21 Colo. 127 | Colo. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the court.
It is admitted by the pleadings that in the application the insured in answer to the question, “ What is your title ? ” answered, “ Good.” And it is likewise admitted that the policy contained the following stipulation :
“ That if the interest of the insured in the said property or any part thereof now is or shall become any other or less than a perfect legal and equitable title and ownership free*134 from all liens whatever, except as stated in writing thereon, if the property be incumbered by a mortgage or otherwise, or if the buildings or either of them stand on land of which the assured has not a perfect title then this policy shall be void.”
The facts in reference to the title to the real estate upon which the insured buildings stood are as follows : Upon the 28th day of January, 1880, and prior thereto, the title was in the United States. Upon the date mentioned, Leonhardy located the same as the Leonhardy placer claim, and on the 19th of April, 1880, filed his application for patent for this claim, covering 149r40V acres. Advertisement of said application was duly made. It does not definitely appear at what time this advertisement expired, but it is certain that no adverse was filed during the time within which the law permits the same to be filed, or in fact at any other time.
On the 7th of February, 1882, one David N. Cook filed a protest against the issuance of a patent to 19Tf acres of the ground claimed by Leonhardy as a placer claim, alleging that he had filed upon the same as agricultural land; that it was agricultural and not mineral land. A hearing before the local officers upon this protest resulted in an order overruling it. The insured buildings were not situate upon any part of the 19^ acres involved in the Cook protest. Seven days thereafter, to-wit, on February 14, 1882, the receiver issued his final receipt to Clara P. M. Leonhardy for the surface area embraced in the Leonhardy placer claim of 14914U4(J acres. From the order overruling the protest filed by Cook an appeal was taken to the commissioner of the general land office. In the general land office it was discovered that the report of the deputy surveyor upon the character of the Leonhardy placer claim was not in compliance with the rules of the department, and it not appearing to the satisfaction of the commissioner that the lands were mineral lands, the entry was suspended and the matter referred to the register and receiver of the local land office for
The testimony taken upon this hearing before the register and receiver is very voluminous. An opinion was filed on the 4th of May, 1883, in which it was held that the preponderance of the testimony was in favor of the proposition that the ground in dispute was more valuable for mineral than for agricultural purposes. From this decision Cook appealed. When the case again reached the commissioner, he held that the evidence did not establish the mineral character of the land, reversed the decision of the register and receiver, and cancelled the Leonhardy entry. From this order an appeal was taken to the secretary of the interior, who in turn affirmed the decision of the commissioner. Upon a motion for-review of this latter decision before the honorable secretary, a written opinion was filed reviewing the entire transaction from its inception, affirming the previous decision under which the Leonhardy placer claim was cancelled.
The final order was made by the secretary of the interior on the 9th of January, 1889. Of this order Mrs. Leonhardy had notice, but it does not appear from the evidence that the Insurance Company was ever notified of the cancellation of the entry, or that the company had notice of the invalidity of the Leonhardy title at any time prior to the destruction of the insured buildings by fire, and demand for payment under the policy, although the buildings were destroyed by fire some time during the month of June, 1890, nearly eighteen months after the cancellation of the Leonhardy entry.
When a clause in a contract of insurance is susceptible of two constructions, that one will be adopted which is more, favorable to the assured; but when the language of the contract is clear and unambiguous, its effect cannot be destroyed by construction. The rights of both insurer and insured must be governed by the contract solemnly executed.
In this case the covenant in regard to title is clear and unambiguous. If the title fails, “then the policy shall be void.” This would seem to be a wise provision, necessary
In the present instance, the title failed by reason of an inherent infirmity, — the land not being mineral land, and consequently not open to entry under the mining laws of the United States. The character of this land was a question of fact, the determination of which is specially committed to the appropriate officers of the land department of the government, and their decision in all cases within their jurisdiction is final and conclusive, in the absence of fraud. Lindsey v. Hawes, 2 Black, 554; Lee v. Johnson, 116 U. S. 48; Vance v. Burbank, 101 U. S. 514.
It is claimed, however, in this case, that the land officers were acting without jurisdiction. This claim is based upon the assumption that a protestant has no right of appeal, and upon the further claim that by the protest filed only a small portion of the placer claim was involved, the buildings not being upon such portion.
