Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

hy 21, 1958 Honorable Bill Allcorn Opinion No. Ww-436 Commissioner General Land Office Re: Whether a certain tract Austin, Texas of land In Bosaue Countv may be patented:under - Article 5421c, Section Dear Mr. Allcorn: 5, V.C.S. The opinion request from your office states that on January 19, 1038, the Board of Land Commissioners of Bastrop County issued to Thomas H. Maya a headright certificate for three fourths of a league and one labor of land. Patent was Issued for three fourths of a league and In 1858 a certificate for the unlocated balance of one labor was issued. The Constitution of 1876, adopted by the voters on February 15, 1876 provided in Section 2 of Article XIV that "all unsatisfied genuine land certificates now In existence shall be surveyed and returned to the Qeneral Land Office with- in five years after the adopt~lonof this Constitution, or be forever barred". Subse uent to the expiration of the five year period, on March 24, 1881, an application under said certifi- cate was filed with the county surveyor requesting the survey of a labor of land. County surveyor S.J. Siddall promptly made the survey and on April 6, 1881, the application, field notes and certificate were filed in the (feneralLand Office as shown by the endorsements thereon. An official file on said survey was set up in the Land Office, belng designated as "File 2060, Thomas H. Mayes, Mllam 1st Class, 177 acres," and said sur- vey is shown on the official Land Office map of Bosque County. You request our answer to two questions: "(1) Is the tract of land still classified as a headright survey, or by the Act of February 23, 1900, did it become Free Public School Land? "(2) Can it now be patented under Article 5421c, Section 5, V.C.S.?" Honorable Bill Allcorn, page 2 (W-436) Article VII, Section 2 of the present Texas Con- stitution set aside certain lands, Including one half of the public domain of the State, for a "Perpetual Public School Fund". Under the Act of February 23, 1900, (Acts, 26th Leg., 1st C.S., Ch. ll), the balance of the unappropriated public domain, with the exception of certain lakes, bays and is- lands, was In turn conveyed to the School Fund. And see Articles 5416 and 5415a, V.C.S. Because the certificate was not surveyed and re- turned within the five years as required by the Constitution, supra, the survey was ineffective as a headright survey and the land remained a part of the ublio domain. New York and Texas Land Company v. Thompson, 13 Tex. 169, 17 S.W. 920 (1891). Under Article 541b R S the land in question belongs to the State Permanent Soiooi %nd. We agree with you that the land cannot now be patented under the headrlght certificate. Section 5 of Article 5421c, V.C.S., provides in part as follows: "Any headright survey . . . heretofore awarded . . . whloh survey has been held and claimed In good faith by any party for a period of ten years prior to the date of application for patent and which survey cannot be patented under existing laws, may be patented on pay- ment of One Dollar ($1.00) an aore to the Land Commissioner." Under Section 10, General Provisions, Constitution of the Republic of Texas, each white man who was head of a family . and who resided In Texas on the day of the Texas Deola- ratlon of Independence was entitled to a league and labor of land. By the act of December 14, 1837, 1 (fam.1404, a Board of Land Commissloners was set up In each county to pass on land applications and to issue land certificates to those entitled thereto under such constitutional provision. The certificate here under consideration was for less than a league and labor of land. However, certificates for amounts less than that stated in the Constitution have been upheld as valid. State v. Sullivan, 9 Tex. 156; Hill v. Moore, 85 Tex. 335, 19. 162. Section 5 of Article 5421~ was discussed at length in Barber v. Glles, 146 Tex. 401, 208 S.W.2d 553 (1948), a case whose facts are similar in several respects to the facts YOU resent. Field notes were filed in the beneral Land Office in 179 8 under an 1870 law authorizing rants to settlers of homestead tracts. Article 4171, R.S. 1%95, provided for for- feiture of such a grant for failure to file an affidavit of Honorable Bill Allcorn, page 3 (~~-436) three years' occupancy of the homestead tract. The land having been forfeited for such failure, the long-time pos- sessor of the land demanded the right to purchase under Section 5 of Article 5421~. In dlsouasing said section, the Court said at page 554:, "The language used, or pa'rtof It, eug- gests that the first part of Seotlon 5 IS ln- tended as an aot of validation, This Court has been generous In upholding legislation validating titles. . . . By the terms of the Homestead Donation Act, Article 4171, R.S. 1895, all rights under the original deslg- nation and survey terminated and