Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

=E ATI-ORNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS I' ,: ~..'.:'j' : Hon. J. Earl Rudder Commissboner, General Land Office Austin, Texas ..OplaionNo. S-166 : :...RE:,Rightsof the State in certain-Instances upon for- felture af a veteran's con- tract of'sale and pupchase under the Veterans' Land Program. :' :?'Dear.Mr.: ~,Rudder: You have requested an opinion on the following questions: "1. In those cases where it becomes necessary for the Veterans' Land Board.,to forfei~ta,veteran's contra~ct,land It 1s:~ found that the'veteran has executed a graz-~ lng lease on that particular traot.of land. with another party, what is the legal stabs of that pleases contract~lnsofar aspthe Vet- : erans' Land Board Is ooncerne~d. "2. Where.a veteran has executed an agrlcultural~Lease.wlth another party tom. operate the tract of.land.-beingpurchased through the ,Vetetians' Land Program, and It becomes necessary for the Board to forfeit the veteran's ~c~ontract, what Is the'status ~of this lease zontract and,what.r$ghts -ac- crue to the'Board as:to ownershlp.or poss- ession of any,crops growing on .that~ l:aadat the time of such forfeiture? .Your attention ls;called,to the fact that:In no instance, does the Board become a party to any such lease agreement by indicating their approval Hon. J. Earl Rudder - page 2 (US-166) or disapproval of such. "3 . In the case of 011 and gas leases which may have been executed on land subject to forfeiture under the terms of the Veteran's contract, such leases be- fore they become effective must be ap- proved by the Chairman of the Veterans' Land Board and filed In that office. Are such 011 and gas leases affected in any way In the case of forfeiture of the veterans' land contract? "4. Where a veteran purchaser has a growing crop on lands he Is purchasing through the Veterans' Land Program, and has mortgaged all or a portion of such crops, what rights accrue to the Veterans' Land Board to participate in the yield from such crops If forfeiture action be- comes necessary?" Article 5421m, Vernon's Civil Statutes, is corn- manly known as the "Veterans' Land Act.' Section 17 pro- vides, In part: "The sale of all lands hereunder by the Board may be properly initiated by con- tract of sale and purchase, and said con- tract shall be recorded In the deed records In the county where the land Is located. The purchaser shall make an Initial payment of at least five (5$) per cent of the sell- ing price of the property. The balance of said selling price shall be amortized over a period to be fixed by the Board, but not ex- ceeding forty (40) years, together with interest thereon at the rate of three (3s) per cent per annum] . . . no property sold under the pro- visions of this Act shall be trankferred, sold or conveyed, in whole or In part, until the purchaser has enjoyed possession for a period of'three (3) years from the date of purchase of said property and complied with all the terms and conditions of this Act and the rules and regulations of the Board; provided, how- ever, that property sold under the provisions . . Ron. J. Earl Rudder,‘- page 3 ~(S-166) of this Act may be .,transferred, sold, dr conveyed at any time after the entire ,in; debtedness due the Board has been paid. When the entire Indebtedness,due the State under .the,contract of sableIs paid, the Chalrman,of the Veterans' Land Board shall execute ~adeed under its seal ~to~'the.ori- ginal purchaser.of.the land, which deed shall ,lnure to,the benefit .of the legal. owner 'of ,s,aldland," ~Sectlon 18 providea: ?If at,ani'tlme. while the veteran Is Indebted:,tothe aboard for the land PM- chased;,he .should~sxecute, oPth&e is In existence, .a~ oll,~,gasand mineral lease covering such.land or any part thereof, at leastone-ha&f.{i/2) of.ail bonus money reoelved:as.conslderatlon and one-half (l/i?)of all delay rentals paid under such leasesand one-half (l/2) of all royalties received, (or,80 much thereof as may be required) shall be paid to the Board by the owner of said lease and applied by It toward the satlsfac,tlonof said lndebted- ness. The lease made by the veteran will be of no force or effect until the Board has ,recelvedIts portion themof, as here- In provided." Section 19 provides for the forfeiture of the contract of sale and purchase ~ln the following manner: "In the event that any portion of the Interest or principal on any sale should not be'~pald~whendue, the contract of sale and purchase shall be subject to forfeiture by the Board, and such~forfelture,shall be ef- :fectlvewhen the Board shall have met and '.passed a resolution directing the Chairman ,of.the~Board to endorse .upon the wrapper containing the papers of said sale, or upon the purchase.contract f,lledln the Land Of- fice, the word. 