44 Fla. 771 | Fla. | 1902
This cause was. referred by the court to the late Supreme Court Commission for investigation, who reported that the judgment ought to be affirmed. In stating the principles of law controlling the main questions involved, we do so in the language of the opinion prepared by the commission, which we adopt as our own.
This was an action of ejectment instituted in the Circuit Court of Nassau county by the plaintiff in error against the defendant in error to recover possession of lots one and two of section fourteen, township three, north range twenty-eight, east, alleged to contain two hundred and sixty-seven acres of land, more or less, situated on Amelia island in Nassau county, to which plaintiff claimed title. Defendant pleaded “not guilty,” and, in pursuance of a stipulation entered into by the parties, ‘the case was tried by the court without a jury, whereupon
Plaintiff sought to deduce title to lot one under the act of Congress of September 28th, 1850, granting swamp and overflowed lands within the limits of the State for certain purposes, the selection of this lot thereunder, December 17th, 1851, and the approval thereof to the State by the Secretary of the Interior on January 25th, 1853. Lot -two was claimed under a patent to David L. Yulee, issued on September 5th, 1853, based upon a certificate of entry from the St. Augustine land office dated August 4th, 1851, which entry was based upon certificate No. 2, issued April 15th, 1851, in the matter of the grant to Fernando de la Maza Arrendondo. Plaintiff also introduced evidence seeking to establish a Spanish grant, including, it is claimed, nearly alt of both lots, to one Don Juan McClure in 1813; and it undertook, by various conveyances introduced in evidence, to connect itself with these original sources o.f title.
Defendant introduced in evidence a cex-tified copy from the General Land Office of an order of the President of the United States, dated Febi'hary 9th, 1842, directing the Commissioner of the General Land Office to cause reservations'to be made for military purposes of the-following lands among others: “At the north point óf Amelia island, Florida; fractional section eight of township three, north, range twenty-nine east, and fractional section eleven, and lots numbers one and two of fractional section fourteen of township three, north of range twenty-eight east:” and also a certified copy from that office of an order from the Secretary of War to the Commissioner of the. General Land Office, dated March 23, 1849, directing ihat so much of the several tracts of land des
It is an elementary rule in actions of ejectment that the plaintiff must recover on the strength of his own ¡title. If- it appeared, therefore, from any evidence, properly admitted, on the part of the defendant thát the plaintiff had no title to the premises which it sought to Recover, the judgment of the court below was right and' ought to he affirmed, even though the court may have erred in other respects, as such'errors , if any were committed, could not he prejudicial to the • plaintiff. In this view the only Puling on the admission of evidence that ■ . tye find it necessary to consider ■ Is that complained rtf under the first assignment ■ of error, relating to the; admission in evidence of the certified copy of the, order of the President of the United States, dated February 9th, 1842, purporting to set apart the .premises claimed, as a part of a military reservation on the-north end of Amelia island. Many objections were urged in fhe court below to the admissibility of this document, but in this court the objections are confined to the following: 1st. That nearly all of lots one and two were embraced in the Spanish grant to
2nd. That the order was subsequently revoked by the order of the Secretary of War of 1849. This question is considered in another connection, and determined adversely to the contention of plaintiff in error.
3rd. That the President could not by mere order, without authority of an act of Congress, reserve land for military pxirposes.
It. is well settled that the President of the United States, by executive order, could reserve a part of the public domain for a specific lawful purpose, such as a military reservation; Grisar v. McDowell, 6 Wall. 363; United States v. Payne, 8 Fed. Rep. 883; Apis v. United States, 88 Fed. Rep. 931, text 940; Onderdonk v. San Francisco, 75 Cal. 534, text 538, 17 Pac. Rep. 678; Nevada Ditch Co. v. Bennett, 30 Oregon, 59, text, 103, 45 Pac. Rep. 472. See, also, Johnson v. Drew, 171 U. S. 93. Lands thus reserved were effectually segregated from the public dorixain and passed beyond the control of . the General Land Office as a part thereof,'unless it n acquired jurisdiction thereover in some lawful manner As to such iands the General Land Office was wholly without jurisdiction, and any action taken there, whether resulting in the issuance of a patent, or the certification of such lands to the State as swamp find overflowed lands, ha<b ,no binding force-or effect whatever, but was subject'to attack whenever and wherever it should be asserted as tlie basis of a title. Burfenning v. Chicago, St. Paul, M. & O. Ry. Co. 163 U. S. 321; Lake Superior Ship Canal Ry. Co. v. Cunningham, 155 U. S. 354; Doolan v. Carr, 125 U. S. 618, 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1228; Wilcox v. Jackson, 13 Pet. 498;
The only other question we deem it necessary to consider is presented by the fifty-eighth assignment of error, asserting that the finding and judgment in favor of defendant'were not supported by, but were contrary to, the evidence. There was a motion for a new trial embracing this among other grounds, and assignments of error are also based upon the exception taken to the ruling' upon that motion. We sháll consider this in two aspects:' First, with reference to the patent and certh' fixation referred to' above as a basis of title in plaintiff,' and, second, with reference to the Spanish grant which is also relied on by it.
It having been shown that the property sued for was embraced in'a military reservation set. apart by the President in 1842, it is clear that neither the patent issued to Voice nor the approval of the State’s selection, both of which occurred in 1853, could serve as the basis for a claim of title on the part of plaintiff in error, unless the premises had in the interval been restored to the jurisdic
There only remains as a basis for title in the plaintiff in error the alleged Spanish grant to Don Juan McClure, claimed to have been made in 1813, and that, we think is equally unavailing. There may be grave doubt. whether or not the alleged grant was in fact a complete and perfect grant of title. It does not possess the usual attri
We have not felt it incumbent upon us to consider other questions which might arise if plaintiff in error had shown a valid inception of title. It fails to do so, and that is the broadest ground upon which to rest an affirmance of the judgment.
The judgment is affirmed.