Wright v. Gale

140 S.W. 91, 104 Tex. 450, 1911 Tex. LEXIS 178
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1911
DocketApplication No. 7310.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 140 S.W. 91 (Wright v. Gale) 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
Wright v. Gale, 140 S.W. 91, 104 Tex. 450, 1911 Tex. LEXIS 178 (Tex. 1911).

Opinions

This was an action in the District Court of Swisher County by C.E. Wright against G.W. Gale to recover the sum of $1035 for an alleged shortage of forty-five acres in the sale to him by Gale of 485 acres of land. The cause of action was based upon the allegation that forty-five acres of the tract of 485 acres was excess land, and by virtue of the Act of 1889 became the property of the State public school fund, and hence a failure of the warranty.

The facts disclosed that on July 9, 1898, one D. Currie made *Page 452 application to purchase section No. 110, block M8, containing 640 acres, for $1 per acre, paying one-fortieth in cash and the balance on forty years time. The original survey was marked on the ground and the several lines given as 1900 varas each and the excess of forty-five acres was not disclosed by the field notes of the original survey.

The original purchaser, D. Currie, resided upon the section for three years as required by law, and made proof of such occupancy, and filed same in the General Land Office on November 11, 1901, and the commissioner issued his certificate thereon.

D. Currie, on November 6, 1906, conveyed this section of land to G.W. Gale, the defendant in this suit, Gale assuming the obligation of Currie to the State. On December 7, 1906, Gale conveyed to H.A. Robertson 200 acres of said section, describing the same by metes and bounds with its location on or near the base line of the section. On December 7, 1906, but subsequent to conveying the 200 acres to Robertson, Gale conveyed to plaintiff Wright the remaining portion of said section by the acre, the same being 485 acres, giving the field notes of the courses and distances.

No action has been taken by the Commissioner of the General Land Office to ascertain the existence and extent of any excess in section 110, but it appears from the evidence in the case that there exists an excess in this section of about forty-five acres.

This court has determined that it should refuse the writ of error, for the reason that the result reached by the Court of Civil Appeals is substantially correct, but in view of the importance of the question involved in this controversy, and the suggestion of learned counsel for plaintiff in error of the likelihood of similar questions arising in those sections of the State where lies a large quantity of the public school land, and for the reason that the legislative Act authorizing, under the direction of the Land Commissioner, the resurvey of sections already surveyed for the purpose of determining whether an excess of land exists and to what extent and authorizing by implication the segregation of any such excess and its sale, is indefinite and difficult of construction, we deem it proper that this court should, as far as possible, construe the statute referred to and suggest a remedy for those involved in controversies arising out of such excess claims. The case at bar necessarily raises that question and the discussion will not be concerning extraneous matter.

That we may be clearly understood, we quote so much of the legislative Act as relates to the question involved, including the preamble, the Act being of date March 22, 1889, and carried forward in the Revised Statutes as articles 4274, 4275 and 4276:

"An Act to provide for the ascertainment, distribution and sale of the excesses in surveys of land made for the school fund and to validate surveys of land as herein provided."

"Section 1. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of Texas: That all surveys and blocks of surveys heretofore made by virtue of valid alternate scrip be and the same are hereby declared to segregate from the mass of the public domain all the land embraced in said surveys, or blocks of surveys, as evidenced by the corners and lines of same, or by calls for natural or artificial objects, or the calls for *Page 453 the corners and boundaries of other surveys or by the maps and other records in the General Land Office."

"Sec. 2. That all excess in said surveys or blocks of surveys are hereby donated and declared to belong to the public free school fund of the State; and it shall be the duty of the Commissioner of the General Land Office to ascertain, by any and all means practicable, the existence and extent of such excesses, and to provide for and direct such surveys, or corrected surveys, as may be necessary for this purpose: Provided, that where such surveys were made in blocks of two or more surveys, said respective surveys shall remain on the ground consecutively as placed therein, as shown by the maps, sketches and field notes originally returned to the General Land Office: Provided, that the person who has already purchased, or who may hereafter purchase from the State, the particular section to which surplus shall by such resurvey be made contiguous, shall have the prior right for the period of six months after such resurvey shall have been made, in which to purchase such excess on the same terms on which such purchaser has already bought or may buy."

"Sec. 3. That all such surveys which under the direction of the Commissioner of the General Land Office have been or may be hereafter corrected, so that all excess in the original surveys shall be placed in the surveys belonging to the public free schools, are hereby validated and the action of the Commissioner is hereby ratified; and he is directed and authorized to issue patents to the owners thereof, and to sell such surveys belonging to the public free schools, securing to the State the benefit of such excesses."

This court in the case of Willoughby v. Long, 96 Tex. 196, has partially construed the foregoing sections in regard to the purpose of the Act and the authority of the Land Commissioner to ascertain the existence and extent of such excesses, and it is needless for us to reiterate the views there expressed in this regard. But the court did not consider and fully determine the authority of the Commissioner, after having ascertained the existence of an excess in any particular section, to segregate such excess from the body of the section in which it may be found. The authority to segregate the excess, when ascertained, from the other portion of the section is not provided for in the Act, but arises by implication. There being no positive or definite direction in the Act how this right of separation may be exercised by the commissioner, when the necessity arises, the court is called upon to construe the Act and determine how such authority may be exercised. In the absence of any provision directing how to proceed in making the segregation of the excess found to exist we hold the commissioner, in the exercise of the authority confided in him by the Act, must be governed by those rules of justice and equity that control and govern the acts of individuals in dealing with one another in ordinary transactions, as recognized and promulgated by our courts of equity. Because the State is interested in a matter and the public free school fund involved is no good reason why common sense, justice and equity should be discarded in construing the meaning and purpose of a legislative Act.

The case referred to (Willoughby v. Long, supra), and quoted from *Page 454 by the Court of Civil Appeals was one in which the plaintiff sued to recover 320 acres of land, alleged to be the excess of a section thought to contain originally 640 acres, but which was shown by a resurvey to contain 960 acres. While the section had been resurveyed as a whole there had been no lopping off of the excess by the commissioner.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Foster v. Duval County Ranch Co.
260 S.W.2d 103 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1953)
Barber v. Giles
208 S.W.2d 553 (Texas Supreme Court, 1948)
Gulf Oil Corp. v. Outlaw
150 S.W.2d 777 (Texas Supreme Court, 1941)
Thomas v. Cline
135 S.W.2d 1018 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1940)
Kuykendall v. Spiller
299 S.W. 522 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
140 S.W. 91, 104 Tex. 450, 1911 Tex. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-gale-tex-1911.