The answer to this claim will be found in the statutes. By section 2329 of the Revised Statutes of the United States it is provided that a placer claim is “ subject to entry and patent under like circumstances and conditions and upon similar proceedings as are provided for vein or lode claims.” In section 2325, provision is made with reference to lode claims as follows:
“ If no adverse claim shall have been filed with the register and the receiver of the proper land office at the expira*137 tion of the sixty days of publication, it shall be assumed that the applicant is entitled to a patent, upon the payment to the proper officer of five dollars per acre, and that no adverse claim exists; and thereafter no objection from third parties to the issuance of a patent shall be heard, except it be shown that the applicant has failed to comply with the terms of this chapter.” The standing of the protestant seems to be regulated by the exception in the paragraph last quoted. The statement that he is not a party and therefore not entitled to appeal is immaterial to the real question at issue. The law does not knowingly permit a claimant to obtain patent under the mineral laws to agricultural lands, and when a patent is applied for it is quite unimportant as to how the attention of the land department may be called to the character of the land sought to be patented. That department certainly has the right to make necessary and reasonable rules governing’ the manner in which the character of the land shall be made to appear, both prima facie and ultimately, and if these rules are not complied with, or if it appears that the land is not such as can be entered under the particular claim advanced to it, as, for instance, where agricultural lands are applied for under the mining laws, it is not only the province, but the duty of the land department to deny the entry. It should be unnecessary to cite authorities in support of the foregoing, but as the contrary has been seriously urged in this case, we cite the following cases: Lindsey v. Hawes, supra; Pierce v. Frace, 26 Pac. Rep. 192 (Wash.); Harkness v. Underhill, 1 Black, 316; McCarthy v. Mann, 19 Wall. 20.
The law does not make the local land officers the tribunal of last resort upon these questions, although upon their decision the price of the land may be accepted and a receiver’s receipt issued. The commissioner of the general land office has a right, and it is made his duty, to examine the application and proofs in support thereof, before the issuance of a patent. In this case, upon such an examination, it was found that the proof failed to show that the lairds embraced in the Leouhardy placer claim were mineral lands, and a hearing
Without expressing any opinion upon the doctrine announced, we need only call attention to the fact that it is expressly predicated upon the assumption that the land was subject to entry under the homestead act. Here the reverse is true. The land is not subject to entry under the mining laws.
The title of Mrs. Leonhardy under her placer claim having been denied for the reason that the land was agricultural, and for this reason not subject to entry as mineral lands, avoided her title al initio, and the very condition was presented which the parties had agreed should forfeit the policy of insurance.
The buildings were not destroyed by fire until nearly eighteen months had expired after due notice had been given Mrs. Leonhardy of the failure of her title. It was certainly her duty to have promptly notified the company of this failure,
No effort was made in the court below to show that the company had any notice whatever of the failure of title to the realty. Had such notice been received, and no action taken by the company, perhaps it would be estopped from denying that the policy was in force, but such estoppel would depend upon facts and circumstances not now before the court.
In view of the possibility of a new trial, we shall notice two other assignments of error which have been urged upon this appeal. It is claimed that there was a prior insurance on the property which avoided the policy, but the evidence shows that such prior insurance as there had been upon the property had lapsed at the time of the issuance of the policy sued on. Before application was made for this policy, the mortgagees, acting for and on behalf of Mrs. Leonhardy, made inquiry at the office of the company which issued the prior insurance, and were informed that such insurance had been cancelled, and that that Company at the time had no, insurance upon the property. Under these circumstances, we agree with the district court that the policy sued upon was not forfeited by reason of other insurance.
So, also, with reference to the answer as to the amount of incumbrance upon the property, viz. that it was $800, instead of $5,000, it is clear that this part of the application was filled out by an agent of the defendant company, and that he was at the time correctly informed as to the amount of the incumbrance upon the property, and that the error in the application occurred as the result of his negligence and through no fault of the assured. It appearing that the agent of the company wrote down this answer in the printed form in the application, without the knowledge of the assured,
For the reasons stated the judgment must be reversed.
Reversed.