State v. Gulf Oil Corporation

166 S.W.2d 197, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 605
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 9, 1942
DocketNo. 4238.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 166 S.W.2d 197 (State v. Gulf Oil Corporation) 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
State v. Gulf Oil Corporation, 166 S.W.2d 197, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 605 (Tex. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinions

This is an appeal by the State of Texas from the judgment of the District Court of Upton County in a case tried before the court without a jury. Suit was instituted by J. N. Gregory, as plaintiff, against the Gulf Oil Corporation and others, as defendants. The action was in trespass to try title, but the pleadings show it was a vacancy suit as to seventeen tracts of land in Upton County.

Gregory claimed right to purchase an oil and gas lease thereon, alleging that said tracts were, on January 7, 1937, unsurveyed areas of school land belonging to the State, and that on said date he duly filed application to purchase a lease thereon. In respect to this application there was alleged a full compliance with Art. 5421c, Vernon's Ann.Civ.St., and that the lands were subject to sale thereunder. A refusal to grant said application by the Commissioner was averred.

The right to maintain the action was asserted under the General Laws, 1939, p. 465. In compliance with the provisions of *Page 198 paragraph j of Section 1 of that Act, Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. art. 5421c, § 6(j), plaintiff had caused a certified copy of his petition to be served upon the Attorney General and the Commissioner. The Attorney General filed in due time an intervention which, omitting the caption, address, signature, etc., was as follows:

"Comes now the State of Texas by and through its Attorney General, Gerald C. Mann, and on behalf of the public free school funds of the State of Texas files this its intervention in compliance with the provisions of House Bill No. 9, Acts of the Forty-sixth Legislature, 1939, Article 5421c, Section 5, [6] Subsection j, Vernon's Annotated Statutes, and respectfully requests this Honorable Court to instruct the District Clerk to notify the Attorney General of the State of Texas of the date set for any preliminary hearing herein and the date set for the trial hereof."

Some of the defendants questioned by special exception the right of plaintiff to maintain the suit on a rejected application. All joined issue with plaintiff Gregory as to the existence of the vacancy. Thereafter the State filed a motion to withdraw its plea of intervention, urging that the Act of 1939, on which plaintiff relied, did not give plaintiff the right to maintain an action against the State on an ungranted application to lease made under Section 6, Chap. 271, Acts of the Forty-second Legislature, 1931; that plaintiff's suit was unauthorized insofar as the State was concerned. A plea to the jurisdiction was likewise filed by the State urging immunity from suit without authorization by the Legislature. The court granted the State's motion to withdraw the plea of intervention, but refused to dismiss the State from the case, and thereafter overruled the State's plea to the jurisdiction. The judgment found the vacancy claimed did not exist, and was against the plaintiff and in favor of all defendants. As to the State, the judgment provided as follows:

"This judgment shall be binding upon the State of Texas."

The State has perfected this appeal from the judgment. Plaintiff Gregory has not appealed.

The State urges the following point of error: "The Court erred in overruling the plea to the jurisdiction of the court filed by the Attorney General and in refusing to dismiss the cause as to the State of Texas, the Land Commissioner and the Attorney General."

Relied upon as sustaining the appeal was the case of United Production Corp. v. Hughes, 137 Tex. 21, 152 S.W.2d 327, and the case of Glasscock v. Tyler,1 recently decided by this court, in which the Supreme Court dismissed an application for writ of error as without merit. The publication of the opinion has not as yet been authorized.

Hereafter in the discussion of this case we shall refer to the several Public Land Acts as the Acts of 1919, 1931 and 1939.

In United Production Corp. v. Hughes, supra, the opinion was rendered April 30, 1941, and the motion for rehearing overruled on June 11, 1941. In that case plaintiff sought to obtain a lease on vacant land, making, among others, the Commissioner of the General Land Office in his official capacity a party defendant. Plaintiff claimed the right to an oil lease under an application conforming to the requirements of the Act of 1931, Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. art. 5421c § 1 et seq. The Attorney General filed a plea to the jurisdiction on behalf of the Commissioner on the theory that the suit, in the last analysis, was a suit against the State. Some of the other parties defendant filed similar pleas. Plaintiff conceded the validity of the plea urged by the Commissioner, and asked leave to dismiss as to him. The court sustained the pleas to the jurisdiction of all the parties, and ordered the case dismissed, refusing plaintiff leave to amend.

The Austin Court of Civil Appeals reversed the judgment of the trial court. It was held plaintiff's allegations entitled him to maintain his suit against the defendants other than the State, that is, the Land Commissioner. This case is reported under the style of Hughes v. McDonald, Tex.Civ.App. 122 S.W.2d 366. Writ of error was granted, and the Supreme Court reversed the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals and affirmed that of the trial court. Judge Slatton in the opinion reviews the various Acts relating to the right of an applicant to purchase to maintain an action thereon where it was necessary to establish the land was vacant, and maintained the disputed title of the State thereto. In substance, it was stated that the Act of 1919, Art. 5323, R.S. 1925, was the first act conferring this right; that the Act of 1931 took away this right by the repeal of said *Page 199 Art. 5323; in the event the Commissioner rejected the application, the applicant was without remedy, there being no statutory authority to sue the State. The Act of 1939 was referred to as having no application. The suit was instituted, tried and passed upon by the trial court and the Court of Civil Appeals before the Act of 1939 was passed. It is stated in the course of the opinion, as follows:

"The repeal of the 1919 act, i.e., Article 5323 above mentioned, by the act of 1931, c. 271, § 13, evidences a recognition by the legislature that it did not consider it to be in the public interest to allow the titles of lands claimed to belong to the State or any fund of the State to be litigated except through its representative, the Attorney General." [137 Tex. 21, 152 S.W.2d 332.]

Now, it seems to us that the Act of 1939 was passed in the belief that the better policy was to allow one claiming under a rejected application to litigate the question of vacancy — to litigate the same in a proceeding binding upon the State; that as to the prospective application of a law there can be no question but that this deduction is correct.

The case of United Production Corp. v. Hughes, supra, was the first case clearly establishing that a rejected applicant under the Act of 1931 could not maintain an action to establish a vacancy. About the time the Legislature had the Act of 1939 under consideration, the Austin Court had held that a rejected applicant had a right to maintain an action to establish the vacancy against adverse claimants other than the State.

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Bluebook (online)
166 S.W.2d 197, 1942 Tex. App. LEXIS 605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gulf-oil-corporation-texapp-1942.