80 F. 433 | 8th Cir. | 1897
Lead Opinion
after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
The motion to remand the case to the state court appears to have been properly overruled. If the plaintiffs had contented themselves, as they might have done, with the simple averment that they were the owners of the land in controversy, and that the defendants had wrongfully entered upon said lands, and unlawfully removed coal therefrom, to the plaintiffs’ damage in a certain sum, it is doubtless true that the complaint would not have disclosed a federal question, and, under repeated decisions, the venue could not have been changed
Passing to the question whether the complaint states a cause of action, it is to be observed that it charges a continuous trespass committed by the defendants, which commenced January 8, 1885, when the land wás conveyed to the Durango Land & Coal Company, and ended on August 26, 1895. The alleged trespass covers a period of about eight months from and after December 31, 1894, when, as the
A further contention that the complaint, as a whole, is insufficient, because it fails to allege that the plaintiffs below were in possession of the land in controversy at the date of the alleged trespass, is, in our opinion, equally without merit. The action was brought in a state where the Code of Procedure has been adopted, and the various forms of action known to the common law have been abolished. The owner of property, whether in or out of possession, is entitled to recover for all injuries done to it by a wrongdoer. At common law, if he was in possession when the injury was done, he might obtain redress therefor in an action of trespass quare clausum fregit, whereas, if he was out of possession, he was compelled to bring an action on the case. These common-law forms of action having been abolished by the Code, a cause of action is sufficiently disclosed if the fact of ownership in the plaintiff, and the fact that an injury has been done to the land without the permission of the owner, are stated in ordinary and concise language. Fitzpatrick v. Gebhart, 7 Kan. 35, 42, 43. Tested by this rule, the complaint is sufficient.
This brings us to the question of chief interest and importance which arises in the case, namely, whether the complaint shows a right of recovery in the plaintiffs for the coal mined and removed from the land in controversy prior to December 31, 1894, when Evans entered the land, and paid the purchase money. It may be conceded-that a patent for -public land has, on several occasions, been held to take effect as of the date of the initial step taken by the patentee, under the laws of the United States, to obtain a title to the land. Landes v. Brant, 10 How. 348, 372, 373; Lynch v. Bernal, 9 Wall. 315, 325; St. Onge v. Day, 11 Colo. 368,18 Pac. 278; Shepley v. Cowan, 91 U. S. 330, 337; Cothrin v. Faber, 68 Cal. 39, 4 Pac. 940, and 8 Pac. 599; Chavez v. Chavez De Sanchez (N. M.) 32 Pac. 137, 145. Nevertheless, there appears to be no hard and fast rule giving a patent effect by relation as of a date anterior to the time when an entry is fully con
“A title by relation extends no further backwards than to the inception of the equitable right. * * * In other words, the United States does not part with its rights until it has actually received payment, and if, by mistake, inadvertence, or fraud, a certificate of location, which is equivalent to a receipt, is issued, when in fact no consideration has been received, do equitable title is passed thereby; and a conveyance of the legal title does not operate by relation back of the time when the actual consideration is paid.”
In that case the court accordingly declined to give a patent effect by relation as of the date when the initial step was taken to acquire a title to certain public land by the location of a land warrant, where the result of giving it such effect would have been to subject the land to the claims of the holder of a tax title, although he had paid taxes which were assessed when the land was apparently subject to taxation, and had afterwards expended money in improving it.
In the light of these principles the complaint must be examined. The plaintiffs found their right to recover for coal mined and removed prior to December 31, 1894, on the allegation that Evans filed a coal declaratory statement on October 2, 1880. The filing of this statement, assuming the facts stated therein to be true, gave Evans, in the language of the statute, “a preference right of entry,” nothing more and nothing less. Section 2348, Rev. St. U. S. Manifestly, it did not create such a complete equitable title as is acquired when public land is entered and paid for. To have made his equitable title complete, Evans should have proved his rights and paid for the land within one year after October 2, 1880. In default of so doing, the statute (section 2350, Rev. St. U. S.) declared that the land filed against should be subject to entry by “any other qualified applicant.” The complaint shows affirmatively that this was not done; that no payment was made by Evans until December 31, 1894; and that, after the year limited for making payment had expired, Byron McMaster was permitted by the officers of the land department to enter the land, on the theory, no doubt, that Evans’ preference right of entry had been forfeited. The only reason stated in the complaint why the entry of McMaster was eventually canceled by the officers of
We have not overlooked the averment contained in the complaint, to the effect that the declaratory statement filed by Evans was suspended by order of the commissioner of the general land office “until such time when the necessary and proper instructions should have been issued by the said commissioner”; but, in our judgment, that allegation is not sufficient to show that the failure of Evans, for a period of 12 years, to make his proof and payment, was due to the neglect of the officers of the land department in preparing the necessary instructions under which such steps could be taken. The com-, plaint does not show, by direct averment or necessary intendment, that from October 2, 1880, until June 27, 1892, the land department failed or refused to promulgate instructions under which Evans could have prosecuted his claim and perfected his entry; and, in the absence of such an averment, we will not presume that his rights were held in abeyance for such an unusual length of time, and that he was for 12 years deprived of the power to prove up his claim, and pay for the land, without fault of his own, and solely through the neglect of the officers of the land department. Inasmuch as the plaintiffs invoke the equitable doctrine of relation for the purpose of recovering the value of coal which the defendant company has taken out of the land in controversy, doubtless at great labor and expense, and during a series of years, they ought to show, by proper averments, why Evans remained silent and inactive for such a long period after his declaratory statément was filed, and they should also show that his apparent failure to comply with the law and to exercise due diligence was excusable. Without some further allegations showing how it happened that no action was taken by Evans towards perfecting his claim between October 2, 1880, and June 27, 1892, although for a greater part of that time the defendant company was in possession of the land, and mining coal thereon, the inference is clear that he must have been guilty of gross laches in prosecuting his claim, and in asserting his rights; and such laches on his part would seem to be a sufficient reason why his patent should not be given effect by relation as
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring). I concur in the result in this case, but I am unable to agree to the views expressed in the opinion relative to the application of the doctrine of relation. As I read the complaint in this action, it shows that a competent quasi-judicial tribunal decided, in a case of which it had jurisdiction, that the defendants in error and those under whom they claimed never had any right or title to the land from which they wrongfully removed the coal in controversy, and that the plaintiffs in error, or one of them, Roger C. Evans, had during all the time after 1880 a right to the possession and use, and a preference right to enter the land, which eventually matured into a title. It does not appear to me that there is any occasion to abrogate or evade the settled doctrine of relation, in order to take from those who, according to the unassailable judgment of the land department, had a right to this land and its products, and to give to those who never had any such right the coal which the latter wrongfully took from it, and which may have constituted its chief value.