Lee v. Green

58 S.W. 847, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 109, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 115
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 16, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 58 S.W. 847 (Lee v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. Green, 58 S.W. 847, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 109, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 115 (Tex. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

CONNER, Chibe Justice.

The lands involved in this suit consist of sections 22 and 40, State school land, situated in Wheeler County, Texas, appellant, Florence G. Lee, claiming the same as purchaser from the State and as vendee under warranty deed of one Frank Gooden, who became the lawful purchaser thereof from the State of Texas on the 4th day of July, 1881. Appellee claims by virtue of his application and settlement on section 22 made on the 20th day of June, 1898. The case was tried in part upon an agreed statement of facts, and resulted in a judgment for appellee.

So far as necessary to here notice, it may be stated that the purchase of appellant Florence G. Lee was on the 25th day of November, 1895. No question is made as to the validity of her title, save as the same may have been affected by the subsequent failure to pay interest and the forfeiture hereinafter mentioned. Immediately upon her purchase she, together with her husband, moved upon section 40, and they have continued to occupy and improve it ever since as their home.

On the 20th day of August, 1897, the Commissioner of the General Land Office forfeited the sales of- both sections 22 and 40 for nonpayment of interest due the State and unpaid for the years 1895, 1896, and 1897, the forfeiture being declared by said officer by indorsing upon *110 the original application of Gooden the following: “Land forfeited for nonpayment of interest,” signing the same officially.

On the 20th day of June, 1898, appellee M. 8. Green made application in due form of law to the Commissioner of the General Land Office to purchase the whole of said sections Nos. 22 and 40 as an actual settler on section No. 22, which application was duly filed in said Commissioner’s office and the lands were duly awarded to him by the- Commissioner as aforesaid, appellee having duly made his first payment of one fortieth of the principal of the appraised value of all of said lands to the State Treasurer and executed his obligation to the State for the balance of the unpaid purchase money in accordance with law, and has paid all accruing interest thereon as required by law since that time.

On the 21st day of October, 1898, appellant Florence G. Lee tendered to the State Treasurer money sufficient to pay all arrears of interest due the State of Texas on the purchases by virtue of which she claimed, and requested a cancellation of said forfeiture, and that her claim of purchase be reinstated as if no such forfeiture had ever been declared, all of which was refused by said Treasurer and Commissioner of the General Land Office.

The right of the Commissioner to declare the forfeiture we think settled, and the sole question that we deem necessary to determine is the question whether appellee Green was an actual settler within the meaning of the law at the time of his purchase, as found by the court' below, it being in effect, as we think, admitted that if he was not such actual settler appellants were entitled to recover.

That actual settlement is a condition precedent to the acquisition of any right under an application and award as was appellee’s is not an open question. See Rev. Stats., art. 4218f; Metzler v. Johnson, 1 Texas Civ. App., 137.

Appellee’s testimony on this point is as follows: “I came to this country from Oklahoma in May, 1898, bringing with me about ninety head of cattle, wagon and team, my bed, clothing, cooking utensils, etc. I came to Wyant’s place on ‘Nubbin Ridge,” where Converse and Williams were. We leased that land in April before for one year. My purpose in leasing was to hold the cattle there and make a crop. I intended to locate on school land as soon as I could get time to look around. There was about 100 acres under cultivation on Wyant’s place. We put in a crop on it, and after we had our crop pitched I started out to look for some land to file on. I found sections 22 and 40 in controversy in this suit. It was about the first of June. Converse was with me at the time, and we had a compass and looked for the corners. I decided to locate on section 22 as my home, and I went on it the 17th of June with the intention and purpose of making it my permanent home. I had my wagon and team with me, bed and cooking utensils also. I stayed all night on the land; camped near where the dugout was afterwards built. I left there the next day and went back to Wyant’s place, but left my cooking outfit, consisting of a bake oven, *111 coffee-pot, skillet, cups, and perhaps some other little things. When I came away from the section I put them in a nook or corner of the hank where they would not he disturbed. I then went to Mobeetie and made my application and sent down to the General Land Office, with money to file on the land.”

In the strongest light in which the evidence can be placed, this was all that was done prior to the time his application was made. It was necessary, in order to the acquisition of any right, that he should have been then an actual settler. There was other evidence showing or tending to show that from time to time thereafter appellee would go from Wyant’s place to section 22,—sometimes in the daytime and then at night. Sometimes he would go with his wagon, and again on his horse. In leaving the land he carried with him his bed, it being necessary, as he says, for his use, and he testifies that his stay at Wyant’s place was temporary, and that he called section 22 his home. Ho improvements were made, however, until about the 19th or 20th of October, when he began building a dugout, he testifjdng that he was unable to procure the material with which to build a house until about the 1st of December. Ho other witness testifies to having seen Green at any time on section 22, save the witness Converse, who went with him to examine the land and who stayed with him one night upon the land thereafter, though other witnesses testified to instances when appellee would leave the Wyant place with the statement that he was going over home.

We have concluded that the evidence fails to show that appellee was an actual settler at the date of his application to purchase, within the meaning of the law. His acts subsequent thereto are material only as illustrating the character of the settlement, if any, in fact made prior to the application. The application requires the statement under oath that he was then, i. e., at the time of the malting thereof, an actual settler, and we think the acts appearing in the record done by him were merely in the nature of acts of preparation to settle. We think it evident that at that time his real homQ was un the Wyant place. His mere declaration that it was but temporary did not make it otherwise. He was then cultivating a crop there, and continued to do so until the latter .part of that year. The Wyant place was some six miles from section 22 in controversy. He remained there the greater part of the time, as he says, to cultivate his crop and to care for some eighty or ninety head of cattle of which he was the owner. He rolled on the section with his wagon in the evening, remained there that night, and rolled away next morning, taking with him his bed and all things else thereon necessary for his actual residence and business, leaving only a bake oven, frjdng-pan, and perhaps a few other small things in a natural receptacle in the bank of a creek.

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.W. 847, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 109, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-green-texapp-1900.