Walsh v. Preston

109 U.S. 297, 3 S. Ct. 169, 27 L. Ed. 940, 1883 U.S. LEXIS 973
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 26, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 109 U.S. 297 (Walsh v. Preston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walsh v. Preston, 109 U.S. 297, 3 S. Ct. 169, 27 L. Ed. 940, 1883 U.S. LEXIS 973 (1883).

Opinion

Me. Justice Millee

delivered the opinion of the court.

These cases as they stand on our docket are cross-appeals from the decree of the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western District of Texas, in a suit wherein. William Preston was plaintiff, and William C. Walsh, in his character of commissioner of the general land office of the State of Texas, was defendant.

The suit was commenced originally by George Hancock, a citizen of Kentucky, by a bill in chancery against John S. Groos, who was then commissioner of the land-office, and after the death of Hancock, was revived in the name of Preston as plaintiff, and Walsh became substituted for Groos as his successor in. office. The original bill is long, and after Preston became plaintiff he filed a very full amended bill.

To these the defendant demurred, and the demurrers being overruled, the defendant Walsh filed his plea in bar and his answer, under oath, to which there was a replication. .

The bill is founded on a colonization contract between the State of Texas and Charles Fenton Mercer; a class of contracts ay ell known, in the history of Mexico, resting on a policy Avhich Avas continued b_y Texas after separation from that government.

The contract on which the present suit is brought is dated January 29th, 1844, and is signed by Samuel Houston, president of Texas, and Charles- F. Mercer, for himself and such associates as he may choose, and is attested by Anson Jones, secretary of State. '

*299 In making this contract the president acted under authority-of an act of the Congress of Texas of February 5th, 1842, which declared,

“ That the provisions of an act entitled ‘ An Act for the granting of lands to emigrants,’ approved January 4th, 1841, so far as relates to the authority thereby given to the president to enter into- a contract with W, S. Peters and others to introduce colonists, upon certain terms therein expressed and set forth, be, and the same are hereby, extended to such other company or companies which may be organized for like purposes, as the president in his judgment may approve.
2. That all the rights accruing to said company by the provisions of said act, and all the duties, obligations, and conditions imposed by the same upon the said W. S. Peters and his associates, be and the -same are hereby extended to such other companies as may be organized under the provisions .of this act.”

To the act of 1841, therefore, we are to look for the kind of contract which the president of Texas could make in 1844 with Mercer and his associates, for though a joint resolution of the Congress, dated January 16th, 1843, is relied on as introducing some modification of the act of 1841, that resolution seems carefully limited in its operation to contracts already in existence, and does not affect the power of the president in any contract he may make with other parties.

It is true this joipt resolution authorizes an extension of the period within which the contracts, to which it specifically refers by name, may be performed, from three years to five years, and the contract in Mercer’s case allowed five years, .when the act of 1841 required performance within three years; but no point is raised that the Mercer contract is, for that reason, void, and we are not called on to declare the effect of this departure from the act of 1841 in this case.

This agreement is in conformity with the act of 1841 authorizing the contract with W. S. Peters and his associates, and as a substantial summary of the material parts of the Mercer contract, except the location of the land and the names of the parties, that statute is given here.

*300 The first three sections of the act relate to the rights conferred on all immigrants to the State.

Sec. 4 enacts that the president of the. republic be and he is hereby authorized to make a contract with ~W. S. Peters, Daniel S'. Carroll, and others (naming them), collectively, for the purpose of colonizing and settling a portion of the vacant and unappropriated lands of the republic, on the. following conditions, to wit:

“ The said contractors on their part agree to introduce a number of families, to be specified in the contract, within three years from the date of the contract: Provided, They shall commence the settlement within one year from' the date of said contract.”

It then proceeds

Art.. 2009. [5] Be it further enacted, That the said contract shall be drawn up by the secretary of State,.setting forth such regulations and stipulations as shall not be contrary to the general principles of this law and the Constitution ; which contract shall be signed by the president and the party or parties, and attested1 by the secretary of State, who will also preserve a copy in his department.
. “Art. 2010. [6] Be it further enacted, That the president shall designate certain boundaries, to be above the limits of the present settlements, within which the emigrants under the said contract must reside : Provided, however, That all legal grants and surveys . that may have been located within the boundaries so designated previously to the date of said contract, shall be respected ; and any locations or surveys made by the contractors or their emigrants on such grants and- surveys, shall be null and void.
“ Art. 2011. [7] Be it further enacted, That not more than one section of six hundred and forty acres of land, to be located in a square, shall be given to any family comprehended in said contract ; nor more than three hundred and twenty acres to a single man over the age of seventeen years.
“ Art. 2012. [8] Be it further enacted, That no individual contract made between any contractor and the families or single persons which he may introduce, for a portion of the land to which *301 respectively they may be entitled, b> way of recompense for passage, expense of transportation, removal or otherwise, shall be binding, if such contract embrace more than one-half of the land which he, she, or they may be entitled to under this law; nor shall any contract act as a lien on any larger portion of such land ; nor shall any emigrant be entitled to any land, or receive a title for such land, until such person or persons shall have built a good and comfortable cabin upon it, and shall keep in cultivation, and under .good fence, at least fifteen • acres on the tract which he may have received.
“Art. 2013. [9] Be it further enacted, That all the expenses attending the selection of the land, surveying, title, and other fees, shall be paid by the contractor to the persons respectively authorized to receive them : Provided, however, That this provision shall not release the colonist from the obligation of remunerating the contractor in the amount of all such fees, so soon as it can be done without a sale of their land : And further,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 U.S. 297, 3 S. Ct. 169, 27 L. Ed. 940, 1883 U.S. LEXIS 973, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walsh-v-preston-scotus-1883.