16 Or. 388 | Or. | 1888
Lead Opinion
The plaintiffs prosecute this action against tlie defendants to recover two thousand two hundred dollars and interest, as damages for the alleged breach of a covenant in a deed made by the defendants to plaintiffs^ The deed containing the covenant declared on purports to convey to the plaintiffs the west half of the southwest quarter of section 5, T. 1 S., R. 3 E., in Multnomah County, for the expressed consideration of two thousand two hundred dollars. By the terms of the deed the defendants covenanted with the plaintiffs, “and their legal representatives forever, that said real estate is free from all
As a separate defense the amended answer alleges in substance that the premises described in the deed were within the twenty-mile limit of the withdrawal of February 16, 1870, for the benefit of the Oregon and California Railroad Company, whose right to said land attached October 29, 1869, by virtue of the Act of Congress of July 25, 1866, and of a subsequent act of June 25, 1868; and that by virtue of said acts the said O. & C.
The caption to this statement is as follows: “Register of declaratory statements under act of Congress of September 4, 1841, and amendments thereto.” Opposite the numbei; 650 and under the head of “name” is “Joseph Ross”; in the column headed “date of settlement” are the words “20 May, 1859”; in the column headed “when filed” are the words and figures “ 21 May, 1859 ”; in the column headed “ part of section or legal subdivision ” are the figures and letters, “ W. of S. W. J, section 5, and E. J, S. E. ¿, section 6,1 S., 3 E.” It also appears from a letter written by the commissioner of the general land office, under date of June 17, 1880, to the register and receiver at Oregon City, that on April 23, 1877, the defendant E. O. Cor-son made application to enter a part of the land described, and made proof and payment and obtained certificate No. 1538. In this letter the commissioner says: “ Under the present rulings of this office, said homestead entry having been made subsequent
The act of Congress under which the defendant Corson claimed to have derived title through the railroad company is the act approved July 25,1866, entitled, “An act granting lands to aid in the construction of a railroad and telegraph line from the Central Pacific Railroad in California to Portland in Oregon.” By the second section of the act it is provided “that there be and hereby is granted to the said companies, their successors and assigns, for the purpose of aiding in the construction of said railroad and telegraph line .... every alternate section of public lauds, not mineral, designated by odd numbers to the amount of twenty alternate sections per mile (ten on each side) of said railroad line; and when any of said alternate sections or parts of sections shall be found to have been granted, sold, reserved, occupied by homestead settlers, pre-empted, or otherwise disposed of, other lands designated as aforesaid shall be selected by said companies in lieu thereof under the direction of the secretary of the interior, in alternate sections, designated by numbers as aforesaid, nearest to and not more than ten miles beyond the limits of said first-named alternate sections.....” The main question at issue, therefore, seems to be, whether or not the land described in the deed was publio land at the time the grant to the railroad took effect. On this question and in respect to this identical tract of land the commissioner of the general land office has decided both ways.
In Corson’s contest with the railroad company, he decided it was publio land where the railroad company attached, and in the contest of the Railroad Company v. Karnstad, it was held in effect that at the time the railroad grant took effect the same land was not publio land. These decisions are in conflict and seem to be entirely irreconcilable. Nor is it necessary that we
The only evidence offered that said lands had been pre-empted at the time the rights of the railroad company attached is the certified “copy of the form of pages 160 and 161 of the register of declaratory statements on file” in the Oregon City land office, which has already been referred to. It seems to me this paper does not tend to prove that the land described in the deed had been pre-empted. It contains none of the facts essential to be shown to entitle a settler to a pre-emption. The qualifications of a pre-emptor are prescribed by section 2259 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, and are briefly: He must be the head of a family, or widower, or single person over the age of twenty-one years, and a citizen of the United States, or ho must have filed a declaration of intention to become such as required by the naturalization laws; he must make a settlement in person on the public lauds subject to pre-emption, and inhabit and improve the same, and he must erect a dwelling thereon.
By section 2260 certain persons are rendered incapable of acquiring any right of pre-emption under the laws of the United States. These are: (1) Any person who is the proprietor of three hundred and twenty acres of land in any State or Territory; or (2) any person who quits or abandons his residence on his own land to reside on the public lands in the same State or Territory.
Section 2262 of the Revised Statutes provides: “Before any person claiming the benefit of this chapter is al lowed to enter lands, he shall make oath before the receiver or register of the land district in which the land is situated, that he has never had the benefit of any right of pre-emption under section 2259; that he is not the owner of three hundred and twenty acres of land in any State
The question, therefore, arises whether or not there was any evidence submitted upon which to base the instruction asked by the appellants. That instruction is as follows: “That said admission of the parties and said testimony, as a matter of law, establishes the fact that the said land was not embraced in the grant to the Oregon Central Railroad Company by said act of Congress, and that the O. & C. R. R. Co. acquired no interest in said land, and that the deed from the O. & C. R. R. Co. to plaintiffs passed no interest in said land to plaintiffs.”
