78 Cal. 158 | Cal. | 1889
Lead Opinion
— Ejectment. Judgment for plaintiffs, and appeal by defendant from judgment and order denying the motion for a new trial.
The plaintiffs claimed title under a patent from the United States of the land in suit to the Southern Pacific Railroad Company, dated the 4th of April, 1879, and a deed of the company, of date of the 20th of June, 1887, conveying this land to them.
The defendant is a duly qualified pre-emptor, having entered into and held possession of the land in suit since the 22d of April, 1886, and ever since that day has been a bona fide pre-emption settler thereon. On the tenth day of June, 1887, he did tender and deposit his declaratory statement, in due form, for the land, in the proper United States land-office, and tendered therewith all legal fees for filing the same. The register and receiver refused to file this statement, and on the same day defendant appealed from this refusal to the commissioner of the general land-office, at Washington, where the appeal is now pending.
The defendant pleaded that the land in controversy was never granted to the plaintiffs’ grantor, the Southern Pacific Railroad Company, because at the date of the location of the route of the Southern Pacific railroad, or about April 3, 1871, this land was within the exterior limits of the rancho San José, a valid Spanish or Mexi
■ By reason of the foregoing facts pleaded, defendant contends that the patent to the railroad company is void.
If the land in suit here was, when the grant to the railroad company, under the acts of Congress of July 27, 1866, and March 3, 1871, took effect, within the limits of the rancho San José, and the grant of this rancho was then sub judice, the patent under which plaintiffs herein claim was void from the beginning.
This conclusion is sustained by the judgments of this court in Carr v. Quigley, 57 Cal. 395, and McLaughlin v. Heid, 63 Cal. 210.
The ease first cited was decided January, 1881, and the last-cited case on February, 1883. The supreme court of the United States has recently (on the 21st of November, 1887), decided the same way in Doolan v. Carr, 125 U. S. 618.
The case just cited contains an elaborate discussion of the point. As a summing up of the discussion on the case last cited, the court, speaking by Miller, J., used this language: —
“ These Mexican claims were often described, or attempted to be described, by specific boundaries. They were often claims for a definite quantity of land within much larger out-boundaries, and they were frequently described by the name of a place or rancho. To the extent of the claim when the grant was for land with specific boundaries, or known by a particular name, and to the extent of the quantity claimed within out-boundaries containing a greater area, they are excluded from the grant to the railroad company. Indeed, this exclusion did not depend upon the validity of the claim asserted, or its final establishment, but upon the fact that there existed a claim of a right under a grant by the Mexican government, which was yet .undetermined, and*162 to which, therefore, the phrase ‘ public lands ’ could not attach, and which the statute did not include, although it might be found within the limits prescribed on each side of the road when located.”
As the record now stands, the finding on the issue whether the land sued for is within the exterior limits of the grant of the rancho San José is insufficient. In fact, it cannot be regarded as a finding on the issue at all.
The court finds on this point that on the third day of April, 1871, said land was within the claimed exterior limits of the rancho San José, a valid Mexican grant, as shown by the Thompson survey, mentioned in the next finding.
In the next finding it is declared that, in August, 1868, Thompson, a deputy United States surveyor, duly made a survey of the rancho under the instruction of the United States surveyor-general for the state of California, by which survey the land in controversy was included within the exterior limits of said rancho from 1868 until said survey was rejected,in 1875; that by a former survey, made by the United States deputy surveyor Hancock, said land was excluded from the exterior limits of said rancho, which survey, with slight modifications not affecting this point, was finally approved, and the rancho was afterward patented on the twentieth day of January, 1875.
The fact required to be found is, whether the land in controversy was included within the éxterior limits of the rancho San José, as originally granted by the Mexican government.
The court finds that this land was within the exterior limits of the rancho according to Thompson’s survey, and not within such'limits according to a prior survey of Hancock. We cannot see how this could be. The exterior limits of the rancho do not depend on any survey made of it. The land sued for may be within
That the Mexican grant for the rancho above named was sub judice long after the definite location of the railroad was made, is clearly found.
The grant being sub judice, as above found, on the 3d of April, 1871, if the land in suit was within the outside boundaries of the grant appearing in the granting documents as made by the Mexican government, then it was not granted by the act of Congress of the 27th of July, 1866, or of the 3d of March, 1871, to the Southern Pacific Railroad Company, and the patent to it was void, and nothing passed by the deed of the railroad company to the plaintiffs. (See cases above cited.)
It is argued that the defendant should not be allowed to attack the patent of the United States herein, because he is not in privity with the United States. The settlement by the defendant as a pre-emptor on the land in suit was, when made, in compliance with the laws of the United States. And when this land, being a part of the rancho San José as granted by the Mexican government, was excluded from it by a lawful survey, it became subject to settlement and pre-emption. Defendant was then lawfully in possession under the laws of the United States, and being then so in possession, he was in privity with the United States, the grantor in the patent. He entered and remained in possession under the grantor by its permission and authority, and the United States had no power to turn him out of possession, unless by
The views just above stated are sustained by the cases decided by this court above cited, and by the case cited decided by the supreme court of the United States.
The defendant argues further, that the fact that the land in suit is within the indemnity-limit grant of the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad Company can be availed of by him as a defense to this action.
This fact is urged as a defense, if the land in suit was not within the exterior limits of the rancho San José when the line of the Southern Pacific road was definitely located.
' It must be observed that if the land was within the exterior limits of the rancho above mentioned when the line of the Atlantic and Pacific railroad was definitely located, it was not granted to the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad Company. (See third section of the act of July 27, 1866, pp. 294, 265.)
If it was without the limits of the rancho San José, but within the indemnity limits above mentioned, then it does not appear that the defendant was in possession by authority of or by contract with the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad Company. He was then in possession as a mere trespasser or intruder, and could not set up such defense against the patent of the United States under which plaintiffs claim.
• For the error above pointed out, the judgment and order are reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to the court below to find, on the testimony already introduced, and such further testimony as may be introduced by either party, whether or not the land in suit was, on the third day of April, 1871, within the exterior boundaries of the rancho San José as granted by the Mexican government, and on such findings to enter judgment.
Ordered accordingly.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur. The court found that “the plaintiffs’ right of recovery of the land in controversy is based on a patent from, the United States to the Southern Pacific Railroad Company, dated April 4, 1879, and a deed of said land from said company to the plaintiffs dated January 20, 1887.”
Neither the company nor plaintiffs were ever in possession of the lands. Defendant was in the actual possession more than a year prior to plaintiffs’ purchase from the company, and has ever since been in exclusive possession, claiming the land under the pre-emption laws. Ten days prior to the date of plaintiffs’ purchase from the company, defendant tendered a declaratory statement and the usual fees to the officers of the United States land-office, and upon their refusal to accept the same, he immediately filed an appeal to the commissioner of the United States land-office. That appeal is still pending. These facts, under the decision of the supreme court of the United State! in Doolan v. Carr, supra, entitled the defendant to question the validity of the patent from the United States, and they exclude plaintiffs from the benefit of the act of Congress passed March 3, 1887, for the relief of bona fide purchasers. They are not bona fide purchasers. (14 Copp’s Landowner, 214-217.)
McFarland, J., concurred in the judgment.