This was an action of trespass to try title brought by appellant against appellees to recover 775 acres of unsurveyed public domain in Borden County. Both parties claimed under leases from the State, and because that of appellee Cotton, under whom the other appellee claimed, was prior to that of appellant, the recovery sought was denied.
Error is assigned to the judgment (quoting from the brief) "because the evidence shows that the appellant, Watts, made a legal application to lease the land in controversy long before the appellee Cotton, and it *Page 74 was not appellant's fault that such land was not awarded and lease contract executed to him." The court found that appellant had filed an application to lease the land on November 28, 1898, which was rejected upon the ground that the unsurveyed public domain was not subject to lease; that being the construction then given the law by the Attorney General and the Commissioner of the General Land Office. No effort was made by appellant to compel the execution of a lease to him under this application, and the record fails to show any tender of "the first annual rental," without which no lease could take effect, but only shows that his agent at Austin had the money and authority to pay the rent. Sayles' Civ. Stats., arts. 4218r, 4218s. However, on July 11, 1899, he filed another application, and paid to the State Treasurer, under this application, rent for one year in advance, and also back rents to date of his first application, whereupon the land was leased to him; but it had already been leased to appellee Cotton under his application made June 23, 1899, which lease the Commissioner undertook to cancel because of the prior unavailing efforts of appellant to obtain a lease. It seems clear that if the lease to appellee Cotton, which was duly executed and recorded, and which was fully complied with on his part, was authorized by law, the Commissioner had no power to cancel it and make a new lease to another. The power of an agent to make, and his power to break, a contract, are essentially different powers. It seems equally clear that appellant's first proposition to lease was erroneously and wrongfully rejected. Sayles' Civ. Stats., arts. 4218r, 4218s; Harrington v. Blankenship (Texas Civ. App.), 52 S.W. Rep., 585. For correction of this error he doubtless had a remedy by mandamus against the Commissioner of the General Land Office; but, so far from pursuing that remedy, he must be held, under the facts of this case, to have acquiesced in the erroneous ruling of the Commissioner, however much he may have dissented from it, which left the land still open to lease. The statute requires a lease contract to be executed and recorded, and one year's rent to be paid, before the lease takes effect. Until the statute has thus been complied with, the proposed lessee acquires no such right to the land as will enable him to maintain an action of trespass to try title. No leasehold or other right of possession passes to him, but all remains in the State. The case is not analogous to that of a purchaser of school land who has so far complied with the law as to be entitled to an award; for such compliance with the terms of sale proposed by the state is held itself to effect a sale of the land, while the application to lease is but a preliminary proposition on the part of the intending lessee, and contains none of the essentials of a lease. It falls far short of being such "evidence of right to land" as is essential to the maintenance of the action of trespass to try title. See opinion of Chief Justice Garrett in Fall v. Nation, 17 Texas Civ. App. 160[17 Tex. Civ. App. 160], and authorities there cited. The conclusions of the trial court are therefore adopted, and the judgment affirmed.
Affirmed. *Page 75