Pate v. McLain

136 S.W. 538, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 220
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 16, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 136 S.W. 538 (Pate v. McLain) 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
Pate v. McLain, 136 S.W. 538, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 220 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

LEVY, J.

(after stating the facts as above). [1] Under proper assignments of error, the •appellants challenge the conclusion of law made by the court that Julia A. Sigler had full authority as administratrix to make the ••sale and conveyance of April 23, 1872, to J. K. Williams, and that her sale passed title to the land in suit, because the certificate was personalty. A clearer understanding of the points involved in the appeal is had by •a brief statement. Appellants, who were really defendants in the suit, claim title to the land in issue as heirs of W. N. and Julia A. Sigler. The appellees, who were plaintiffs •below, claim title under a chain of transfers from J. K. Williams. J. K. Williams’ claim for title is deraigned through the oonvey•ance of April 23, 1872, made by Julia A. Sig-ler as administratrix of the estate of W. N. Sigler, deceased. The sole controversy is •one of law as to whether in the record the power and authority existed in the adminis-tratrix as such to make the sale and deed to .J. K. Williams. If such power is shown to have existed, then the judgment awarding •appellees all the land in suit is admittedly correct. The deed referred to by its terms •conveyed “one league and labor land certificate issued to M. Carpenter forgone league and labor of land” and “all and singular the lands located by virtue of the same.” At the time of this sale and deed, it appears that the certificate was located upon two surveys in San Augustine county. It is not shown in the record that any order of the probate court was made or had authorizing the administratrix to make the sale and deed, and there is sufficient evidence to show that the sale and deed were made without any order of the probate court authorizing the same. The contention ,of the appellants, in effect, is that it was incumbent on the appellees, claiming to deraign title through the deed of an administratrix, in order to show a valid sale and deed, to make proof that the administratrix had authority of the probate court to make the sale and deed. The appellees contend that the deed only transferred the certificate, and under the facts the certificate at the time was a chattel, and that under the probate laws of 1870 (Acts 12th Leg. c. 81-, §§ 161-167), in force at the time of the sale, an adminis-tratrix had authority to sell personalty of the estate without an order of the probate court. In the former appeal of this case (124 S. W. 718) the certificate was treated as personalty, because in that record there was no evidence that it had ever been located, and we ruled that under the probate laws of 1870 it was not required that an order of court be obtained to authorize the administratrix to sell personalty. The present record, however, is entirely different in respect to the location of the certificate. As seen, the parties each stand and rely on ownership of the certificate, and such ownership is made the basis for title to the land in suit. And, as the point on appeal is presented, the power and authority of the ad-ministratrix to make the sale and deed in suit are made dependent on whether such sale should be controlled by the probate laws of sale of realty or personalty. And this determination makes it material to decide whether the certificate under the facts at the time of the sale and deed in evidence constituted property of the character as between the parties of chattel real or personalty. If a chattel real, then admittedly in the record the administratrix acted without any authority in making the sale and deed.

This brings us to the determination of whether the court’s conclusion of law, challenged by appellants, was correct, that the certificate under the facts was personalty. The court finds as a fact that the certificate was located in December, 1840, upon two surveys of land subject to appropriation in San Augustine county, and sufficient to appropriate all of the certificate. The field notes and plats of the two surveys were duly returned to and recognized by and filed in the General Land Office, and were duly entered in the records of the surveyor of San *540 Augustine bounty, and legally made. The location, field notes, and surveys were recognized by the Land Office and the parties until August 2, 1872. The original certificate was never returned to the Land Office and filed with the field notes. On August 2, 1872, the Land Commissioner, acting under the act of 1871, declared the two surveys made under the certificate forfeited for the reason that the certificate had not been returned to the Land Office. On July 30, 1872, the Land Commissioner issued a duplicate certificate reciting that it was issued “in lieu of the original lost.” After the forfeiture of the two surveys, this certificate was floated and located upon the land in suit. Upon these facts the court concluded as a matter of law “that the location and surveys and return of the field notes to the General Land Office on the two surveys made in December, 1840, did not merge the certificate in realty, because the certificate was not returned to the General Land Office with the field notes, and therefore the certificate still remained personal property.” Prom the facts it appears as a fact that the location and surveys and field notes made remained and were recognized by the Land Office and the parties from 1840 to August 2, 1872. And by this it is understood that the court did not base his conclusion of law that the certificate was personalty upon any presumption or inference that there had been an abandonment in fact at any time by the parties of the location and surveys because of the failure to return the certificate. The parties to the suit stand on and rely on the forfeiture of the two former surveys by the Land Commissioner, and the subsequent floating of the certificate, as authorizing the location and patent of the Panola county land in suit. Therefore, as between the parties, and' as between the parties and the state, it is to be taken as a fact that the original location and survey in San Augustine county had not been abandoned at the time of the sale, and not until August 2, 1872, when the Land Commissioner, acting under the act of 1871, forfeited the surveys. And by reference to the deed in suit it clearly appears by its terms that the parties were dealing with respect to rights existing under the location and survey then had, and that it was their intention to pass and acquire all such rights. The deed by its terms undertakes to convey not only the certificate, but “all and singular the lands located by virtue of the same.” In Curdy v. Stafford, 88 Tex. 120, 30 S. W. 551, the terms of the deed only mentioned the certificates as conveyed, and it was held that a conveyance “of a land certificate which is located conveys the land upon which the location is made.” Also Hearne v. Gillett, 62 Tex. 23. Therefore, if this were a suit between the parties for that particular land, could it be successfully asserted that such conveyance, if' power existed in the administratrix to execute it, did not pass title to the land to Williams? So by the facts that the certificate was actually located and the surveys thereunder not abandoned or forfeited at the time of the deed the terms of the deed would be controlling that the parties by express intention and legally were conveying an interest in realty. It was said in. Simpson v. Chapman, 45 Tex. 560: “The certificate until located, as often said by this court, is personalty. But, when it is located, it loses this character. It then attaches with the land and becomes a chattel .real, and can be assigned and transferred by parol no more than the land itself.

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Bluebook (online)
136 S.W. 538, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pate-v-mclain-texapp-1911.