same may come on the market by reason of the expiration or *86 . cancellation of such leases and in cases where land may be sold and become subject to forfeiture or cancellation for non-payment of interest and thereby subject to revert to the fund to which it originally belonged by reason of the forfeiture or cancellation of the sale, it shall be the duty of the Commissioner to classify and value same before some sale date thereafter and adopt such means as may be at his command that will give wide publicity and general information as to when such land will be forfeited or cancelled, and when it and other land will be on the market for sale together ;with the regulations, terms and conditions upon which the land may be purchased if past due interest should not be paid. No tract of land shall be subject to sale, except unsurveyed school land, until it shall have been advertised. If there are no other satisfactory or sufficient means at the command of the Commissioner that will give the necessary publicity he shall have printed at the expense of the State, to be paid out of the appropriation for public printing, lists of the land for free distribution to the public. The list shall contain a brief statement of how oneshall proceed to buy the land and also state the year to which delinquent interest must be paid to prevent a forfeiture and cancellation. No corporation shall buy any land under this Act.” We think that a careful examination of Article 5311, (formerly old Article 5408, amended and changed) will disclose that said article has no application to the rights of the owner of land subject to forfeiture or which has been actually forfeited, and therefore has no bearing on this case whatever. This article clearly has reference to the manner of putting on the market for sale to the public, lands which are subject to forfeiture, and declares the duty of the Commissioner with reference to such land, first, to classify and value the same before some sale day, and, second, to give, for the benefit of the state and the purchasing public', wide publicity and general information as to when such lands will be forfeited and when same will be on the market for sale, and the terms upon which the land may be purchased, if past due interest should not be paid. There is absolutely no reason, under the very wording of the statute, to suppose that the things named in Article 5311 to be done by the Commissioner are intended for the benefit of the defaulting owner or to make a forfeiture more difficult, or to be prerequisite of the power of the Commissioner to enter the forfeiture. The owner of the land, as a matter of law, knows the time when his interest is due, and he knows that his land is subject to forfeiture in case he fails to pay his1 interest at the time provided for by law. There could be no good *87 reason given for the Legislature to require the Commissioner

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Bluebook (online)
10 S.W.2d 710, 118 Tex. 82, 1928 Tex. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huggins-v-robison-tex-1928.