Miller v. Moss

65 Tex. 179, 1885 Tex. LEXIS 333
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 27, 1885
DocketCase No. 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 65 Tex. 179 (Miller v. Moss) 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
Miller v. Moss, 65 Tex. 179, 1885 Tex. LEXIS 333 (Tex. 1885).

Opinion

Stayton, Associate Justice.

The patent offered in evidence, vests title to the land in controversy in such persons as are the heirs of James T. Miller, and there is no controversy as to the fact that the appellants take in that capacitjr, and through his wife who had an interest equal to his own. The patent also shows that it was issued under the act authorizing the sale and settlement of the Mississippi and Pacific railway reservation, approved August 26, 1856 (P. D., 5038, 5043), and is prima facie evidence that everything was done necessary under that act and subsequent acts to authorize the patent to issue. The patent issued July 16, 1883, but relates to the time the right upon which it is based had its inception.

The record shows that James T. Miller, with his family, settled upon and improved the land as early as the year 1855, and that they continuously occupied it, until sometime in the year 1862, when he went into the Confederate army and died, but since that time they have not occupied it.

The act of August 26, 1856, (P. D., 5038, 5043) did not require three years occupancy to entitle one residing on land within the Mississippi and Pacific railroad reserve to one hundred and sixty acres [182]*182of land, but it did require such person to pay fifty cents per acre for the land. The time for making such payments and for returning such surveys to the general land office was extended from time to time. P. D., 4366, 4367, 4370, 5041, 5048, 5049, 5050. The survey for Miller was made on December 22, 1858, duly recorded on same day, and returned to the general land office, on January 5, 1859, and it appears to have been properly entered on the county map. The patent is conclusive of the right of Miller’s heirs as against all persons who do not show some right which the law recognizes having an existence prior to its issuance, as is it conclusive of the right of those who claim through it against every person who does not show some right antedating the inception of the Miller claim, if the facts existed in relation thereto which authorized the patent to issue. The ground on which it is claimed that there was no authority to issue the patent, is, that the price required to be paid by the act of August 26, 1856, (P. D., 5038, 5043) was never paid by Miller nor his heirs. The patent is prima facie evidence that this was done, if the law in force when the patent issued required such payment to be made, and • we are of the opinion that the evidence offered on the trial was not sufficient to rebut the proof made by the patent. The proof made, at most, only went to show the want of knowledge by some of Miller’s heirs that the payment had been made.

If, however, the money was not paid, we are of the opinion that its payment was rendered unnecessary by the act of March 24, 1871. P. D.; 7052. That act declares that “any person who has occupied any portion of the public domain, not exceeding one hundred and sixty acres, in good faith, under any of the pre-emption laws, for three years or longer, shall be entitled to the same as a homestead, and upon complying with the requirements of section .second of the act approved August 12,1870, to regulate the disposal of the public lands of this state (except as to future residents), shall be entitled to a patent therefor, which shall issue at once.”

The second section of the act of August 12, 1870, contains no requirement applicable to one who had occupied land as prescribed by the act of March 24, 1871, for three years prior to that act, and had caused the land to be surveyed, survey recorded, and the field notes already returned to the general land office, as a condition precedent to the settler’s right to ¿patent, except that, as in claims to pre-emption, right to which was made to depend on three years’ occupancy, the act required proof of that fact to be made and the office fees to be paid.

The act of March 24, 1871, does not, in terms nor by implication, require any payment to be made for land occupied “under any of the [183]*183pre-emption laws of this state for three years or longer,” as did the act of August 26, 1856, and as did the pre-emption law of December 7, 1853 (P. D., 4337, 4338, 5043), yet it is expressly made applicable to all pre-emption laws existing at any time anterior to its passage. That the act of August 26, 1856, was a pre-emption law its nature renders too clear, and that those claiming under it are classed as persons entitled to pre-emption, is clearly shown by several statutes extending relief to persons holding under the several pre-emption laws. P. D., 4357, 4362.

That the conditions on which the settler was entitled to land under the act:of August 26, 1856, were settlement on the reservation at the time of the passage of the act, and payment of the prescribed price, in no way interfered with the right or power of the legislature, by the act of March 24, 1871, to give the land to the settler without such payment on the sole condition that he had occupied the land for three years before the passage of that act.

Miller occupied the land for more than three years, as a pre-emptor, after the land was subject to location and sale, before the passage of the act of March 24, 1871, and under the spirit as well as the letter of that act was entitled to a patent without paying fifty cents per acre for the land. The sole duty imposed upon him to entitle him to the patent was, he having long before had the land surveyed and the survey returned to the land office, that he should make proof of the occupation and improvements required by the statute. This his heirs did, and thereby, under the statute, they became entitled to a patent, as would their ancestor have been had he lived. P. D., 7053.

The surveys under which the defendants claim homestead donations were made on October 9 and 10, 1877, and the occupation and improvements began in the same year; but there were no applications in writing sworn to by the defendants or their vendees, such as was required by the statute to give authority to the surveyor to make the surveys.

The act of November 12,1866, as also the acts of January 27, 1845, and the act of February 13, 1854, in substance, provided that: 11 On application being made by such settler to a surveyor to have his or her said land surveyed, to include his or her improvements, he or she shall not be required to furnish the surveyor with any land certificate as other claims against the government for land; but he or she shall make an affidavit, which may be administered by such surveyor, that he or she believes that he or she has settled upon vacant land, as contemplated in the first section of this act, upon which the survey for not exceeding one hundred' and sixty acres of land may be made.” [184]*184P. D., 7059. It is not believed that so much of the act as is above quoted was repealed or superceded until the adoption of the Revised Statutes, which may be deemed but a continuance of the former law. The act of August 12, 1870, did not declare how applications should be made, and only repealed laws in conflict with it. General Laws, 1870, 69.

The act of May 26,1873, did not declare how the application should be made, nor what it should contain, and it only repealed such laws as were in conflict with it. It, however, contains this provision: “ Upon such application being made as required bylaw, it shall be the duty of the county surveyor, within one month thereafter, to survey said homestead, certify to the correctness of the field notes, record them in his office, and forward them,

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Bluebook (online)
65 Tex. 179, 1885 Tex. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-moss-tex-1885.