If the evidence offered proved that at the time the railroad grant took effect a valid pre-emption existed on said lands, then, clearly, the instruction asked should have been given. On the other hand, if such was not the effect of the evidence offered, the court did not err in refusing said instruction. As has been shown, the laws of the United States have fully and clearly defined who may take a pre-emption, who shall not, and the manner in which a right to the land shall be acquired. A preemption is a right derived wholly from the statute, and in order to acquire such right, a substantial compliance with the statute must be shown. In no other way could such right exist or be acquired. In other words, unless the statute granting preemptions to actual settlers on the public lands was substantially complied with by Ross, it cannot be said that the lands mentioned in the deed had been pre-empted at the time the railroad company’s grant attached, and unless such lands had been so
It is useless to' point out or enumerate the particulars in which the papers offered fail to show a compliance with the statute. They are entirely silent on each and every essential requisite. I do not think that an exact and technical compliance was necessary; but a substantial compliance, one that showed that the conditions existed which would enable the pre-emptor to acquire the land under the law, and that he had performed at least enough on his part to give him some inchoate right to the land. If the papers existed which showed a right in Boss they ought to have been produced, or if lost that fact could have been proven, and secondary evidence'of their contents could have been offered. But nothing of this kind was done or attempted. All we have is the copy of the form of pages 160 and 161 of the “registry of declaratory statements on file.” This I suppose to be a mere memorandum made by some clerk in the office, or by the register, of the fact that a declaratory statement had been filed. But why not produce the declaratory statement itself, or a copy of it.
It would surely be better evidence of the existence of this pre-emption claim than the memorandum offered. And for the like reasons, in the absence of record evidence of the existence of a valid pre-emption claim on the l.and described in the deed under the admissions contained in the record, the said land passed to the railroad company under their grant, and the court did not err in so declaring to the jury. The plaintiffs do not allege or claim that they were actually evicted or ousted by judicial process. Their contention is, that at the time the covenant sued on was made, there was a paramount title outstanding in the United States; that Karnstad had succeeded to that title, and that they have succeeded him. This, I think, under the authorities, they might do, if he had acquired a title better than plaintiffs’ title, but they must by their proof negative the existence of title in the defendants when they made the covenant. In addition to this, they must show that such outstanding paramount tide was asserted.
The judgment must therefore be affirmed.
Rehearing
Petition for rehearing.
[Riled July 28, 1888.]
The main question involved in this case is whether the appellants proved a breach of the covenant of title alleged in their complaint in the action. The covenant is a general warranty of title against the lawful claims of all persons. I used to suppose that such a covenant would not be regarded as broken without the covenantee having been evicted from the granted premises by a paramount title; but by some kind of logic which I fail to appreciate, the courts have held that there need be no actual eviction shown, and that where the outstanding title is proved to be in the government, it will be sufficient without proof of a constructive eviction even. There was no ouster of the appellants proved in this case, beyond an attempt upon the part of Karnstad to pre-empt the land; and it might reasonably be inferred from the evidence that the appellants encouraged him to do that. The United States may never claim the land, and if a recovery can be had upon such proof, the
If the respondents had been notified that Karnstad was attempting to pre-empt the land, they would have had an opportunity to contest his right to do so, and probably been able to defeat him in his efforts in that direction. The register and receiver would not have been likely to have permitted his filing to stand under the circumstances, and in view of the rulings which they had already made in regard to the status of the title to the land. The respondent S. O. Corson endeavored to enter the land as a homestead, and the land department upon a contest instituted by the Oregon and California R. R. Co., had decided that it belonged to the latter; thereupon said Corson purchased it from the company, and subsequently executed the deed to the appellants containing the covenant in question. Ross, who is alleged to have filed upon the land May 21, 1859, made no claim to it, and the company by assuming to convey it debarred itself from claiming lieu land in its stead.
In such a state of affairs, the land department, unless it is organized to make inconsistent rulings and to complicate titles, would have rejected Karnstad’s filing and confirmed the appellants’ ownership. I make these allusions not with a view of departing from established precedents, but by way of protests against such an invasion of the general rule upon the subject as will occasion injury. It might not be the wisest policy to require an eviction by legal process in all cases, though the maintenance of it to that extent would often prevent collusion. It may, perhaps, be safe enough to allow a recovery for the breach of such a covenant where the covenantee has given up the possession of the land to the claimant of the alleged paramount title, if the covenantee is required to establish by clear and unequivocal proof that such claimant was the absolute owner of it; but no such recovery should be permitted when the question is left in doubt. Hence, the appellants were not entitled to recover in the action
Said counsel in their petition for a rehearing concede that it may not have been the best evidence, but claim that it was introduced without objection, and was sufficient evidence of the fact, and they cite section 745 of the Code to show that entries made in public or other official books, etc., are primary evidence of the facts stated therein. That is the general rule as to entries in public books independently of the statute. Mere certified or office copies, however, from such books are not evidence, unless where the officer is authorized to give out or certify copies. (Part 2, n. 163, to p. 163, 3d ed., C. & H. notes to Phillips on Evidence.) But if we yield to counsel the full benefit of the proof which the entry furnishes, does it establish that Boss had pre-empted the land in question when the grant was made to the railroad company? Is such an entry evidence of any fact of which the officer has no personal knowledge, and is not required to determine from the statement contained in the entry? It seems to me not. It would doubtless under the rule referred to be evidence that Boss had filed a declaratory statement, to the effect that it was his intention to claim the tract of land as a preemption right. Under the act of Congress upon the subject, it would be proof that he had taken the preliminary step under the act, entitling him to purchase it in preference to others. The statement may have shown that Boss claimed to be a settler upon the land, and a qualified pre-emptor; but that would not prove such settlement or qualification, nor authorize the register to infer it. Those matters must be established when the final proof is made in the mode pointed out in the act.