'forfeited,' or words of ~! ,.. Hon. J. Earl Rudder - page 4 (S-166) similar Import, with the date of such action, and to sign officially; there- upon the .lands and all payments thereto- fore made shall become forfeited. ,A notice of the action of the Board In forfeiting the original contract shall be ma.iled to the County Clerk of the couritywherethe land Is located, and the said Clerk shall enter on the margin of the 'page or pages containing the re- cord of the original contract, a notation of such forfeiture. Lands Included In such forfeited contract shall be subject to resale under the same terms and condi- tions as though said lands had not there- tofore been sold. In any case where the sale has been forfeited and the title to the lands revested In the Veterans' Land Fund, the orlglnal purchaser or his vendee shall have the right to reinstate his claim In the purchase contract at any time prior to the date on which the Board shall have met and ordered the said lands to be advertised for resale, or for lease for mineral development, but not thereafter. . . .' The forfeiture of a defaulting veteran's contract of sale and purchase Is one of the few Instances in which formal resolution by the Board la required. Unlike many other duties of the Board which can be delegated to the Commissioner of the General Land Office, the forfeiture of a contract of sale and purchase cannot be so delegated. Section21 provides: "The Board Is hereby authorized and empowered to make and promulgate such rules and regulations under this Act as.they shall deem to be necessary or advisable, and to en- force the same. It shall likewise have the power to prescribe the form and contents of all notices, bids, applications, awards, con- tracts, deeds, or Instruments whatsoever In any manner used by It In so carrying out such project and plan when the same shall not be in conflict with law. The Board is hereby made the sole judge of forfeiture of any purchase contract under this Act, and anyone . Hon. J. Earl Rudder - page.5 (S-166) avalllng'of the provislons of tNs Act shall by so.dolng agree to abide by the same; and should'the Board declare a for- feitux under said purchase contract, then the purohaser hereby a rees to vacate the premises within thirty 'i; 30) days after , receipt of notice of such declaration." The questions you have asked presuppose that the transactions with reference to the veteran and his lessee occurred subsequent to the execution of the contract of sale and purchase between the veteran and the State and before foffeltum'by the,Board for legal cause. It Is as- sumed, also, that the veteran's claim has not been reln- stated. Not'only the'veterans' Land Act, but as well the 'contractof sale and purchase of record In the county clerk's office, puts on notice anyone who deals with the veteran, that the contract Is subject to forfeiture so long as there remains unpaid any portion of the Interest and principal due on the contract. Thus, there Is mlss- lng one .of the three elements essential to a bona fide purchase, namely, absence of notice. Therefore, the life of any type of lease contract, except an oil, gas and mineral lease was partlcu&ai?ly~provldedfor In Section 18, entered into between the veteran and his lessee, Is de- pendent upon the veteran's keeping current his obligations under,his ,contract of sale and purchase. From a mading of the foregoing quoted sections, It will be ndted that the procedure for the contract of sale and purchase of land to a veteran, together with the conditions attached thereto, Including the forfeiture provisions, Is rather definite and comprehensive. Appar- ently, the legislature patterned the forfeiture provisions after earlier ,laws authorizing forfeiture of sales of the public lands under certain circumstances. In Lawless v. Wright, 86 S.W. 1039 (Tex.Clv.APP. 1905), it was said: "It Is the settled law that the State of Texas has the power and authority to for- felt, through a declaration of &he