11 Colo. 68 | Colo. | 1887
In construing the foregoing statutes this court has held that the execution and .delivery of a deed to a portion of the Denver town-site, by a probate judge, acting under and by virtue of these statutes, was anal
The doctrine is established by numerous decisions of the supreme court of the United States that, should the officers of the land department, in issuing a patent, err in respect to their duty or as to questions of fact or law, or even act from corrupt motives, the patent cannot be collaterally attacked for such cause, if, upon any state of facts, the patent might have lawfully issued; and that against collateral attack it will be presumed the necessary facts existed. Parties aggrieved by such error or fraud must resort to a direct proceeding to set aside the patent. Smelting Co. v. Kemp, 104 U. S. 636; Johnson v. Towsley, 13 Wall. 72-83; Moffatt v. United States, 112 U. S. 34; 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 10.
It is held in Field v. Seabury, 19 How. 323-333, that when a patent has issued without any provisions-incorporated for inquiring into its fairness as between grantor and grantee or between third parties, a third party cannot raise, in ejectment, the question of fraud as between the grantor and grantee, and thus look beyond the patent.
These exceptions require explanation. In a contest between two patentees, concerning the same tract of land, where the patents were issued by the land department of the government under the general land laws thereof, and the land in dispute was subject to entry and sale, the exception only applies to cases arising under certain state statutes which authorize such an inquiry into the prior equities in an action at law. It is not a general exception. The exception also applies in the earlier patent issued without jurisdiction, as if the land was not then the property of the United States, or was not open to entry and sale. Another exception, and the one upon which the most of the cases cited by the appellant are based, relates to patents issued by the government for lands in California, under the treaty of 1816' with Mexico, and the congressional act of 1851, passed in aid thereof. This exception will be explained hereafter. As to the second class of exceptions, also arising under special statutes, the rule announced in the above-mentioned case was, if the patent is silent on the subject it is competent to show the initiatory steps were not taken at all. The rule contended for under this third proposition is that the filing upon a lot by a claimant, made in the office of the probate judge, in pursuance of
The patent in the above case purported to have been made by virtue of certain warrants founded on entries. The plaintiff offered to prove that these entries were never made and that the warrants wmre forgeries. This evidence was excluded at the trial by the district court of the United States, but held to have been admissible by the supreme court on the principle announced in both this and the previous case, that the object of the testimony was to show that the state had no title to the thing
We are of opinion that the adjudications of the state and federal courts, upon patents issued by the United States for lands in California claimed under Mexican and Spanish grants, do not furnish a correct rule for the interpretation of a deed to -a parcel of land in the Denver town-site, executed by a probate judge, under and by virtue of the acts of congress and of the territorial legislature relating to that subject.. The statement in the
It is seen from these recitals that the deed is xxeither void upon its face nor silent as to the authority of the officer to execute it. They are sufficiexit, under the pxinciples annouxiced, and the authorities cited in support thereof, to raise the presumption, in an action of this character, that the necessary initiatory steps were taken in conformity with the law*.
Respecting the error assigned as to the form of the judgment, the irregularity complained of is in no manner prejudicial to the appellant.
Affirmed.