Swetman v. Sanders

20 S.W. 124, 85 Tex. 294, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 861
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 1892
DocketNo. 7414.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 20 S.W. 124 (Swetman v. Sanders) 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
Swetman v. Sanders, 20 S.W. 124, 85 Tex. 294, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 861 (Tex. 1892).

Opinion

MARR, Judge,

Section A.—The controversy in this case is about a pre-emption homestead survey of 160 acres of land situated in Jack County. The verdict and judgment were rendered in the court below in favor of the plaintiff, C. B. Sanders, and the defendant, J. D. Swetman, has appealed. His counsel have presented twenty-one assignments of error, but it will not be necessary to notice all of them. Many of them are but repetitions of the same questions.

To properly present the case and the questions involved, it will be necessary to give a summary of the evidence. The following statement, as made in the brief for the appellant, is substantially correct as far as it goes, viz.:

“ On the 31st day of December, 1888, appellee Sanders instituted suit to recover of appellant Swetman 160 acres of land situated in Jack County, Texas. On the 16th day of November, 1874, Asbury Johnson had the *296 land sued for surveyed as a pre-emption under the Act of 1873. At the time of said survey Asbury Johnson was not living or settled upon the land, nor has he up to this day ever lived on or settled upon or improved said land.

“ Sometime in the year 1875, exact date not known, Asbury Johnson made a verbal contract of sale of said land to one Cates for 850. About twelve or fifteen months after the survey of Asbury Johnson (according to the testimony of one of appellant’s witnesses), Cates went into possession of the land and made some improvements. According to one of appellee’s witnesses, Cates went into possession during the spring of 1875.

‘ ‘ In the spring of 1876 Cates sold the land to appellee Sanders by verbal sale, and he went into possession and made improvements. In 1882, As-bury Johnson, with the consent of Cates, transferred the land to appellee Sanders by deed, Cates never having received a written transfer. Neither Cates nor Sanders had the land surveyed. On the 9th of April, 1884, appellee Sanders made proof of his occupancy. He lived upon the land until 1886, and went to the Indian Nation. Before he left for the Nation, appellant Swetman, thinking the land belonged to appellee Sanders, proposed to buy it, but Sanders told him he did not intend to sell until he got a patent.

“ Sanders left for the Nation, and Swetman, who was the head of a family and without a home, learned that the land was vacant public domain, and he took possession, applied for a survey, had it surveyed, the field notes returned to the General Land Office, and continued in possession, and was so in possession when this suit was instituted.

“ Sanders brought an action of trespass to try title, and pleaded his title. Swetman answered by general demurrer, special exceptions, and general denial. A trial was had, and judgment rendered for appellee Sanders, that he recover the land and $60 in rent.”

Plaintiff also claimed compensation for improvements in good faith, etc. Appellee’s evidence went to show that he leased the land to appellant at the time of his departure for the Indian Nation, and that he intended to return and occupy the land. There is evidence, however, that he was absent about two years, and in the meantime had married. He had actually resided on the land after his purchase from Cates about twelve years, and during the greater part of that time was the head of a family, composed of his widowed mother and her minor children. No issue is raised upon this point.

The appellant “ made proof of Johnson’s abandonment, filed on the land, and had it surveyed, and sent the field notes to Austin.” His application to pre-empt the land was made on May 10, 1888, and the survey on the 24th day of said month and year.

There was some evidence tending to show that the original claimant, Asbury Johnson, failed to occupy the land on account of his fear of hos *297 tile Indians, and that when he surveyed it he intended to occupy it as the home of himself and family as soon as he could do so with safety. The question arises, however, whether he, or any one claiming under him, ever acquired any right to the land, as he had not settled upon the. land at the time he caused it to be surveyed, and in fact never resided upon nor occupied the land at any time nor in any manner.

This question is sharply presented by the following assignments of error, viz.:

“ 8. The court erred in refusing to give the second special charge of defendant, to-wit: If Asbury Johnson had the land in controversy sur-

veyed as a pre-emptionist, and at the time of said survey had never occupied the land, the survey was unauthorized, and such survey did not sever the land from the public domain.’

“ 9. The court erred in refusing to give special charge number 3, asked by defendant, to-wit: ‘ If the evidence satifies you that Asbury Johnson never lived upon said land in controversy, then if Cates purchased from Asbury Johnson, he took nothing by his purchase; and if Cates or said Johnson, or both of them, sold to plaintiff, plaintiff took nothing by his purchase.’ Because said Johnson had no right whatever in" the land, as it was public domain when Johnson sold it. A survey by one man and settlement by another many months after, will not pre-empt land, but it must be occupied by him at whose instance the survey is made.”

In reply to the above proposition, the appellee submits the following counter-proposition, viz.:

“If Asbury Johnson had said land surveyed, and was the head of a family, and intended to make this the home of his family, but before he went upon the land he was compelled temporarily to leave the country, but with the intention of returning again to carry out his intention of improving and making this place the home of his family, he would have an inchoate right in the land, which would entitle him to return to the land, or to sell or transfer the same to another person, provided no abandonment was proved and the rights of no third party intervened between his departure and the sale of the land; and it would not be necessary for Johnson’s assignee to have the land resurveyed, but the survey made by Johnson would enure to the assignee who purchased his inchoate right to the land.”

The evidence is not very clear that Johnson “was compelled to leave the country,” or that he did so “ with the intention of returning again” for the purpose of “improving and making this place the home of his family,” even if we may suppose that such was his original intention. This issue, however, the court below omitted to submit to the jury, except in general terms.

The court, in its charge to the jury, assumed that Johnson’s claim to the land was valid and sufficient to appropriate it if he had duly caused *298 it to be “ surveyed under and in accordance with the pre-emption laws of this State, and never abandoned the intention of moving upon and occupying the same as a homestead,” whether in fact he ever occupied or actually settled upon the land or not, provided that those claiming under him subsequently did so.

Manifestly this was an erroneous view of the law, and the court also erred in refusing to allow the above special instructions, as requested by the defendant, under the facts of this case.

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.W. 124, 85 Tex. 294, 1892 Tex. LEXIS 861, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swetman-v-sanders-tex-1892.