'Such a statement is no evidence upon which the register and receiver are authorized to issue the final papers, giving the
The counsel appear to claim that because the entry in the book of the office of the register would prevent another person from taking steps to pre-empt the land, without instituting a proceeding to have Boss’ filing canceled, therefore the grant to the railroad did not affect it. The grant and an attempt upon the part of another person to pre-empt the land after Boss had filed on it stand upon a different footing. Congress is invested with full power to dispose of the public lands, and it may do so irrespective of any attempt by a party to pre-empt, or enter them as a homestead, unless a right actually vested and existed in favor of such party when the grant was made.
The bare filing of a declaratory statement to pre-empt those lands, unless the declarant were shown to be a qualified preemptor, and to have complied with the law upon the subject, would not prevail against such a grant. In this case the grant to the railroad company included the land in question: but if it were found to have been granted, sold, reserved, occupied by a homestead settler, pre-empted, or otherwise disposed of, then other lands were to be selected by the company in lieu thereof. Was the land shown to have been pre-empted prior to the grant? This question must be kept in view in determining the case, and it turns entirely upon the meaning of the term “ pre-empted ” as used in the grant. Boss did not complete his title to the land. His filing is shown to have been declared abandoned August 18, 1870, but at what time it was abandoned does not appear. It seems to me that it cannot reasonably be claimed that he pre-empted the land, or that he did more than to attempt to pre-empt it.
The grant does not provide that, “when any of said alternate sections or parts of sections shall be found to have been attempted to be pre-empted, other lands .... shall be selected,” etc., and unless an attempt to pre-empt and pre-empted are synonymous, the grant to the railroad company must prevail. I should be inclined to hold, however, that if Boss were shown to have possessed the requisite qualifications, and had complied with the
The petition for a rehearing should therefore be denied.
Rehearing
The plaintiffs have filed a petition for rehearing, in which they seem'to overlook the real question upon which our previous decision rested. The question contested arises upon the refusal of the court below to instruct the jury, at the plaintiff’s request, that said admissions of the parties, and said testimony as a matter of law, established the fact that the said land was not embraced in the grant to the Oregon Central R. R Co. by said act of Congress, and that the O. & C. It. R Co. acquired no interest in said lands, and that said deed from the O. & C. R R Co. to the plaintiffs passed no interest in said land to plaintiffs. The “admissions” referred to in this instruction were made upon the trial, and were to the effect that the O. & C. R R Co. succeeded to all the rights of the Oregon Central R R Co. to the land grant provided for in the Act of Congress of July, 1866, and that neither the said last-named company nor the said E. O. Corson ever had any title or interest in said property other than such as it, or he, acquired under said act of Congress and the amendments thereto.
It was further admitted that prior to the execution of said deed by defendants to plaintiffs, said E. O. Corson had purchased from said O. & C. R. E. Co. whatever rights it had to said land, and -had received its certificate therefor. That at the .time of the execution of said deed, said Corson assigned said certificate to the plaintiffs, and subsequently the said railroad
The court was required to declare that this testimony as a matter of law defeated that title. In refusing to do this we have held that the court did not err, and we adhere to that opinion. The papers offered had the effect claimed for them, or they did not. There is no room for any middle ground under the claim of secondary evidence. It must be remembered that the plaintiffs were bound to prove title out of the defendants at the time the defendants signed the deed, or fail in their suit. To do this it devolved upon them to prove that the land described was excepted out of the railroad grant in some one of the ways specified in the act. They attempted to do this by introducing this documentary evidence. To take it out of the grant, then, the land must have been pre-empted. How? By a compliance with, the law granting a pre-emption by a qualified settler.
In no other way can such right be acquired or have any existence; and to prove such acquisition something more is required than the naked entry upon the register. If such entry were made by the officer in that book without the filing of the antecedent papers showing compliance with the law, it would be a mere nullity, and would confer no right on any one, nor would such an entry prejudice the United States or their grantees. In sucli case the land' would not be pre-empted within the meaning of the statute, nor would any private right whatever have been acquired in the same. I fully concede that if it were shown that Boss filed the paper required by statute, he' would have acquired an inchoate right to the land, and whether he acted in good faith or not the case would have been within the principle of the cases cited; but in the absence of any showing whatever on that subject, the court cannot declare, as a matter of law, that the entry in the book has all the force and effect of an actual settlement on the land, and the filing of the preliminary papers.
It is not perceived how section 745 of the Code aids the
The rehearing must therefore be denied.