206 F. 51 | 5th Cir. | 1913
(after stating the facts as above). The claim asserted by the plaintiff to the timber is that of a purchaser from a homestead entrywoman holding a final certificate, which certificate, subsequent to the purchase, was canceled. The claim and possession of the defendant are based on the allowance by the Land Department of his application to enter the land as a homestead, and an original homestead entry certificate issued to him after the cancellation of the entry and final certificate of the plaintiff’s vendor. The legal title to the land remains in the government, no patent having ever been issued. The plaintiff contends that it was entitled to the relief prayed for in the bill, and granted by the decree, because: (1) Susie L. Well-born, by reason of the issuance of the final certificate to her, was the owner of the land, and had the right to sell and convey it, and the right to sell and convey the timber, and that, by the conveyance to the plaintiff, the plaintiff now has the right to cut and remove the same; (2) that the plaintiff, having paid her $2,000 for the timber, relying on her right, as shown by the final certificate, to sell the same, and having no knowledge of any fraud on her part, or defect in her claim, is entitled to the protection of the; court as an innocent pur-
The bill shows that James Moser reported to the Commissioner of the General Land Office that Susie L. Wellborn had never resided' upon the land. The Commissioner directed a special agent to investigate the entry. Another contestant was permitted to intervene in the same case.: Notice was given to Susie L. Wellborn, and her vendee —thé plaintiff here — -also became a party to the contest. Evidence was offered by both parties. On- the trial the entry and certificate were, canceled, and on appeal, finally to the Secretary of the Interior, the cancellation was affirmed. The Land Department had jurisdiction of the controversy, and the bill affirmatively shows that it was not acting in an arbitrary manner. This decision deprived the entrywoman of all interest in -the land, and necessarily deprived her vendee of any apparent, interest in the timber. The legal title remaining in the government, the controversy was necessarily within the jurisdiction, of the Land Dépártment, and, its action not being illegal or arbitrary, the District Court could not have interfered in behalf of the entrywoman/ for so long as the legal title remained in the government the Land Department was the proper tribunal to settle the controversy. Cosmos Co. v. Gray Eagle Co., 190 U. S. 301, 23 Sup. Ct. 692, 47 L. Ed. 1064. It is clear, therefore, that if the controversy here was between Susie L. Wellborn, the entrywoman, and the defendant, who entered the homestead after the cancellation, the legal title still 'remaining in the government, the District Court could not properly interfere to decide which of the two entries was valid. It certainly cofild not divest the title out of the government, cancel in effect the second entry, and deprive the Land Department of its statutory jurisdiction to settle such controversies. 10 Ency. of U. S. Sup. Ct. Reps. 265, 266.
We cannot see how the plaintiff, as the vendee- of Susie L. Well-born, can have any better title than she had. It must be remembered that throughout these transactions the government had, and now has, the legal title to the land as matter of law, and that the plaintiff, purchasing from one who holds, not a patent, but a final certificate, was chargeable with notice that the legal title was in the government, and that the certificate, for cause, was subject to cancellation.
If the legal title to land is in A., and he contracts to convey it to B., on the payment of a certain sum by a fixed date, retaining the right to cancel the trade for nonpayment, and B., holding such contract, sells the timber on the land to C., who is chargeable with notice of the title, and B., when the time arrives, fails to pay A. for the land, and A., as authorized by the terms oí his contract, cancels the trade with B., C. has no equitable or legal claim on the timber as against A. or his subsequent vendee. C., having bought the land from a holder of a mere equity, chargeable with notice that another has the legal title, has no remedy except a suit for breach of contract against his immediate vendor.
The same rule, we think, should apply here. The holder of the final certificate had a claim prima facie entitling her to title, but subject to cancellation by the government for cause. She sells the timber on the land to one charged with notice of the character of her claim. The certificate is canceled. The buyer, we think, has no claim on the timber, because he has no better title than his vendor. He has no claim on the government or its subsequent patentee. lie has no contract with either. His remedy is an action against his vendor. It is de - cided in Hawley v. Diller, 178 U. S. 476, 20 Sup. Ct. 986, 44 L. Ed. 1157, that an entryman holding a final certificate acquires only an equity, and that a purchaser from him, the entry being subsequently canceled, cannot be regarded as a bona fide purchaser. This case is ■in direct conflict with the plaintiff's contention; but it is argued by counsel that a later case, United States v. Detroit Lumber Co., 200 U. S. 321, 26 Sup. Ct. 282, 50 L. Ed. 499, establishes the contrary rule. In a decision handed down to-day, this court has expressed the opinion that there is no conflict between the two cases, and that a purchaser from an entryman whose entry and certificate are subsequently canceled cannot defend as a bona fide purchaser, although the rule is different, as held in the latter case, where the entry and certificate are not canceled, but confirmed by a patent. United States v. Kennedy, 206 Fed. 47.
“That, after the lapse of two years from the date of the issuance of the receiver’s receipt, upon the final entry of any tract of land under the homestead, timber culture, desert land, or pre-emption laws, or under this act, and when there shall be no pending contest or protest against the validity of such entry, the entryman shall be entitled to a patent conveying the land by him entered, and the same shall be issued to him.”
“The directing of an investigation by a government special agent within two years from the time final proof'had been submitted and certificate issued was sufficient to bar the operation of the proviso.”
Especially is such direction sufficient when it is made because of a protest filed within the two years, as is shown by the averments of the bill, and also by the opinion of the Secretary of the Interior. If the bill, a condensed statement of which we have given, did not make it plain that a contest was filed within the two years and was pending till it led to the cancellation of the entry, the decision of the Land Department that such was the case would not be subject to review in. this action on the averments of the bill. The contents of the “protest” or “contest” and the letter directing an investigation are not before us.
Whether or not the paper filed by Mosér and-the order made thereon was a contest or protest was a question for the decision of the Land'Department, a special tribunal on which Congress had conferred jurisdiction to decide such questions, and we are of the opinion that the District Court would be without jurisdiction to interfere with or reverse its decision of that question, on the averments of the bill; it failing to show the contents of the protest or to allege arbitrary or illegal action by the special tribunal. See Fisher, etc., v. United States ex rel. Grand Rapids Timber Company (M-.s. opinion of the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia, November 6, 1911).
No view that can be taken of this case would give the plaintiff any right to the timber, the subject of the suit, unless the Land Depart-^ ment should cancel the homestead entry of the defendant, and reinstate that of Susie L. Wellborn, and issue to her a patent. She is not a party to this litigation, and there is nothing in the record to show that she is asserting, or will ever assert, any claim to the land, or that she could assert such claim successfully.
We are unable to see that the averments of the bill entitle the plaintiff to any relief in the District Court.
The decree is reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to sustain the demurrer.