19 Nev. 255 | Nev. | 1886
By the Court,
The parties hereto were tenants in common of the tract of land in controversy. At the time plaintiffs acquired their interest, defendant was residing upon the premises. In consideration of his occupancy, and of the use- of certain farming implements and horses owned by the parties as tenants in common, and of other matters immaterial here, defendant agreed to cultivate the land and return plaintiffs one fourth of the crop of grain grown thereon. Under this agreement defendant occupied and cultivated the land for two- seasons, and engaged to do so for a third; but during the third season, and on or about the thirty-first day of July, 1882, plaintiffs learned from defendant, for the first time, that his- cultivation of the land was not for their use or benefit, as during the preceding seasons, and that he had, on the twenty-first day of January preceding, preferred a claim to the land under the homestead laws of the United States. Upon these facts plaintiffs brought the present action of ejectment. Defense is made upon the homestead claim.
The case presents but a single point: Was the land subject to pre-emption? In other words, can a tenant in common acquire a right of homestead to government land of which he is in the possession for himself and his co-tenants?
In Nickals v. Winn, 17 Nev. 188, the plaintiff was in the possession of a large tract of the public land. He neglected to
The present action is sought to be distinguished from Atherton v. Fowler, and kindred cases, upon the ground that the defendant was not personally in the actual possession of the premises at the time of the eviction. The parties being tenants in common, the possession of the defendant was for the benefit of his co-tenants as well as himself. Occupied lands are exempted from the provisions of the pre-emption laws upon the presumption that Congress could not have intended to invite the disorder and violence which would follow the invasion of homes made by settlers upon the public lands. The evils against which the rule is directed are subject to occur where lands are held by such a constructive occupancy as the facts of this case present, and we think it falls within the principle ruled in the class of decisions upon which Nickals v. Winn is based.
Counsel for appellant has referred us to the case of Emerson v. Sansome, 41 Cal. 552, as opposing this view. That case was decided before the decision in Atherton v. Fowler established the contrary doctrine.