Monroe Cattle Co. v. Becker

147 U.S. 47, 13 S. Ct. 217, 37 L. Ed. 72, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2142
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 3, 1893
Docket87
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 147 U.S. 47 (Monroe Cattle Co. v. Becker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monroe Cattle Co. v. Becker, 147 U.S. 47, 13 S. Ct. 217, 37 L. Ed. 72, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2142 (1893).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

This case involves the construction of the statutes, of Texas with regard to the purchase of school lands, and depends upon the question whether, during the ninety days allowed to the proposed purchaser to make his first payment, it is competent for the surveyor to receive another application for the same land, or rather to permit a person, who had theretofore filed' applications for two parties, to treat such applications as withdrawn and abandoned, and to make other applications in the ñamé of different persons within the ninety days.

No one can examine critically the provisions of the statutes in question without noticing the solicitude of the legislature to prevent a monopoly of these lands by capitalists, or their withdrawal from the market by fictitious applications. To secure a measurably equal allotment to each purchaser it was provided:

1. That no one should purchase more than three sections within five miles of the centre of any county of upon any water front, nor more than seven sections in any case.

2. That he should make his first payment within ninety days of his application!

3. That applications should be made in the real name of the actual purchaser.

4. That no one should reijew his application nor file on the same land more than once in twelve months.

5. That no one should renew his file in the name of another.

In -this case there were circumstances Calculated to arouse suspicion in the conduct of both parties. Upon the one hand, *53 Rhomberg made application on February 28, 1882, for the purchase of these eleven sections in the names of F. Becker., S. L. Rhomberg and Conrad Becker. These applications were suffered to lapse, and on the ninetieth day thereafter, namely, May 29, he made application for seven sections of the same lands in the name of J. M. Beechem, and on the following day for four sections in the name of M. B. Thompson. These applications were also suffered to lapse, and ninety-two days thereafter, namely, August 28', he applied for the same sections, except section 66, in the name of Margaretta Rhomberg and F. M. Robinson. lie also seems to have intended that these should lapse, but as the ninetieth day, November 26, fell on Sunday, he wrote his attorneys on the 22d : “ The old file expires on Sunday next. You will, therefore, probably have to refile on Saturday.” A new application was, therefore, made on Saturday, November 25, in the name of Maggie L. Rhomberg and Frank Robinson. In this connection, the bill charged that Rhomberg made these applications in the names of other persons, who did not intend to be actual purchasers, for his own use and benefit, in order to acquire more than he was permitted to purchase directly from the State; that he further determined, in violation of the provision against renewing files in the names of other persons, to take advantage of the ninety-day limit, to allow the applications to be forfeited, and to make new applications in the names of other persons, not intending to be actual purchasers, and thus, to hold the lands for a longer period than was permitted by the law; and, for the time being, to avoid the payment of any part .of the purchase money and of the taxes, which Avould be assessed after the first payments had been made.

An answer under oath being required, the defendant denied the fraudulent purposes and designs charged against Rhomberg in the bill, and, in his testimony, Rhomberg swore that Margaretta and Maggie L. Rhomberg were different persons, as were also F. M. Robinson and Frank Robinson, and that they were each of them bona fide living persons, three of then? living in Iowa, and one in Chicago; that Margaretta .Rhomberg was his sister-in-law; that he was only distantly related *54 •to the husband of Maggie L. Rhomberg, and that he was not related to eitherof the Robinsons; that he was not interested in any of the purchases himself; that he considered invest.ments in Texas school lands good, and made his views known, to many of his relatives and friends, and advised them to buy; that, as he was making his headquarters in Texas, many of them confided their interests to him; that he looked after them without demanding or expecting any pay for his services; and that the persons for whom he acted furnished the money to pay for the lands. He admitted making, several applications to purchase the lands in question, and that these were abandoned without making the first payments; that the different applications were not renewals, but were for different persons; and that they were not intended to keep other persons from purchasing the lands. In short, that the applications ’were made bona, fide for the benefit of the applicants, and that he .had no personal interest in any of them. As there was no testimony contradictory of this, Rhomberg being the only witness examined on the subject the charges of fraud must be regarded as not sustained, if, indeed, the answer be not sufficient for that purpose without other testimony, Hughes v. Blake, 6 Wheat. 453; Vigel v. Hopp, 104 U. S. 441; Beals v. Illinois, Missouri & Texas Railroad, 133 U. S. 290.

Upon the other hand, the answer charges that one H. C. Jacobs was county surveyor, and J. L. Fisher was county .judge of Shackleford County; that they were partners as real estate agents, transacting business under the name of Jacobs & Fisher; that the F. B. Jacobs, who made application in January, was a brother of H. C. Jacobs,- and postmaster at Albany, the county seat of Shackleford County, and that Malinda Fisher, who applied for the remainder of the lands, was the wife of one John A. Fisher, deputy surveyor of the county, and brother of the other member of the firm of Jacobs- & Fisher; that théy entered into a conspiracy to levy a contribution upon all the .purchasers of school lands in the county, and to control the same for their own benefit; that the firmAf Jacobs & Fisher wrote letters' to Rhomberg soliciting his business, promising to sell his lands at an advance, *55 and offered to make files of applications, promising special favors and attention, to all who should employ them. It seems that Rhomberg did employ them in this connection, and had some correspondence with them. As these charges were made upon information and belief only, and as there is no evidence to support them, except the similarity of names, they must also be treated as not sustained.

I.. The case resolves itself, then, into the simple question whether the surveyor was authorized to receive the applications of November 25, and whether the' plaintiff is in a position to take advantage of his failurfe of jurisdiction in this particular. The language of the act is somewhat ambiguous, but the intent of the legislature that no application shall be entertained within the ninety days is entirely clear.

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Bluebook (online)
147 U.S. 47, 13 S. Ct. 217, 37 L. Ed. 72, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monroe-cattle-co-v-becker-scotus-1893.