Yoakum County v. Robison

124 S.W. 629, 103 Tex. 145, 1910 Tex. LEXIS 160
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1910
DocketNo. 2060.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 124 S.W. 629 (Yoakum County v. Robison) 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
Yoakum County v. Robison, 124 S.W. 629, 103 Tex. 145, 1910 Tex. LEXIS 160 (Tex. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Williams

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an application in behalf of Yoakum County for a mandamus to compel the Commissioner to issue to the county, for its school fund, patents for four leagues of land. Coke County and certain individuals are made parties as claimants of the land. The refusal to issue the patents is based upon the fact that the same land has been patented as school land to Coke County, by which it has been sold to other parties under whom the other corespondents claim.

The question arises under the Acts of March 26, 1881, (p. 65), and that of April 7, 1883, (p. 45).

It is asserted by relator that those Acts reserved from the public domain, with which to supply the school lands to the unorganized counties which had previously been established and were then existent, of which Yoakum County was one, the three hundred leagues for the surveying and setting apart of which provision was made by the first named Act, so that no part thereof could lawfully be granted by the officers of the State to counties subsequently created and organized, as was Coke County, to constitute their school lands; and that, hence, the patents to Coke County are nullities and constitute no bar to the selection and appropriation of the land embraced in them by Yoakum 'County.

The position of all the respondents is that the laws referred to had no such effect, but that they set apart the lands for appropriation as well by counties to be created and organized after the enactment of the statutes as by those then having legal existence, but unorganized.

The Act of 1881, as passed, was entitled: “An Act to provide for designating and setting' apart three hundred leagues of land out of the unappropriated public domain for the benefit of the unorganized counties of the State and to provide for the survey and location of the same.” Its first section provided for the survey of three hundred leagues “which shall constitute a reservation out of which each of the unorganized counties of this State, as it may be organized, shall be entitled to four leagues for school purposes.”

Section 7 is as follows:

“Bach league of land shall be numbered in the order it is surveyed by the contractor or contractors, beginning at number one and extending to number one hundred, and as each of the unorganized counties of the State shall be organized, such county shall be entitled to the first four leagues out of the reservation authorized by this Act, which shall not have been patented to other counties for free school purposes, upon the payment to the treasurer of the State the actual costs of the surveying fees and legal interest thereon from time of payment by the State and upon the payment of the cost of surveying and patent fees, the Commissioner of the General Land Office is hereby required to issue patents to said county for four leagues of land as above provided; provided, any county that fails to pay surveying and *147 patent fees under this Act, within three years after its organization, shall forfeit all claims to the lands herein donated.”

The Act of 1883 recited that three hundred and twenty-five leagues had been surveyed under the Act of 1881, and that the surveys of four leagues of school land previously made for some of the organized counties conflicted with older surveys, and provided for the satisfaction out of these three hundred and twenty-five leagues of counties so situated as well as of the unorganized counties as before. Further statement of the provisions of this Act is unnecessary, since it is not contended, and we can not see that there is anything in them to make the question before us different from what it would be under the Act of 1881 alone.

It must be admitted that the construction of counsel for relator is readily and naturally suggested by the language of the Act last mentioned.

When it was passed, some of the counties were organized, and some were unorganized, but all had legal existence. The phrase, “the unorganized counties of the State,” if there were nothing to modify its meaning, would seem to refer to those which were in existence and thus known. Undoubtedly the language does refer to and include them, but the question is, does it discriminate between them and counties afterwards to be established and organized? Was it really the legislative purpose that the mere fact that parts of the territory of the State had been segregated from the rest, by boundaries, and had received names, as counties, should give them a preference over others, afterwards to be established, in the enjoyment of the provision for the support of free schools which the constant policy of the Eepublic and of the State had extended to every county as it came into existence and established a county government? It is easy to see why the Legislature would reserve from the rapidly diminishing public domain lands with which to continue the established policy of the State. The reason is also plain why a reservation would not be made for the benefit of organized counties further than was done. They had already received their lands or were in a condition to receive them at once. But it was important to save from the impending exhaustion of the public land some with which eventually to supply those counties which could not otherwise be provided for at once; and this consideration was as cogent with reference to counties to be created and organized later as with reference to those . already created but unorganized. NTo reason can be seen why the Legislature would consciously include one class and exclude the other class from the benefits of the provision made.

There is nothing in the previous legislative history, nor in the nature or language of this particular provision, but the mere use of the phrase above quoted, to suggest that such a discrimination would purposely be made. From the time when the municipalities, with their vast territories, were constituted the first counties, the Legislature had, as the settlement of the country demanded, constantly created new counties out of territory included within the old. As these new counties were organized four leagues of land for the support of schools were granted to each. This course was never at all dis *148 turbed by the fact that the parent county had already received a like grant. Ho policy of the Republic and State has been more fixed and constant than this. The Constitution itself recognized it, and assured to the counties the title to lands “heretofore or hereafter” granted to them.

When the Act of 1881 was passed there was in force a statutory provision, in which this policy was enforced, that, “each county shall be entitled to four leagues out of the vacant and unappropriated public domain, for free school purposes,” and providing the manner in which each organized county which had not received such grant, might obtain it “upon application of the Commissioners’ Court.” Rev. Stats., 1879, art. 4032.) Under this any county, newly created and organized, could have received certificates for its four leagues and have appropriated them out of any land unappropriated anywhere in the State.

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Related

Slaughter v. Yoakum County
195 S.W. 1129 (Texas Supreme Court, 1917)
Yoakum County v. Slaughter
160 S.W. 1175 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 S.W. 629, 103 Tex. 145, 1910 Tex. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yoakum-county-v-robison-tex-1910.