Standifer v. Wilson

54 S.W. 898, 93 Tex. 232, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 132
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1900
DocketNo. 840.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 54 S.W. 898 (Standifer v. Wilson) 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
Standifer v. Wilson, 54 S.W. 898, 93 Tex. 232, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 132 (Tex. 1900).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

The questions embraced in the following certificate are presented for our decision by the Court of Civil Appeals for the Third District.

“The land involved in this suit is public free school land, the sale of which was authorized under the Act of the Legislature of Texas, approved July 8, 1879, and the amendment thereto, approved April 6, 1881, and was duly and regularly placed upon the market for sale under said acts, when one Thomas Dolan became the purchaser thereof, complying with the provisions of the law in affecting the purchase. The appellee claims'title under the Dolan purchase. Default in payment of the interest due under the Dolan purchase having been made January 1, 1896, the Commissioner of the General Land Office, on August 20, 1897, declared a forfeiture of said purchase, without re-entry or judicial ascertainment, and the land was duly and regularly reclassified and appraised under chapter 47 of the Acts of 1895, and the amendment thereto, chapter 129, Acts of 1897, and placed upon the market and purchased by appellant as an actual settler. The forfeiture declared August 20, 1897, was jmder and by virtue of the Act of the Legislature of the State of Texas, approved March 5, 1897. The contention of appellant is that this forfeiture was valid and his purchase thereafter vested in him. title to said land, subject to the payment of the purchase money therefor to the State. The contention of appellee is that the forfeiture declared August 20, 1897, whether done by virtue of the Act approved March 5, 1897, or any other act of the Legislature, was invalid and did not af *235 feet his right in the land, because the Dolan purchase, under which he held title, having been made under the Act approved April 6, 1881, which provided for a forfeiture on default of payment of interest by a judicial ascertainment, that method of forfeiture or rescission became and was a part of the contract, and any subsequent act of the Legislature which authorized a forfeiture of a purchase under said, act without judicial ascertainment was an impairment of the obligation of contract, and is in violation of section 10, article 1, of the Constitution of the Dnited States. The question was submitted to the court below, which held the forfeiture invalid, and rendered judgment for the appellee.

“The above statement is taken from the brief of appellee, which we find substantially correct. The Court of Civil Appeals, through its Chief Justice, certifies to the Supreme Court, under the facts as stated, the following questions:

“1. Did the State, through its Commissioner of the General Land Office, without judicial proceedings, have the authority to legally declare a forfeiture of the Dolan title on account of the failure to pay the interest, as stated?

“2. Are the principles of law, as decided by the Supreme Court of this State in the case of Fristoe v. Blum, 92 Texas, 76, applicable and controlling of the question certified ?”

In the case of Fristoe v. Blum, it was affirmed that when the State becomes a party to a contract with a citizen, the same law applies to it as under like conditions governs the contracts of individuals, and when the contract in any form comes before a court, the rights and obligations of the contracting parties must be adjudged upon the same principles as if both the contracting parties were private persons. Applying the proposition to a contract for the sale and purchase of school lands, under the Act of 1883, it was further said that, on the one hand, the rights of the purchaser were the same as if the vendor had been a citizen instead of the State, and that so long as he complied with his obligation to pay interest as it matured, the State could not deprive him of the land; and, on the other, that upon his breach of his obligation by a failure to pay interest, the State had the same right which an individual, under a like contract, would have had to rescind the sale and to resume control of the land. The statute under which the sale in question in that case was made provided, in terms, for a nonjudicial forfeiture upon default in pajunent of interest installments, which provision was conceded, for the purposes of the decision, to have been subsequently repealed; but it was held that authority could be given to the Commissioner of the Land Office, by a still later statute, to exercise the State’s right of rescission arising from the purchaser’s breach of his obligation to pay the interest. As to this the court said:

“But it is said that a construction of section 11, which would give to the Commissioner of the General Land Office the authority to enter a forfeiture as in this ease, would render the act unconstitutional, because it would be giving to it a retroactive effect by which it would vio *236 late the obligation of the contract. A sufficient answer, so far as this case is concerned, to that proposition would be that this contract was entered into when such a law existed and provided for the doing of the very thing that the Commissioner has done, and the repeal of that law could not constitute on the part of the State, an obligation that it should not be restored in the future. We prefer, however, to put this decision upon the broader ground and stronger position that where a right exists the Legislature may give a new remedy, provided it does not deprive either party óf a substantial right. Sutherland v. De Leon, 1 Texas, 305; Johnson v. Taylor, 60 Texas, 362.”

Neither that decision nor the principles declared in the opinion are questioned by appellee, but his counsel contend that this case is not governed by them, because the Act of 1879, under which the contract here in question was made, provided for a judicial forfeiture of the rights of the purchaser for nonpayment of interest, and that the Act of 1897, which undertook to substitute action by the Commissioner of the General Land Office, if applicable to such contracts, is unconstitutional, both because it is retroactive and because it impairs the obligation of contracts. This contention is based upon the assumption that the provision of the Act of 1879. for a judicial forfeiture became a part of the contract and fixed, by the agreement of the parties, the only method of determining the rights of the purchaser for default in payment of interest. If the provision referred to is to be considered' a term of the contract specially providing for such a remedy, it may be true that it should be treated as prescribing the exclusive mode of rescission, or, in the language of the act itself, of “forfeiture,” and that a subsequent law which undertook to substitute another mode would be subject to the objection urged.

On the other hand we think it must be conceded that if the statute of 1879 simply had the effect of providing for the.breach of the contract a remedy which was not stipulated for in the contract itself and which was not, in itself, essential to the full enjoyment or exercise of the rights or the enforcement of the duties arising from it, but which could be supplanted by another remedy without taking away or impairing such rights and duties, a subsequent statute merely working such a change in the remedy would not be repugnant to any constitutional provision.

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Bluebook (online)
54 S.W. 898, 93 Tex. 232, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standifer-v-wilson-tex-1900.