78 So. 956 | Ala. | 1918
Appellants filed this bill asserting their ownership of a certain tract of land in Monroe county, averring that appellee corporation, without grant or leave from them and without proceedings to condemn a right of way, had constructed its railway over the tract, and praying that appellee be required to pay the value of the right of way thus occupied by it, or, in default thereof, that it be enjoined from the further use of the same. Appellee, answering, made its answer a cross-bill under the statute, averred its ownership of the tract in question, and prayed that its title be quieted against the claim of appellants. Demurrer to the cross-bill was overruled, after which this appeal.
Appellants claimed title by inheritance from John Hathcock, who, in 1859, purchased the land from the United States government under the provisions of Act Cong. *561 Aug. 4, 1854, c. 244, 10 Stat. 574, providing that "any person applying to enter any of the aforesaid lands, shall be required to make an affidavit before the register or receiver of the proper land office, that he or she enters the same for his or her own use and for the purpose of actual settlement and cultivation, or for the use of an adjoining farm or plantation owned or occupied by him or herself," etc. Appellee averred in its cross-bill that Hathcock at the same time paid the full purchase price of the land, and then and there became entitled to a patent, but that thereafter and long after the death of Hathcock, in, to wit, 1907, and not until then, patent was issued in the name of their ancestor Hathcock and delivered to appellants, his heirs.
Appellee, showing its own claim of title on the other hand, averred that the land had been assessed by the state for taxation in 1869, had been sold at tax sale in 1870 to J. F. McCorvey, to whom deed was made in 1872, and under whom it claimed through mesne conveyances. Appellee further averred that it and its predecessors in title, to state the general effect of the averment, had been in adverse possession of the land for more than 30 years, and, further, sought to estop appellants from asserting their claim under the patent by showing that for 20 years they had stood silently by while appellee and its predecessors in title paid the taxes, put valuable improvements upon the land, and brought the same into a high state of cultivation.
Whether the land over which appellee has constructed its railway was subject to taxation by the state in 1869 is the principal question in this case, and that question must be answered in the affirmative. We have held that a patent issued under circumstances similar to those of this case invested the heirs of the patentee with no new or additional property in the land, but only gave them better and conclusive evidence of the title acquired by him; that, in cases of sales by the United States, the law gives the right, and the patent is to be considered, not as the title itself, but as the evidence by which it is shown that the prerequisites to a legal sale have been complied with; that the payment of the purchase money vests a perfect equity in the purchaser, leaving in the general government no more than a bare, technical legal title, held in trust for the purchaser, and that to this equity, except as against the United States and those claiming under it, the state may attach what incidents and qualities of property it pleases. Birmingham Coal Iron Co. v. Arnett,
It results also from the principle of the foregoing authorities that the land, in the state of its title, was capable of being held adversely to the original entryman and those claiming through him, and that appellee may have acquired title under the general statute of limitations of ten years or under the short statute of five years made and provided in cases of the sale of lands for taxes and in force at the time of the sale to the ancestor of appellants. Payment of the purchase money vested in the entryman and his successors all the substantial interest of the government, with an inchoate legal title, alienable, descendible to heirs, subject to execution or other liens, and to be divested or transferred in the same manner as any other legal title. In the federal courts such title will support trespass, waste, or ejectment. Cawley v. Johnson (C. C.) 21 Fed. 492. If appellants or their ancestor had a certificate of payment, on that they might have maintained ejectment in the courts of this state. Code, § 3980. Otherwise they might have maintained an equitable action for the recovery of the land. It is true that the statute of limitations does not run against the government; but wherever there is a person competent presently to assert a claim of title, it is laid down generally and correctly that an adverse possession for a length of time which makes out a title under the statute of limitations may be set up against such claim. Harrison v. Pool,
It is not thought that the opinions in the cases of Price v. Dennis,
By a quotation from Price v. Dennis, supra, counsel for appellants intimate that there could be no valid tax deed because the government might have canceled the entry or refused to issue a patent. We have already cited decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States touching upon this question. And in Cawley v. Johnson, supra, it was said that:
"The purchaser, when he had paid his money and taken his receipt, has done all in his power to complete the purchase, and that the land from that time is taken from the market, and designated and set aside for the purchaser's use; that the receiver's receipt is as binding upon the government as a patent, the issuing of which is a ministerial act which conveys no new or substantial claim or interest in the land. Of course, the certificate is liable to be canceled by the government in case the sale was improperly made, but no more so than a patent. Either a certificate or patent may be recalled or canceled in case the government has previously sold the land. But the certificate, as fully as the patent, conveys all the substantial interest of the government in the land, with an inchoate legal title, which may be aliened, will descend to heirs, * * * and the title divested or transferred in the same manner as any other legal title" — citing our case of Goodlet v. Smithson, 5 Port. 245, 30 Am. Dec. 561, along with numerous others.
Appellee in its cross-bill claims to have derived title by means other than the statutes of limitations, as has appeared; but these other alleged sources of title require no extended comment. It appears to us upon the averments of the cross-bill that appellee's title may be left to rest upon the statutes mentioned. It does not appear that the prescriptive presumption which arises out of possession can be of any service to appellee, since a possession which would entitle it to the benefit of the presumption of a grant would, without its aid, suffice, under the statutes of limitations aforesaid, to vest title in it or those under whom it claims. Snow v. Bray, 73 So. 542;1 Echols v. Hubbard,
The decree overruling the demurrer to the cross-bill will, for the reasons pointed out, be affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and McCLELLAN and GARDNER, JJ., concur.