44 Cal. 371 | Cal. | 1872
This is an action of ejectment. The defendants answered and also filed a cross-complaint.
The equity set up in the cross-complaint is based on these facts: In 1853 Jones & Belden located school land warrants on these and other lands, entered into possession thereof, and made improvements thereon; and in 1858 they sold and con
The location of the school land warrants in 1853, prior to a survey of the land, was void. The authorities on this point are too numerous to require citation. The fact that both the plaintiff and the defendants purchased distinct parcels from the same party, and by virtue thereof acquired the possession of tlieir respective parcels, creates no relation of trust or confidence between them; nor will it render a subsequent purchase by one party of both parcels fraudulent as to the other party, nor make such subsequent purchase inure, in equity, to the benefit of the other party. The facts stated in the cross-complaint show neither that the acquisition of the title by the plaintiff" from the United States was fraudulent in a legal sense, nor that a trust was thereby created in favor of the defendants.
Had it been alleged that between the defendants, or those under whom they claim, and the plaintiff, the relation existed
This leaves for consideration only the questions relating to the legal title, and the incidental question in respect to the improvements on the two-acre lot, claimed by the defendants. In considering the cross-complaint, we have accepted as true all its allegations, but the agreed statement of facts and the finding have not been considered in connection with the cross-complaint, for they cannot be regarded as adding thereto any further fact. The cross-complaint must fall unless it is sustainable on its own allegations of fact.
The patent issued by the United States to the plaintiff is prima facie valid, and it conveyed the title, unless the defendants acquired the title by virtue of the location of the school land warrants, and by the aid of the Act of Congress of July 23d, 1866, to quiet land titles in California, or unless the patent was issued without authority of law, and therefore void. The Act of 1866 (14 U. S. Stats. 218) confirms certain invalid selections of land, theretofore made under the authority of the State; or, more properly speaking, the means are thereby provided by which the selections may be confirmed and the title to the lands acquired. The selection, in this case, comes under the provisions of the third section of the Act, as the lands were not surveyed at the
The sole ground of attack on the patent, is that as the plaintiff’s declaratory statement was filed before the filing with the Register of the township plat, it is a mere nullity; and that a patent issued without a declaratory statement having been duly filed, is unauthorized and void. The first branch of the proposition need not be considered. The authorities are not agreed upon it; but it may be accepted as sound for the purposes of this case. Ro authority is cited by the defendants which supports the second branch of the proposition, and none has come to our notice. It is not true that declaratory statements are in all cases required to be filed by preemptioners, without regard to the class to which the lands desired to be purchased, belong. The Act of March 27th, 1854, for the relief of settlers on lands reserved for railroad purposes, and the rules and regulations prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior, in pursuance of that Act, dispense with the declaratory statement. (See 10
The Act of March 30th, 1868 (Stats. 1867-8, p. 708), provides that an inhabitant of this State, who has put improvements upon any lands of the United States or this State, or has the right of possession of such improvements, may remove the same within six months after the lands shall have become the private property of any person; and declares that houses, barns, sheds, outhouses, buildings, fences, orchards, and vineyards shall be held to be improvements within the meaning of the Act. This enactment raises the question whether this State has authority to provide, that a patent issued in accordance with the Acts of Congress, upon a sale of the public lands of the United States, shall not convey absolutely to the purchaser, all that it purports to convey—all the real estate within the boundaries of the lands described in the patent. If houses, fences, orchards, and vineyards on the lands of the United States are real estate, they are as much a part of the freehold as the soil itself; and the statute, by giving to them other names, does not change their character or sever them from the land. They being a part of the freehold, a patent issued in the usual form by the United States, would convey them to the purchaser of the land, and the State cannot prevent them from vesting absolutely in the purchaser by virtue of the patent,
Judgment affirmed.