Lamb v. James

29 S.W. 647, 87 Tex. 485, 1895 Tex. LEXIS 374
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1895
DocketNo. 240.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 29 S.W. 647 (Lamb v. James) 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
Lamb v. James, 29 S.W. 647, 87 Tex. 485, 1895 Tex. LEXIS 374 (Tex. 1895).

Opinion

DBRMAR, Associate Justice.

In 1885 the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Company survey number 2, 333 acres of land, in Wichita County, Texas, was part of the public domain set apart for the benefit of public free schools.

*488 September 7, 1885, Still applied to the land board to purchase same as agricultural land under the Act of April, 1883, and same was by said board awarded to him; but he acquired no interest therein by virtue of said award, for the reason, (1) that he never became an actual settler thereon, and (2) the land was not sold in the county or district where situated. The State v. Opperman, 74 Texas, 136; Martin v. McCarty, 74 Texas, 128.

When the land was awarded to Still, as aforesaid, he paid a small part of the purchase money, and gave his notes for the balance to the State.

In March, 1887, Still conveyed the land by warranty deed to James, who assumed the payment of said notes, but never took possession of the land. In February, 1889, James, by deed with covenants of general warranty, conveyed to Lamb and Edwards, in consideration of $200 cash and four negotiable promissory notes for $294.05 each, executed by Lamb and Edwards in favor of James, and the assumption by Lamb and Edwards of the payment of said notes executed by Still to the State, vendor’s lien being retained to secure all said notes.

Lamb and Edwards immediately upon said purchase moved upon and became actual settlers upon said land. Soon afterwards Edwards sold to Lamb, who assumed to pay all said notes. When Lamb and Edwards purchased they were aware that there was some question about the regularity of the Still purchase, but believed they were getting good title.

After Lamb purchased the interest of Edwards as aforesaid, he ascertained that he had acquired no title under the conveyances above, and that the land was still public domain, whereupon he made application under the Act of April 8, 1889, as an actual settler to purchase said land from the State, which he did at a cost to him of $333 more than the aggregate amount of the Still notes, the Still purchase and notes having been at Lamb’s request cancelled. Said notes executed in favor of James were by him for their face value indorsed to the Panhandle National Bank, which had notice of the facts above.

'Under the above state of facts, Lamb, in March, 1890, sued James and said bank, seeking to recover of James said $200 cash payment made by Lamb and Edwards to James, and to have said four notes executed by Lamb and Edwards to James, and by him indorsed to said bank, cancelled.

The bank in reconvention sought a judgment against Lamb, as principal, and James, as indorser, for the full amount of said notes, interest and attorney’s fees, and a foreclosure of the vendor’s lien for the full amount thereof on said land as reserved in the deed from James to Lamb and Edwards.

The State at the instance of Lamb intervened, in May, 1890, seeking to cancel the Still purchase.

*489 On the first trial the court below rendered judgment for the State agaiust James, conceiting the Still title, and for Lamb against James for §200, and against the bank for cancellation of said notes.

On the second trial the court, in deference to the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals, in James v. Lamb, 2 Texas Civil Appeals, 186, rendered judgment in favor of the State cancelling the Still title, and against Lamb for the full amount of the four notes executed to James as aforesaid, less $333, and for a foreclosure of the vendor’s lien on said land, and against James as indorser on said notes.

The judgment was necessarily lengthy in adjusting the rights of the parties under the rules of law applied by the court below, but the above is the substantial result thereof as to Lamb, and all that is necessary to state for the purpose of this discussion.

On appeal by Lamb the judgment was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals, and he has brought the case here on writ of error.

The court below, in rendering, and the Court of Civil Appeals, in affirming, the judgment herein, were governed by the well-established rule of law, that where a vendee sues his vendor on his warranty, and it appears on the trial that, although there was a failure of title, the vendee, without having been evicted, has purchased the superior title, the measure of the vendee’s recovery on the warranty is the sum expended by him in thus perfecting the title, not to exceed the original purchase money and interest; and where, as in this case, the notes representing unpaid purchase money, being held by the vendor or a purchaser with notice, exceed in amount the sum paid for the outstanding title, the vendee is only entitled to have credited thereon the sum so paid. This rule originated at common law, where the vendor placed the vendee in actual possession by livery of seizin, and such possession would in time ripen into a perfect title, and at all events, was, before eviction, of great value in securing the immediate enjoyment of the land and in defending against or forcing a compromise with the holder of the superior title; and being placed by the vendor in so advantageous a position with reference to the land, the vendee, while retaining such possession, was estopped from repudiating or disputing the vendor’s title or setting up against the interests of the vendor any subsequently acquired title, except to charge the vendor on his warranty with such sum as it was necessary for him to expend in acquiring the outstanding superior title to protect his possession.

In such cases it could not be said that there was a failure of consideration for the payment of the purchase money, even though the title should fail, and in the absence of a warranty the purchase money could not be recovered upon such failure.

Though the method of conveying land has been changed by statute so that it is no longer essential that the vendor should have, or place *490 the vendee in, actual possession, nevertheless the law regulating their respective rights remains the same.

These rules apply to private lands, that is, lands the titles to which have passed, or so far passed out of the government as to be the lawful subject matter of private contract.

But do such rules have any application to an attempted conveyance of a portion of the public domain? -The vendor can not lawfully place the vendee in possession. The possession of the vendee can not ripen into a right, nor will it give him any advantage in dealing with the State. His wrongful possession will not even preclude an actual settler from moving onto the land under contract with the government, for it can confer upon him no right of action or defense. The making of such deeds by private parties would tend to embarrass the State in the disposition of its public lands, would encumber the homes of the purchasers with liens not only to the State for the real purchase money, but also in favor of a stranger to the title for such sum as he might charge the settler for his pretended right, thereby rendering the settler less able to perform his contract with the State, and is therefore contrary to public policy.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.W. 647, 87 Tex. 485, 1895 Tex. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamb-v-james-tex-1895.