33 Kan. 275 | Kan. | 1885
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action in the nature of ejectment, brought by the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fé Eailroad Company against Elizabeth Fearns, to recover the south half of the southeast quarter of section 21, in township 20 south, of range 8 east, in Chase county. Before the final trial of the case, Elizabeth Fearns died, and the action was revived against her heirs, Chaifies Fearns and Catherine Gleason. The final trial was by the court, without a jury, and the court, after delivering an opinion in the case, found generally in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants, and rendered judgment accordingly; and the defendants now bring the case to this court for review.
A preliminary question is raised in this court. It is claimed that amended pleadings were filed in the case; and that they have not been brought to this court, and therefore that this court cannot tell what the issues were in the court below, nor whether the court below committed any material error, or not.
. We do not think, however, that it sufficiently appears that amended pleadings were filed in the court below, or that the original pleadings were amended further than to substitute Charles Fearns and Catherine Gleason as the defendants, in the place of Elizabeth Fearns, the original defendant. This is as far as the blank amended pleadings found in the record show, and they certainly do not change the original issues in the case. Besides, the case was tried in the court below precisely as though the issues as made by the original pleadings were still the issues in the case. The most of the facts were agreed to, and nearly all the evidence was introduced without objection; and all these facts, and all this evidence, and the opinion of the court below, indicate that the parties on both
The facts of the case appear to be substantially as follows: In 1863, and prior and subsequent thereto, the land in controversy was a portion of the public domain of the United States, subject to homestead entry, preemption, etc. In the early part of January, 1868, Patrick Ryan settled upon and occupied the land in controversy, intending to procure the same under the homestead laws of the United States. Afterward, and on January 13,1868, he attempted to make a homestead entry of such land, at the United States land office at Salina, but in fact and through mistake made an entry of another piece of land. On June 9, 1869, Lucius Manly filed a declaratory statement for a preemption entry of the same land which Ryan had intended to enter, alleging a settlement thereon, on January 8, 1869. On June 30, 1869, the plaintiff railroad company definitely located its railroad opposite the land in controversy, and within less than ten miles thereof, and became entitled to the same under the congressional land grant to the state of Kansas for railroad purposes, of March 3, 1863, (12 U. S. Stat. at Large, 772,) provided the homestead and preemption entries of Ryan and Manly were both illegal and void; but the railroad company did not become entitled to such land if either of such entries was valid. Hence the principal question involved in this case is, whether either of such entries was valid, or not. On July 9, 1869, Ryan filed an affidavit in the
All the foregoing proceedings seem to have been ex parte, and at the instance of the railroad company only, and Mrs. Fearns was not a party thereto. ■ Afterward Mrs. Fearns ap
“This is an action of ejectment, to recover the possession of the south half of southeast quarter of section 21, township 20, range 8 east, in Chase county, Kansas. One Patrick Ryan made an entry on certain lands in Chase county on January 13, 1868, and intended to and supposed he had entered the land in controversy. He made improvements on the land in controversy, and it was not until another party filed upon the land, on June 9, 1869, that Ryan discovered that he had not filed upon the land in question. He at once began proceed
Now, was either Ryan’s homestead claim or Manly’s preemption claim valid and subsisting at the time of the railroad company’s definite location of its railroad? If either was valid, we would suppose that the railroad company obtained no rights by virtue of the aforesaid land grants or the definite location of its road, [A. T. & S. F. Rld. Co. v. Pracht, 30 Kas. 66, and cases there cited,) and that one or the other was valid (and we think Ryan’s) must follow, from the facts proved and agreed upon. And this without reference to the decision of the secretary of the interior, and even if, as a matter of law, the decision had been made the other way. We suppose that it is well settled that the findings of fact made by land officers in a contested case before them must afterward, when relief is sought in the courts, be considered as final and conclusive. (Tatro v. French, ante, p. 49, and cases there cited.) But when the land officers misconceive or misconstrue the law arising upon the facts of the case, their decision with respect to the law will not be considered as final or conclusive, and the courts may afterward grant any proper relief. (See authorities above cited, also Quinby v. Conlan, 104 U. S. 420.) And the decision of the land officers in an ex.parte proceeding will not, in any case, be considered as final or conclusive against the parties who were not before them.
This present case is unlike the case of the A. T. & S. F. Rld. Co. v. Mecklim, 23 Kas. 167. In that case no attempted entry of any kind was made prior to the definite location of the railroad company’s line of road, while in this case there was. In
The judgment of the court below will be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.