196 F. 577 | E.D. Wash. | 1912
This is a suit in equity to quiet title. It appears^ from the bill of complaint-.that the complainant and one Annie Morss intermarried in the state of California in the year 1887; that on the 22d day of June, 1897, the complainant made settlement on the lands in coutroversey, under the homestead laws of the United States; that his homestead entry was fded for record on the 7th day of September, 1898; final proof made October 22, 1902; letters patent issued December 17, 1903; that the complainant's wife died September
Demurrers have been interposed to the bill of complaint on the grounds: First, that the bill does not state facts sufficient to entitle the complainant to the relief prayed for, or any relief whatever; second, that the complainant has an adequate remedy at law; and, third, that this court is without jurisdiction in the premises.
The complainant frankly concedes that he is foreclosed! by the decisions of the state court, but earnestly insists that these decisions fail to give full force and effect to the paramount laws of the United States. In support of this contention he relies largely on such cases as Hall v. Russell, 101 U. S. 503, 25 L. Ed. 829; Bernier v. Bernier, 147 U. S. 242, 13 Sup. Ct. 244, 37 L. Ed. 152; and McCune v. Essig, 199 U. S. 382, 26 Sup. Ct. 78, 50 L. Ed. 237.
In the Hall Case the court held that where a claimant under the Oregon Donation Act died before the completion of his four consecutive years of residence and cultivation, his heirs at law, including his widow, succeeded to his rights, under the provisions of section 8 of the Donation Act, and that they .took as grantees from the government, not as heirs of the deceased entryman; or, in the language of the court:
“Their title, to the land was to come, not from their deceased ancestors, but from the United States. The title, it is true, was granted to them by reason of the possessory rights of their ancestor, but these were rights which he could not transfer, and which passed to them under the statute without any act of his. On his death his heirs became qualified grantees.”
In the Bernier Case it was held that upon the death of an entry-man under the homestead law, before. perfecting his entry, leaving no widow, the right to complete the proof and acquire the patent passed to all his children equally, under section 2291 of the Revised Statutes (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 1390), and not to the minor children only, under the next succeeding section.
In the McCune Case it was held that, upon the death of the homesteader before final proof, the right to complete the proof and obtain the patent passed to the surviving widow, under the express provisions of' the homestead law, and not to his widow and child under the community property laws of the state. The reason upon which these decisions are founded is obvious. Under the donation and homestead laws the land) is granted to the entryman upon compliance with certain
Beyond this prohibition there is nothing in the laws of Congress indicating in the remotest way that lands acquired in the several states under the homestead1 and other settlement laws should be held by a different tenure or subject to different rules than other lands in private ownership. Congress has never concerned itself with purely local and domestic relations such as the interest a wife shall have, in property acquired by her husband either before or during the existence of the marital relation. The rule so often announced by the state Supreme Court has become a settled rule of property, and many titles depend upon its maintenance. To overrule these cases at this late day would, in the language of the court in Connecticut Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. New York, etc., R. Co., 25 Conn. 265, 65 Am. Dec. 571, “invite a system of litigation more portentous than our jurisprudence has yet known.” If these tilles are to be disturbed at all it should only he for the most cogent reasons and'by a court of last resort.
The demurrers are therefore sustained.