Land Com- missioner, a sale of Its lands, for the non- payment by the:vendee of,the Interest on the Hon. J. Earl Rudder - page ,6 (S-166) purchase money. Such being the law, the act of the Land Commissioner In forfelt- lng the purchase of the land by Fancher had the effect of restoring such land to the public domain of the state . . . After the fo,rfelturethe land assumed the same status that it occupied before the sale to Fancher, and the State'clearly had the right, which It exercised, of placing the land on the marketagain and selling It. . . .n ~If the veteran's contract of sale and purchase Is forfeited, there can be no claim of rlgh~tIn anyone holding under him. Frlstoe v. Blum, 92 Tex. 76, 45 S.W. 998 (1898). You are advised, therefore, In answer to your first questlon, that the grazing lease referred to ex- pires and is of no further.force and effect from and after forfeiture. The answer to your second question depends on the particular facts Involved at the time of forfeiture. Strlct- ly speaking, under the contract of sale and purchase, the State Is the owner of the legal title and the veteran Is the owner of the equitable title. The veteran Is entitled to possession and heris not prohibited under the Veterans' Land Act from leasing the land for grazing or agricultural purposes. Although the land Is not held subject to a vendor's lien as such, yet It Is subject to forfeiture and repossession. The same principles of law governing the vendor and purchaser in an ordinary transaction Involving the sale of land and the retention of the vendor's lien likewise apply to the contract of sale and purchase be- tween the State and the veteran. Where the land Is held subject to a vendor's lien, the lien debtor until title has been divested by foreclosure, Is entitled to effect a constructive severance of crops growing on the land, and thus prevent them from passing to the purchaser at a foreclosure sale. w1111s v. Moore, 59 Tex. 628 (1883); Bowers v. Bryant Link Co., 15 S.W.2d 598 (Tex.Comm.App.1929). The lien of a vendor of land does not extend to growing crops. League v. Sanner Bros., 60 S.W. 898 (Tex. Clv.App.1901). One who takes a mortgage on crops to be grown by the purchaser has a right which is superior to .. , Hon. J. Earl Rudder - page 7 (S-166) any claim on the part of the vendor or a purchaser at a foreclosure sale to enforce the vendor's lien. Caldwell, Hughes & Patterson v. Yarborowh, 186 S.W. 350 (Tex.Clv. App.1916), Leanue v. Sanner Bras., supra. A tenant Is entitled to his share of the crops grown on the land. In Brown v. Leath, 42 S.W. 655.(~ex. Clv.App.1897, error ref.) (concluslon,of facts In 44 S.W. 42), the court said: " . . . The lessee had, under his lease, cult,lvatedthe land; and at the time of the sale thencrop of cotton and corn was maturing, and some of It matured. The lease severed the right to the rents from the realty, and the sale of the land under the'deed of trust did not carry the title to the rents, or the crop on the premises standing at the date of the sale, wheth- BF mature or not. The lessee had the right of Ingress and egress for the purpose of gathering and preparing the crops for market or use. This Is no longer an open question In this state. (Citing Willis v. Moore, supra, and other cases). The fact that the tenant had notice of the mortgage by Its record Is lmmaterlal. It Is the right of the mortgagor, before foreclosure, to sever the rents from the reversion. In this case It was done by granting the lease. . . ." In Dlnwlddle v. Jordan, 228 S.W. 126 (Tex.Comm. App.1921), the court said: "The doctrine of emblements Is the com- mon law right of tenant, whose lease of un- certain duration has been terminated without his fault and without previous knowledge upon his part, to enter upon the leased premises to cultivate, harvest, and remove the crops planted by him before the termination of the lease." The court, In the same case, supra, quoted the Supreme Court of Indiana as follows: "In order'to entitle one claiming to be a tenant, or his legal representative, to emblements, the follpwlng facts must Hon. J. Earl Rudder - page 8 (S-166) appear: (1) The existence of a tenanoy of uncertain duration. (2) A termination of the tenancy by the Act of Cod or by the act of the lessor. (3) That the crop was planted by the tenant, or someone claiming under him, during his right of occupancy." In the second