after stating the case, delivered the opinion' of the court.
An inspection of this record discloses that the bill of exceptions was not settled, allowed and signed by the judge who tried the case, but by his successor in office, several months after the trial. It is settled that allowing and signing a bill of exceptions is a judicial act, which can only be performed by the judge who sat at the trial. What took place at the trial, and is a proper subject of exception, can only be judicially known by the judge who has acted in that capacity. Such knowledge cannot be brought to a judge who did not participate in the trial or to a judge who has succeeded to a judge who did, by what purports to be a bill-of exceptions,' but which has not been signed and allowed by the trial judge.-
Section 953 of- the Revised Statutes is as follows: “ A bill *285 of exceptions allowed in any cause shall be deemed sufficiently authenticated if signed by the judge of the court in which the cause was tried, or by the presiding judge thereof, if more than one judge sat at the trial of the cause, without any seal of court or judge being annexed thereto.”
We understand this enactment to mean that no bill of exceptions can be deemed sufficiently authenticated unless signed by the judge who sat at the trial, or by the presiding judge if more than one sat.
In
Mussina
v.
Cavazos,
Boroscale
v. Bosworth, a case reported in
The rationale of these cases evidently was that the court of errors could not consider a bill of exceptions that had not been signed by the judge who tried the case, and that such failure or omission could not be supplied by agreement of the parties, but that the only remedy was to be found in a motion for a new trial.
Those cases were cited with approval by this court in
Hume
v. Bowie,
In
Young
v.
Martin,
In
Origet
v.
United
States,
In
State
v.
Weiskittle,
It certainly cannot be contended that if the trial judge is able officially to sign the bill of exceptions, it would be competent for the counsel to dispense with his action, and rely upon an agreed statement of the facts and law of the case as tried. Nor can they agree that another than the trial judge may perform his functions in that regard. In Lynde v. Craney, 95 Michigan, 109, it was said that the practice of stipulating a bill of exceptions without the sanction of the judge cannot be commended ; and if such fact be brought to the attention of the court before the argument of the case, the appeal will be dismissed.
In Coburn v. Murray, 2 Maine, 336, it was held that a bill unauthenticated by the trial judge cannot be given validity by consent of counsel.
*288 We are referred to no decision of this court on the precise question whether counsel can stipulate the correctness of a bill of exceptions not signed by the trial judge. But we think that on principle this cannot be done, and we regard the cases just cited as sound statements of the law.
Accordingly, our conclusion is that the errors of the trial court alleged in the bill of exception's, unauthenticated by the signature of the judge who sat at the trial, cannot be considered by us.
The defendant’s demurrer to the complaint, on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to cpnstitute a cause of action, having been overruled, and the defendant not having elected to stand on his demurrer, but having availed himself of the leave of the court to file an answer, and his several objections to the admission of evidence at the trial not having been brought before us by a proper bill of exceptions, all that is left, for us to consider is whether, on the facts found by the court below, the plaintiff was entitled to judgment.
Those facts, briefly stated, were that the plaintiff and his grantors on April 19, 1881, entered into actual possession of the land in dispute; put substantial improvements thereon; and continued in possession, under claim of right, and adversely against the defendant and all others, till on April 29,1891, the defendant, without right or title so to do, entered upon the said land, and ejected the plaintiff therefrom; that the plaintiff was the owner of an undivided one half part or interest of, in and to said land in the complaint described, and that the defendant wrongfully withheld the sáme from him.
From the findings the court drqw the conclusions of law that the plaintiff was entitled to recover possession of the said land in dispute, being the undivided one half part or interest of, in and to said lot No. 4, in said block No. 4, in said town of Juneau, against said defendant and all persons claiming under him, and to recover a judgment for said possession and for costs.
The appellant now contends that, under section 318 of Hill’s Oregon Code, (which by the act of May 17,1884 — 23 Stat. 84 — was made applicable to Alaska, and which is in the follow *289 ing terms: “ The plaintiff in his complaint shall set forth the nature of his estate in the property, whether it be in fee, for life, or for a term of years, and for whose life or the duration of such term, and that he is entitled to the possession thereof, and that the defendant wrongfully withholds the same from him, to his damage such sum as may be therein claimed,”) the plaintiff failed to plead the nature of his estate in the property, whether it be in fee, for life or for a term of years.
Without stopping to consider whether the defendant could be heard to again raise a question that had been decided against him on his demurrer to the complaint, we think that the objection is not a sound one. The plaintiff alleged, and the court has found, that for more than nine years prior to April 29,1891, he and his grantors were the owners by right of prior occupancy and actual possession of the land in dispute.
In the condition of things in Alaska under the act of May 17, 1884, c. 53, 23 Stat. 24, providing a civil government for Alaska, and under the twelfth section of the act of March 3, 1891, c. 561, 26 Stat. 1094, 1100, the only titles that could be .held were those arising by- reason of possession and continued possession, which might ultimately ripen into a fee simple title under letters patent issued to such prior claimant when Congress might so provide by extending the general land laws or otherwise.
Davenport
v. Lamb,
In
Bennett
v.
Harkrader,
This principle applies more strongly to the present case, in which the real nature of the plaintiff’s estate in the property is truly alleged as ownership by right of prior occupancy and actual possession, and was so found to be by the trial court.
The same view of the nature of a title to a lot in a townsite in Alaska, under these acts of Congress, was expressed by the District Court of the United States for the District of Alaska, in the case of Carroll v. Price, 81 Fed. Rep. 137. As, then, the only kind of estate that could be held was that of possession, it was sufficient for the plaintiff to allege that his was of that nature.
It is next contended on behalf of the plaintiff in error that, even if the complaint should be held otherwise sufficient, yet the action must fail because coming within section 3524, Hill’s Oregon Code, which is as follows: “ In an action to recover the possession of any land, tenement or other real property, where the entry is forcible, or where the possession is unlawfully held by force, the merits of the title shall not be inquired into; and three years’ quiet possession of the premises immediately preceding the commencement of such action by the party in possession, or those under whom he holds, may be pleaded in bar thereof, unless the estate of such party is ended.”
It is argued that, as the complaint was filed in the court below May 25, 1896, more than five years from the day of entry alleged in the complaint, and as the defendant pleaded in bar of the action the three years’ quiet possession of the premises immediately preceding its commencement, the defendant is entitled to a judgment of reversal.
If this were indeed an action in forcible entry and detainer, and as the complaint shows on its face that the defendant’s possession was longer than three years prior to the commence *291 ment of the action, then the defendant was entitled to have bad his demurrer sustained. But he did not stand on his demurrer, but availed himself of the court’s leave to answer; and hence it might well be questioned whether it was competent for him to again raise in his answer a question already ruled against him under his demurrer.
But this it is unnecessary to consider, because it is altogether clear that, on the complaint and the facts found, this was not an action for a forcible entry and detainer, under the section of the Oregon Code pleaded by the defendant, but was an action of ejectment to which the statute pleaded did not apply.
The judgment of the District Court of the United States for the District of Alaska is
Affirmed.
