114 Minn. 398 | Minn. | 1911
Appeal from the judgment of the district court of the county of St. Louis in an action for the conversion of certain timber. The findings of fact hy the trial judge, as amended, were to the effect following:
The plaintiff, on July 12, 1902, duly made application to enter as a homestead the land described in the complaint, and in September next following he took possession thereof, erected a house, and made. other improvements thereon, claiming the exclusive right thereto under the homestead laws of the United States, with which he has at all times since first applying to enter the land fully complied. Through error on the part of the officers of the land department his first application was rejected. No notice thereof was ever served upon him, though the rules of the land office gave him certain preference rights and right of appeal until thirty days had expired after the service on him of such notice. October 3, 1907, he filed a new homestead entry on the same land. This entry was accepted, as was also his final proof thereon; and the final certificate of the United States land office was thereafter issued to him for the land. After the plaintiff so went into the possession of the land, Edward Randall, believing that he had a right so to do, entered thereon, and without right cut part of the standing timber thereon, and banked the products thereof on the land. Thereafter, and on April 1, 1903, the défendant, having purchased such products from Randall, entered upon the land so in the possession of the plaintiff and removed therefrom such timber and converted it to its own use. The value thereof was then the sum of $284.25, but when it was in the form of standing timber on the land the value was $118.25.
On November 21, 1908, the plaintiff commenced an action against the defendant and Edward Randall in the district court of the county of St. Louis. The complaint in that action alleged that tho
This action was commenced March 12, 1909, and brought to trial January 11, 1910. After the filing and acceptance of the plaintiff’s second application to enter the land, the Northern Pacific Railway Company moved for a review of the land department’s action in the case of the United States against it, which was an action before the secretary of the interior, wherein the Northern Pacific Railway Company claimed the land, and which had, prior to the plaintiff’s second application, been decided adversely to its claim. Its motion for a review was pending at the time of the dismissal of the former action and was still pending up to and until the tenth day of November, 1909, when it was denied, and the department thereafter issued to plaintiff its final certificate for said land.
As a conclusion of law from the facts found, the trial court directed judgment for the plaintiff for $118.25, with interest and costs. Thereupon the defendant made a motion for a new trial, which was denied, and judgment entered as directed, from Avhich the defendant appealed.
There is no settled case, hence the only question for our decision is whether the facts found by the trial court are sufficient to sustain the judgment.
It is true, however, that tbe legal title to tbe land was in tbe United States when tbe timber was cut, and also when tbe defendant carried it away; but it is clear, from tbe facts found by tbe trial court, that tbe plaintiff’s possession of tbe land, from September, 1902, down to tbe time when tbe patent therefor to him was ordered to be issued, and tbe granting of the final certificate, was continuous and exclusive under bis homestead entry. Tbe fact that tbe land department erroneously rejected bis first application, evidently for tbe reason that tbe land was claimed by tbe Northern Pacific Railway Company, did not affect.bis substantial rights and equities as against tbe defendant, a stranger to tbe title. He settled upon tbe land, claiming it as a homestead under bis first application, which was in fact and law valid, although by reason of tbe mistake of tbe land department be was obliged to make a second application. He did all that be could do to protect bis rights in tbe land and tbe growing-timber thereon, and they are not affected by tbe mistake of tbe land officers. Roy v. Duluth & I. R. Ry. Co., 69 Minn. 547, 72 N. W. 794.
Tbe timber was cut after the first application was made, and after
2. It is further urged that the plaintiff cannot recover, because he did not comply with G. S. 1894, §§ 6128-6130, providing that a settler on public lands may maintain an action for injuries to the-possession thereof, if his claim is marked out so that the boundaries may be easily traced and the extent of the claim known. This statute has no application to the facts of this action, for it is-not one for injury to the plaintiff’s possession of the realty. But,, were it such an action, the facts do not bring the case within the-statute cited; for the plaintiff entered upon surveyed lands, and the-boundaries thereof were presumably marked by government posts- and marks. The original of the statute is R. S. 1851, c. 88, which, was enacted at a time when the greater part of the public lands of the territory was unsurveyed, and settlers were accustomed to* stake out their claims on unsurveyed lands and post notice thereof. The statute was passed to protect the rights of squatters on the public-lands and limit their claims. The reason for the statute ceased years-ago, and it was superseded by R. L. 1905, § 4453. Again, neither the pleadings nor the findings of fact present any such issue. The-only reference in the record to the question is in the memorandum, of the trial judge, which is not made part of his findings.
3. The findings of fact do not, as defendant claims, show an election of inconsistent remedies. If the first action against the defendant and Randall is to be construed as an action for a conversion of the same timber which is the subject-matter of this action against, the defendant alone, the remedies were not inconsistent, and the-first action having been dismissed before the second one was tried, it was not a bar to the further prosecution of the second one. On-
4. The last contention of the defendant is that the action is barred by the statiite of limitations. The findings of fact show that the defendant converted the timber on April 1, 1903. The action was brought March 12, 1909. The fact that the patent was not issued until November 10, 1909, does not affect the question.
Judgment affirmed. .