question poeed, the veteran has leased the land for agricultural purposes. The tenancy is in existence and is of uncertain duration because it is subject to termination by forfeiture of the veteran's contract of sale and purchase by the action of the Board. Secondly, the tenancy has been terminated by forfeiture which Is the result of the landlord's (veteran's) act in not performing his part of the contract of sale and pur- chase. Thirdly, the tenant's ~crophas been planted by him, or someone claiming under him, during his right of occupancy. Therefore, your second question is an- swered as follows: Where a veteran has .executed an agricultural lease to another party and the veteran's contract of sale and purchase is forfeited by the Board, the lease Is termi- nated; however, the tenant is entitled to hls share of the crops. The State Is entitled to receive the land- lord's veteran's portion of the Brentprovided the land- lord's Iveteran'sI portion has not been severed previously, eitheractually or constructively, by the landlord (veteran) prior to the forfeiture. We shall not attempt in this opinion to cover fully the matter of what constl- tutes a constructive severance, but we will note that a sale or mortgage of the crops is a constructive sever- ance. Willis v. Moore, supra; Bowers v. Bryant Link Co., supra. The answer to your third question Is in the negative. The status of an 011 and gas lease exekuted pursuant to the terms of Section 18 is not changed by for- feiture except to the extent that the State thereafter would be entitled to receive all annual delay rentals and royalties. In Willis v. Moore, supra, the court said: I,. . . As, however, the crops are separate and distinct in their nature from the land upon which they grow, the ownership of the one, even Hon. J. Earl Rudder - page 9 (S-166) on mortgaged property, may be in one per- son, and the title to the other in afiother; and whenever crops growing or standing upon land covered by a lien given by the owner of the Land, or . . acquired by law, have in law or In faci?Deen severed in ownership, or actually severed from the land prior to sale of the land under the lien, title ',. thereto will not pass by the foreclosure of the lien. "A mortgagor is entitled to sever in law or fact the crops which stand upon his land at any time prior to the destruction of his title by sale under the mortgage; this results from his ownership and conse- fluentright to the use and profits of the land, . . ." You are advised, in answer to your fourth ques- tion, that If a veteran purchaser has mortgaged all or a portion of the crops growing on lands he Is purchasing through the Veterans' Land Program, no rights accrue to the State to participate in the yield from such crops if forfeiture action becomes necessary, except to the extent only of the portion of crops which has not been severed, either actually or constructively, prior to for- feiture. SUMMARY A grazing lease executed by a veteran purchaser under the Veterans' Land Act expires and Is of no further force and effect from and after forfeiture of the veteran's contract of sale and pur- chase. An agricultural lease executed by a veteran purchaser to another party Is terminated by forfeiture of the veteran's contract of sale and purchase; however, the tenant is entitled to his share of the crops and the State Is entitled to the veteran's portion of the rent provided the veteran's portion has not been severed previously, either actually or constructively, by the veteran prior to forfeiture. - . . Hon. J. Earl Rudder - page 10 (S-166) The status of an oil and gas lease executed by the veteran and approved by the Chairman of the Veterans' Land Board is not changed by forfeiture except to the extent that the State thereafter is enti- tled to receive all annual delay rentals and royalties. If a veteran purchaser has mortgaged all or a portion of the crops growing on lands he has contracted to purchase through the Veterans' Land Program, no rights accrue to the State to participate in the crops after forfeiture except to the extent of the portion of crops which has not been severed prior to forfeiture. Yours very 'truly, JOHN BEE SREPPERD Attorney General APPROVED: Mary K. Wall Reviewer John Davenport Reviewer Will D. Davis Special Reviewer Davis Grant Special Reviewer John Atchison Acting First Assistant John Ben Shepperd Attorney General JAA:bt