Court Opinion

ID: 3909861
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:38:43.048252+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:16:01.211147
License: Public Domain

The land in suit is situated in Crane County and, on the 3rd day of April, 1907, was upon the market as free school land under the Act of April 15, 1905, for sale by competitive bidding. (See Chap. 103, Laws 1905, p. 159.) No question is raised as to the regularity of the proceedings prior to the sale. The tract contains 640 acres, and A.L. Fisher bid $3.05 per acre and the land was awarded to him on the day of the sale, April 3, 1907, but he did not deposit the first payment in the treasury until the next day after the award was made. Mrs. M.T. Johnson claims under an award by the Commissioner which would give title, if Fitzhugh's title is not superior.
On the 3rd day of April, 1907, D.K. Fitzhugh, in compliance with law, filed his bid to buy the same land, bidding $3.00 per acre, and on that day deposited with the Treasurer one-fortieth of the purchase price and claimed to be the purchaser; but the Commissioner of the General Land Office awarded the land to Fisher. *Page 320 
As we view the case it depends upon the validity of the purchase claimed by Fitzhugh. If he got the title, then the judgments of the trial court and of the Court of Civil Appeals must be reversed and judgment must be rendered for the plaintiff in error, unless he abandoned his claim.
This land was sold under Chapter 103, Laws 1905, page 159, the 4th section of which reads: "When the applications and obligations aforesaid have been filed in the General Land Office, and upon inspection they are found correct and the land is found to be classified and valued and on the market for sale the day the application was filed, or on any prior date and still unsold, and the first payment is in the State Treasury, it shall be the duty of the Commissioner to award the land to the one offering the highest price therefor."
Fitzhugh persistently claimed the purchase, and at the time left his deposit with the Treasurer until it was urged upon him to receive it, and he did so under protest, and continued at all times in possession of the land after it was awarded to him, making frequent claim for it to the Commissioner while excluded from possession.
There is no evidence in the record to sustain the finding that Fitzhugh abandoned his claim.
Two cases are rarely found to be so similar as this and Rawls v. Terrell, 101 Tex. 157. The case cited arose under the same law as this, and in that two men had filed bids for the same section. One bidder made deposit according to law, the other did not. The Commissioner of the General Land Office awarded the land to the man who had no deposit with the Treasurer when the award was made, and upon an application for mandamus this court ordered that officer to award the land to the man who had made his deposit according to law on the day the land was sought to be purchased. This court stated the legal rights of the contestants thus: "We conclude that since the co-respondent did not have his first payment in the Treasury at the time the bids were opened, he was not in the eye of the law a bidder, and the Commissioner was without power to award him the land."
That decision determines this case. Fitzhugh acquired a right by his bid and deposit and was entitled to the land, and is now entitled to judgment against Mrs. Johnson. It is therefore ordered that the judgments of the District Court and of the Court of Civil Appeals be reversed and that judgment be rendered that plaintiff below take nothing and pay all costs.
Reversed and rendered.