46 F. 219 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri | 1891
For the information of counsel it will be sufficient to say that the court dismisses the bill of complaint on the ground of laches. The bill charges in effect, that Dunklin county holds the legal title to about 17,000 acres of swamp land, situate in that county, in trust for the complainant, the land having been entered, as it is claimed, and paid for, by parties under whom complainant derives title, some time in the year 1857. The purpose of the proceeding is to obtain a transfer of the legal title, on the ground that complainant has succeeded to all the rights of those who originally entered the lands, and is now the equitable owner of the same, and entitled to a conveyance of the legal title. It will be seen, therefore, that the title which plaintiff asserts had its origin more than 30 years ago, and nothing appears to have stood in the way of an assertion of that title by the plaintiff, or by those under whom he claims,
The case made by the evidence presents certain features that were not disclosed by the bill when it was before the court on demurrer. Vide, 38 Fed. Rep. 567. It is obvious, from what has been said, that all the facts appear in evidence which are requisite to support the plea of laches. The complainant and those under whom he claims have acquiesced for years in an open and notorious denial by the county of the equitable title on which the complainant relies. In the mean time numerous persons, who are not parties to this suit, have acquired an interest in the lands described in the bill, whose titles would be clouded by a decree in favor of the complainant; and, in the third place, it appears that, by
There are some other defenses which it is unnecessary to notice. The bill must be dismissed, for the reason stated.