Murphy v. Terrell

100 S.W. 130, 100 Tex. 397, 1907 Tex. LEXIS 240
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 6, 1907
DocketNo. 1616.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 100 S.W. 130 (Murphy v. Terrell) 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
Murphy v. Terrell, 100 S.W. 130, 100 Tex. 397, 1907 Tex. LEXIS 240 (Tex. 1907).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

This is an original application for a mandamus to compel the respondent, as Commissioner of the General Land Office, to award to relator three sections of school land upon his applications to purchase them, in addition to a section which has been awarded to him for his home and as to which his contract is in good standing. The corespondent, Mabel Tillman, is joined as the purchaser to whom the respondent has awarded the three sections in controversy.

The defensive pleadings attempt to oust the jurisdiction of this court by making an issue of fact as to relator’s settlement upon and occupancy of his home section, not otherwise involved in the controversy, and it becomes necessary that we determine whether or not such issue is so raised as to make it material to the decision of the case. If so, as we have no power to settle disputed questions of fact, the cause would have to be dismissed.

Relator’s applications to purchase all four of the sections were pending when they came on the market, September 1, 1905. The section applied for as a home was awarded to him December 2, 190.5, but the Commissioner refused to accept his three other applications because he thought that the corespondent, who had on file applications to purchase the three sections in question, was entitled to preference as the assignee of an entire lease.

In his pleadings relator alleges that he settled upon his home section *399 and filed the affidavit of the fact within the time required by the statute, and that he has since continuously occupied the land. In her answer, the corespondent, Tillman, denies in general terms the facts of settlement and continued occupancy. The answer of the respondent, Terrell, “adopts the plea of nonsettlement which is. set forth in the original answer of the corespondent” and refers to copies of affidavits attached to his answer, the originals of which had been filed in the General Land Office, concerning relator’s occupancy of the section, the contents of which need not be more particularly stated. Both of these answers were filed December 19, 1906.

In a supplemental petition, to which no reply has been made, relator pleads the statute of limitation passed in 1905 (Acts Reg. Sess. 29th Leg., p. 35) in bar of the attack upon his purchase, and avers that he filed in the Land Office affidavits in answer to those copies of which are attached to respondent’s answer, and that the Commissioner had, on December 13, 1906, acted upon the contest and ascertained that he did settle on the land in compliance with law and had refused to cancel the sale of his home section. Upon this state of facts relator relies upon the provisions of the Act of the Legislature just referred to, in support of his contention that the attack upon his purchase comes too late, more than a year having elapsed between the award to him and the filing of the answer. The provisions relied on are as follows:

“Section 1. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Texas: That hereafter all persons claiming the rights to purchase or lease any public free school lands, or any lands belonging to the State University, or either of the state asylums which have been heretofore or which may be hereafter sold or leased to any other person under any provision of the law authorizing the sale or lease of any of said lands, shall bring his suit therefor within one year, after this Act goes into effect, or after the date of the award of such sale or lease, if such award is made after the taking effect of this Act, and not thereafter.
“Section 2. If no suit has been instituted by any persop claiming the right to purchase or lease any of said land within the period of time limited in the first section of this Act, it shall be conclusive evidence that all the requirements of the law with reference to the sale or lease of such lands have been complied with; provided that nothing in this Act shall be construed to affect the State of Texas in any action or proceeding that may be brought by it in respect to any of said lands.”

It will be noted that the express terms of the Act apply only to cases in which persons claim the right to purchase or lease land which has already been sold or leased to others; and, as the corespondent is not attempting to obtain the section which has been sold to relator, the language does not specifically include her. It may therefore be contended that the prescribed limitation is not applicable to the case. But this would be a very narrow view of the statute, the purpose of which evidently was to protect,, from the attacks of all, except the State, sales and leases which have stood and been recognized by the State for as long as a year. If only a question of the limitation of time applicable to such cases as this arose out of these provisions it should be held, we think, that the period prescribed by the statute applies. While *400 the corespondent does not attack the sale to relator because she claims the right to purchase the section which he bought, she does attack it because, upon her theory, the relator’s right to purchase the other sections is dependent on the validity of his claim to his home section. She thus puts herself in the attitude of one attempting to show that he acquired no title to the home section and, therefore, no right to buy the other land. Her position could not possibly be better than that of one claiming the right to buy the land previously sold.

But we think the statute has another effect upon the question here involved. It defines the only class of claimants, besides the State, who are to be allowed to attack sales made and allowed to stand by the State. The right so recognized is only in those who assert a claim to purchase or lease lands sold or leased to others. Why should it be extended to those circumstanced as the corespondent? The relator’s home tract has been sold to him by the State and the sale is permitted by the State to continue in force. It is not at all essential to any right the corespondent may have to hold the other land that she be allowed to disturb the relations which exist between the State and the relator in respect of the land sold to the latter. She has and can assert no right or interest in that, being interested merely in sustaining her claim to the other sections, the merits of which claim as against that of relator may be determined without questioning his relation to the State as a purchaser. We therefore hold that she can not in this way make the question as to the fact of relator’s settlement, that being a question which can now arise only between him and the State. Has the Commissioner raised that question in any permissible way in behalf of the State? It will be noted that the saving clause of the statute in favor of the State says it shall not be affected “in any action or proceeding brought by it in respect to any of said lands.” It is not at all clear that the Commissioner by his adoption of the answer of his corespondent meant to make an attack in behalf of the State upon relator’s purchase, or to do more than to rest the defense upon the right set up by her, which, as we have seen, can not be maintained. But we shall not stop to consider this further, nor to inquire whether or not this method of attack could in any case be considered as such an “action or proceeding” brought by the State as is excepted from the provisions of the Act quoted.

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Bluebook (online)
100 S.W. 130, 100 Tex. 397, 1907 Tex. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-v-terrell-tex-1907.