Walraven v. Farmers & Merchants National Bank

74 S.W. 530, 96 Tex. 331, 1903 Tex. LEXIS 140
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1903
DocketNo. 1178.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 74 S.W. 530 (Walraven v. Farmers & Merchants National Bank) 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
Walraven v. Farmers & Merchants National Bank, 74 S.W. 530, 96 Tex. 331, 1903 Tex. LEXIS 140 (Tex. 1903).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

Question certified by the Court of Civil Appeals for the Third District, based upon the following facts:

“The Farmers and Merchants National Bank of Texas and William

T. Fenton brought this suit in the District Court of Sterling County ágainst James Walraven, to recover a section of land in said county, described in their petition, being State school section.No. 8 in block No. 13, in the name of the S. P. R. R. Co. The action was in the form of trespass to try title. Defendant plead not guilty.

“Plaintiffs claimed title under conveyances originating with one M. Z. Smissen, and the evidence, without contradiction, showed that the plaintiffs had acquired all the title which said Smissen ever owned in the land.

“The evidence with reference to the title of Smissen, as far as material to the questions to be certified, was as follows:

“(1) Resolution No. 1 of the State Land Board, dated October 33, 1883, as follows:

“ 'Resolved by the board, that all common school, university and asylum lands in all the counties of the State are hereby placed upon the market for sale or lease; provided, that for the present all watered sections of land belonging to any of the said funds are hereby reserved from sale or lease, except where the same were occupied by actual settlers, in the legal meaning of that term, prior to January 1, 1883.

“ 'Resolved, that under authority of section 7 of chapter 88, General Laws of 1883, the following is prescribed as the mode of placing said _ lands on the market: The application for the purchase or lease of any of said lands' shall be in writing, and addressed to the secretary of the State Land Board, Austin, Texas; said application shall fully and minutely describe each and every section desired to be bought or leased, giving number of section, block and certificate number, and name of the original grantee, with character of soil, grass, timber and water, if any, on each section or piece of land. Said application shall be accompanied with a sketch of the surveys embraced therein, and shall state the price per acre offered for the purchase or lease, and the time for whibh the land is wanted if leased. The application must be sworn to before some officer authorized to administer oaths, and the lease or sale will be regarded as vacated and null for misrepresentation or false description.

“ 'Said application when so prepared shall be registered by the surveyor of the county or district in which the land is located, in a well *333 bound book to' be kept by him for this exclusive purpose, and which shall be at all times open to the inspection of the public free of cost. The surveyor shall indorse on said application the date of registry, with page and volume of register, and shall sign the same officially. All applications must be presented to and registered by the. surveyor at least ten days exclusive of the day of registry, before the first Tuesday of the following month. The surveyor shall be authorized to receive from the applicant the following fees: for each section or piece of land described in the application, twenty-five cents, provided the fees in no one application shall exceed one dollar.

“ ‘Immediately after such registry, the application will be forwarded by the applicant to the Land Board at Austin as hereinbefore prescribed, and the same will be considered by the board on the first Tuesday of the following month; provided no bids will be • considered and awards made by the board before the first Tuesday in December next.

“ ‘All applications so received will be kept -by the secretary of the board, subject to examination and inspection, and all persons desiring to purchase or lease are invited by the board to be present in person or by attorney at the times the bids are considered.

“‘The board reserves the right to refuse to consummate the sale or lease for any reason they may deem sufficient, or in case of conflict between applicants, to inquire into the rights of the parties before making the awards.’

“(2) Application of Smissen October 30, 1883, to purchase the land in controversy, complying in form with the regulations-set out above, containing these statements: ‘Character of soil: light and gravelly.

Grass: curly mesquite. Timber: small mesquite. Water: none;’ and offering $2 per acre.

“(3) Obligation of M. Z. Smissen in the terms required by law for the balance of the purchase money of said section upon his application.

“(4) Certified copy from the Land Office of the appraisement of the land in suit by H. B. Tarver, surveyor of Tom Green County.

; “(5) It was agreed and proved, that, under Smissen’s application to

purchase, the first payment to the State in cash, and all interest payments which have become due to date under the Smissen purchase, have been made.

“(6) The evidence showed that defendant was in possession of the land.

“Plaintiffs introduced evidence tending to show that the description in the foregoing application was substantially correct. One of the witnesses, W. L. Foster, upon this issue, testified as follows: ‘I knew the land in suit since 1883. There was no permanent water on it. The timber was small mesquite, a few scattering china, hackberry, walnut and ehitim along the creek. The soil was light gravelly, grass curly • mesquite.’

“Other witnesses for plaintiff testified in substantially the same manner.

*334 “Defendants introduced evidence tending to show that the land was misdescribed in the application. J. H. McKinney, for defendant, 'testified: That he had known the land in question since 1881. That a hill of about 150 acres lies in the southwestern portion of the survey; that the soil in the hill is more or less rocky and gravelly; that the rest of the section lies in a valley, and that the land in said valley was a dark, loamy soil. That when he first knew the land, the valley was covered with a thick growth of large mesquite timber. That there was also china, chittim, walnut, willow, haclcberry and catclaw growing upon the land. That in the year 1883 he cut 300" or 400 fence posts off the land. That one prong of Sterling creek ran through the land.

“A number of other witnesses testified to substantially the same facts.

“Defendant offered evidence which was excluded, as follows: Application of Smissen of same date and form as that before mentioned in which he sought to purchase another section with same representation as to soil, grass and timber as that given in the other application, except as to water the application contained the statement, ‘None permanent.’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 S.W. 530, 96 Tex. 331, 1903 Tex. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walraven-v-farmers-merchants-national-bank-tex-1903.