Marshall v. Robison

191 S.W. 1136, 109 Tex. 15, 1917 Tex. LEXIS 112
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1917
DocketNo. 2764.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 191 S.W. 1136 (Marshall 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
Marshall v. Robison, 191 S.W. 1136, 109 Tex. 15, 1917 Tex. LEXIS 112 (Tex. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Justice YANTIS

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an original suit by the relator, Elmer Marshall, asking that a writ of mandamus be granted against J. T. Robison, the Commissioner of the General Land Office, requiring him to approve his applications for the purchase of school land sections 2 and 4, block 39, township 4-south, certificates 3185 and 3186, Texas & Pacific Bailway Company original grantee, and to require the respondent, J. T. Bobison, 'Commissioner of the General Land Office, to cancel the sale made by Jim to Mrs. J. G. Hall of said two sections of land. Mrs. Hall and Jer husband were made parties to the suit as co-respondents by the relator.

It was alleged, and is admitted, that the two sections were classified, .appraised and advertised for sale by the respondent, Robison, as containing 640 acres of land each, and also advertised that the said sections would be put upon the market for sale under the competitive bidding system on the 20th day of August, 1914, as 640 acres. On July 13, 1914, the relator made application for the purchase of each of said sections, offering therefor $4.50 per acre. The obligation of the relator attached to each application for said sections promised to pay to the State $2808 as the balance of the purchase money for the section, which, together with $72 in cash, as the first payment which accompanied each of his bids, made the total amount offered by him for each section $2880. Both applications were written on a form made for such purpose with blanks to be filled in by the applicant. There was a blank under the word “acres” in each application, which was filled out by the applicant by writing therein the figures “640.” There was a blank under the words “price per acre,” and in this blank was written by the applicant “4.50.” Above these figures was written:

“I agree to pay for said land the price per acre specified below.”

The concluding parts of the applications consist of what is referred to as “obligation.” It is a promise to pay, in most parts in the form of an ordinary promissory note, the total sum of $2808 for the purchase of all of said section No. 2, and the same amount for all of said section No. 4, being the balance of the total purchase money which he agreed to pay for each tract of land described, $72 in cash having been paid for each of - said sections.

The co-respondent, Mrs. Hall, made applications also for said section 2 and for said section' 4. Each of her applications described the land as containing 640 acres in each section, and for section 2 she offered $4.12½ per acre, and for section 4 she offered $4.06. In her “obligation” for section 2 she bid $2662.48, which, added to $68.27, which had been paid in cash, made the total sum of $2730.75 as her bid on all of sec *17 tion 2. Her “obligation” for section 4 was in the sum of $2594.78, which, added to $66.55, the amount of cash which she had remitted, made the total sum of $2661.33 as her bid for all of section 4.

The bids of both parties were opened August 21, 1914, and both the bids of each party were rejected by the Land Commissioner on the ground that section 2, under corrected field notes, contained 662 acres, and section 4, under corrected field notes, contained 655-£ acres. He rejected both applications of each party on the ground that they had applied to purchase only 640 acres, and that the law required all tracts to be sold as a whole, and this attempt to buy a portion only of a tract rendered the applications void. Later, on October 13, 1914, after he had been notified of the rejection of his applications, relator filed new applications showing the correct acreage, according to the corrected field notes, showing obligation.in his bid for $2904.53 on section 2, and for section 4 showed an obligation in the sum of $2876, with the correct acreage, according to corrected field notes. He also transmitted sufficient additional cash to amount to one-fortieth of the aggregate price offered. On the day following the filing of these new applications by the relator, towit, on October 14, 1914, the Land Commissioner, acting on the two applications of the co-respondent, Mrs. Hall, which he had formerly rejected, awarded each section to her. His reasons for making the award on the applications which he had rejected do not appear, and are perhaps immaterial since the rights of the parties were fixed by the filing of their applications, without regard to his reasons.

It is a mandatory provision of the statutes that the land shall be awarded “to the one offering the highest price therefor.” Article 5416, Vernon’s Sayles’ Civil Statutes. This rule can not be departed from. The State is vitally interested, in selling its public lands, to obtain the highest price which may be offered. In order to secure the highest price which any purchaser is willing to pay for the land, and in order that all prospective purchasers may be treated fairly and with justice, and that partiality may not be shown to any citizen who wishes to buy the land offered for sale, it is provided in article 5410, Vernon’s Sayles’ Civil Statutes, for competitive bidding through the method of sealed bids being filed with the Land Commissioner, all of which' shall be opened on the day following the day when the land comes on the market, said envelopes to be opened and the bids examined at 10 o’clock a. m. on said day. Can anyone doubt that one of the main purposes for such competitive bidding is to secure to the State the highest price that any bidder offers for the land? Can anyone doubt the meaning of the language of article 5416, Vernon’s Sayles’ Civil Statutes, when it says: “It shall be the duty of the Commissioner to award the land ■to the one offering the highest price therefor.” Necessarily this rule implies that the land shall not be sold to the lowest bidder therefor. The rule laid down is plain and simple, and is the only safe guide to' follow, when once it has been ascertained from the applications, which *18 bidder has offered the highest price for the land. The duty is plain that the land should be awarded to him, and, indeed, his rights are fixed so that he is entitled to have the land awarded to him, and the courts will aid him in the enforcement of such right, he having complied, of course, with other provisions of the law by duly making his application, transmitting to the Land Commissioner one-fortieth of the aggregate price which he had bid for the land, together with an obligation in writing to pay the State the balance of the amount offered in his bid.

It must be conceded that the relator offered the highest price for the tract of land in his first applications, for he offered $2880 for each tract, and properly transmitted to the Land Commissioner $72 in cash for each section. He executed his obligations, which contain all the ingredients of a promissory note, for $2808, which, added to the cash transmitted, made a total offer for each entire tract of $2880, while the total offered on the part of Mrs. Hall, co-respondent, combining both her obligation and the cash she offered for section 2, was $2730.75, which is $149.25 less than was offered for said section by the relator in his first application. Her total bid for section 4 was $2661.33, which was $218.67 less than the total offer made for said section by the relator in his first application.

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Bluebook (online)
191 S.W. 1136, 109 Tex. 15, 1917 Tex. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-v-robison-tex-1917.