the land became vacant, unappropriated public land when Callahan or his assignee failed to make,satlsfactory proof of three years' oo- cupancy of the land; and by the terms of the Aot of February 23, 1900,.. . . the land was set apart and granted to the public school fund. After the land had thus been set apart to the pub110 sohool fund the mandate of Sec- tion 4 of Article VII of the Oonstitutlon, Vernon's Ann.St., forbade Its disposition otherwise than by sale. . . The tract of land, the subject of oontroversy herein, is surveyed land within the definition contained in Section 3 of the 1931 Act, field notes for it being on file in the General Land Office. "The first part of Section 5 of the 1931 Sales Act may reasonably be construed as au- thorizing sales of the land to which it applies, giving to the persons who have held and claimed the land in good faith for 10 years preference rights to buy it at the price named, and thus construed it ,ls in our opinion valid. . . Pre- ference rights to purchase public school land have often been given by acts of the legisla- ture to designated classes of persons, and such legislation has been sustained as the valid exercise of legislative power. 'When and to whom the lands shall be sold, is a question of sound policy and belongs to the political department'." Whether or not the Thomas H. Rays survey was a "headright" survey heretofore "awarded" is our question. Your office informs us that in the early practice of the General Land Office, no formal "award" was made prior to the issuance . . Honorable Bill Allcorn, page 4 (wW-436) of a patent.,A location was simply made on vaoant public do- main and the field notes plus the certificate were filed In the General Land Office. In Stubblefield v. Hanson, 94 S.W. 406 (Tex.Civ.App. 1906, error "No question Is raised as to the vali- dity of the warrant, and the survey and loca- tion of the land by virtue thereof was not controverted. This was sufficient to sever the land from the public domain and vest title in the owner of the warrant for whom the lo- cation and survey was made, and is sufficient title to authorize the maintenance of an ac- tion of trespass to try title." Technically, of oourse, no award of a headright survey was accomplished because the certificate under which the survey was made was barred by limitation under the con- stitutional provision. The survey hence was invalid. Never- theless, the field notes, along with the headright oertifl- cate, were received and filed in the Qeneral Land Office, and they have never been cancelled. Apparently no question as to the validity of such survey has been raised in over three quarters of a century. The survey appears on the official Bosque County map in the General Land Office. It was not the intention of the statute under consideration to give a pre- ference right to purchase~a survey previously awarded or sold when such previous award or sale was made in aocordance with law in all respects. To the contrary, Section 5 specifically states that It applies only to surveys which "cannot be patented under existing laws". This presupposes a flaw in the title of the buyer or awardee of such serious proportion as to prevent the issuance of a patent. The purpose of Section 5 was to grant a preference right to purchase for a dollar an acre to one who in good faith reliance upon the survey had held and claimed the land for 10 years. Our Supreme Court in Barber v. Qiles, supra, refers to Section 5 as an "act of validation" and says that said court "has been generous In upholding legislation validating titles", citing cases upholding the Relinquishment Act and the Small Bill, respectively. Giving the statute a liberal construction, as appears to be authorized by the above statement, we hold that the Rays Survey may be patented upon a compliance with the terms of Section 5, Article 5421c, not because the head- right survey was valid but because such invalid survey, when combined with 1O~years good faith possession thereunder, gives to the good faith claimant the right to buy at the stated price the land he had long thought that he owned. Honorable Bill Alloorn, page 5 (w-436) SUMMARY The Texaa Constitution provides that existing land oertifioates surveyed more than five years after the adoption of the Constitution are for- ever barred. A survey under an 1858 headright certificate filed in the Land Office after the expiration of said five year period Is lneffec- tlve, and the land remains a part of the public domain, being dedicated to the'State Permanent School Fund under Article 5416, R.S. The land may, however, be patented under Section 5, Article 54210, V.C.S. Yours very truly, WILL WILSON, Attorney General of Texas J. Arthur Sandlln JAS:bh APPROVED: OPINION COMMITTEE Gee. P. Blackburn, Chairman J.C. Davis, Jr. Milton Richardson Edward Cazares REVIEWEDFORTHEA'P'PORNEY QENERAL BY: W.V. Qeppert I_