Walker v. Rogan, Commissioner

54 S.W. 1018, 93 Tex. 248, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 135
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1900
DocketNo. 844.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 54 S.W. 1018 (Walker v. Rogan, Commissioner) 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
Walker v. Rogan, Commissioner, 54 S.W. 1018, 93 Tex. 248, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 135 (Tex. 1900).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

The plaintiff, by original proceeding instituted in this court, seeks by mandamus to compel the respondent, as Commissioner of the General Land Office, to issue to him a patent for a section of land belonging to the public school fund to which he claims right under a purchase thereof made by Ellen Clarke under the provisions of the Act of July 8, 1879, and of the act amendatory thereof, approved April 6, 1881, regulating sales of such lands. Laws Spec. Ses. 16th Leg., p. 23, et seq; Laws Reg. Ses. 18th Leg., p. 119, et seq.

The facts upon which his claim depends are these: Ellen Clarke, at the time a minor between 11 and 12 years of age, made application on the first day of October, 1881, for the purchase of the section, and thereafter all things required by the statute were done so as to give rise to a contract between her and the State for the sale and purchase of the land, unless the fact of her minority prevented the creation of such contract. The payments required by the law' upon such a purchase were made thereafter by her until the latter part of 1882, when her interest in the land was regularly sold and conveyed by her guardian, under orders of the probate court, to plaintiff, who assumed payment of the balance due from her to the State. Eo notice of this sale -was filed in the Land Office, and the account continued to stand in the name of Ellen Clarke. In her name all subsequent payments were made *252 bv plaintiff, until all the money required by her obligation had been paid. Plaintiff then, on the 29th day of March, 1899, filed in the Land Office his deed, paid the necessary fee, and demanded the issuance of a patent to himself. This was the first information received by the officers of the State of Ellen Clarke’s minority and of plaintiff’s purchase of her title. The Commissioner refused to issue the patent on the ground that a sale to a minor was not authorized by the law. Whether or not this is true constitutes the principal question presented.

Section 6 of the statute provides that “any person desiring to purchase” shall make the prescribed application and do the prescribed acts. Mo persons, natural or artificial, are, in express terms, excluded from purchasing. Mo qualifications are prescribed for purchasers, as that they shall be actual settlers, such as are found in subsequent statutes. If minors are prohibited from buying, it is by implication arising from the nature of the acts and obligations required of purchasers.

Section 8 requires any applicant to execute his obligation for the unpaid balance of the appraised value of the land, stipulating to pay one-twentieth of the amount on the first day of January of each year, with 8 per cent interest on such amount of the principal as may be due at the date of each payment. ' It further provides that such purchaser may pay the entire purchase money at the date of purchase, or such amount of principal and interest as majr be due at any subsequent time; that any payment of principal may be deferred for one or more years, but that all interest shall be paid annually, on or before the first day of March of each year, and the whole amount shall be paid in twenty years.

Mo provision is made for a suit njjon the obligation, or other action to enforce collection, in case of default; but section 12 requires the Commissioner, in case any installment of interest shall be unpaid on the first of March following its maturity, to cause judicial proceedings to be instituted to declare a'forfeiture of the purchase. Mo such proceeding is directed in case of failure to pay the principal after its maturity.

The obligation which all purchasers, except those who choose to pay cash, are required to execute is such as a minor can not impose upon himself, and clearly shows to our minds that the Legislature did not contemplate purchases by them.

Again, section 15 provides that any purchaser may sell the land bought by him, and, upon the filing of his transfer in the Land Office, the vendee shall be liable to the obligations of the original purchaser; and, upon final payment of purchase money, the Commissioner is required to issue the patent to such assignee. This, also, permits the doing of an act which a minor, on general principles, can not legally do. It contemplates a conveyance, final and binding on the party executing it, and not one which the’’party majr be at liberty to avoid at will; for it gives complete effect to the conveyance by a substitution *253 of the assignee for the purchaser, by requiring the discharge of all obligations by him, and the issuance of the patent to him.

It is true that a statute may capacitate a minor to enter into special engagements such as the general rule of law would hold not to be binding on him. A statute which in terms requires or permits a minor to enter into an obligation would have the effect of removing, to that extent, his disability and of making such obligation valid. Sedgwick Const. Stat. Law, p. 81; Bishop on Con., sec. 922. “But mere general words in a statute are not ordinarily interpreted to exclude infants from their privilege of minority.” Bishop, ut supra.

This rule of construction would require that in order to take away the incompetency of minors, so far as to permit them to execute binding obligations, the intention to do so must affirmatively appear in the statute and is not to be deduced from the mere use of general words, such as “any person.” No such intention appears in the statute under consideration. If the Legislature had intended such a result, a rule on the subject would doubtless have been made and the age of such minors as were permitted to contract would have been prescribed. As it is, the proposition that this statute includes minors would lead to the absurdity of allowing all infants, whatever their ages, to become parties to these transactions.

It would seem plain that the requirement that- all who purchase should execute obligations, excludes from those who may purchase persons ivho are legally incapable of complying with such condition. The law intends that an effectual obligation' shall be taken, one that Avill bind the purchaser, and a person Avho can not make it can not comply Avith the law.

It is urged that the validity of the obligation was not essential to the purpose in vícav in selling the land, since there was no purpose to sue on the obligation, but merely to assert the rights of the State by a forfeiture for default in payment, Aidiich could be done against a minor as well as an adult; that the contract, at the worst, Avas only voidable and could not be repudiated by the State and could only have been repudiated by the minor after she reached majority, and that then she could not have recoA’ered the purchase money since she could not sue the State.

We think it too clear for argument that AAdien the statute required the giving of an obligation, it meant a legal and binding one. The fact that it only provides for a forfeiture for nonpayment of interest does not shoAV a contrary intent. The State Avould lm-e the same right of action upon such an obligation as an individual would have had; and if its officers Avere not authorized by then existing laivs to institute proceedings upon it to collect the money thereby promised, the Legislature could at any time have conferred such authority. Fristoe v. Blum, 92 Texas, 76.

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Bluebook (online)
54 S.W. 1018, 93 Tex. 248, 1900 Tex. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-rogan-commissioner-tex-1900.