181 F. 786 | 9th Cir. | 1910
(after stating the facts as above).
The testimony is voluminous, and, while it has received our careful attention, only meager reference need be made to it, in the view we take of the controversy. There was' introduced in evidence by the plaintiffs a plat of the town of Haines, which purports to have been compiled from the original town plat and actual surveys. The original survey of the town was made by one Walter Fogelstrom, and filed for record January 29, 1898. Fogelstrom acted in behalf and at the request of citizens of the place at the time. This town plat covers by its blocks 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6, and streets and alleys, the larger part of the area of survey No. 573, which marks the boundaries of a homestead claimed by the defendant, Solomon Ripinsky; but there is a parcel of 270 to 280 feet in length and about 150 feet in width at the extreme east end, and another of about 150 feet in length at the west end, of the survey, that it does not include. The parcel at the east end not so covered by the town-site survey is designated on a plat, designed to show the conflict in survey between the town plat and survey No. 573, which was introduced in evidence by the plaintiffs, and marked “Plaintiffs’ Exhibit No. 1,” as “Ripinsky Homestead.” It will be convenient hereafter to refer to this plat as “Plaintiffs’ Exhibit No. 1.”
The evidence of plaintiffs tends to show, so far as it is necessary to allude to it, that Harry Fay and five or six others went to Haines some time in December, 1897, and that they located upon certain lots or parcels of land within
There are 34 parties plaintiff to the suit, and to illustrate the style of holdings relied upon as a basis for the cause of suit it will be instructive to trace the titles of some of the plaintiffs, which are exhibited by the proofs and the record. In order to prevent confusion, the lots as numbered on the Fogelstrom plat begin on the east side and run west, for the south tier of each block from 1 to 6, and for the north tier from 7 to 12. The map to which reference is had here is one compiled by Elias Ruud. It is offered in evidence as “Plaintiffs’ Exhibit No. 2,” and may be termed the “Fogelstrom Map.” The lots as shown on Plaintiffs’ Exhibit No. 1, for the south tier in general are numbered from east to west, running from 1 to 6, and for the north tier from west to east, running from 7 to 12. The exceptions to this numbering are blocks 1 and 2. As to block 1, the south tier is numbered irregularly, beginning at the east and run-, ning from 1 to 11, and the north tier regularly, beginning at the west and running from 12 to 17. As to block 2, the south tier again is numbered irregularly from east to west, the numbers running from 1 to 8, and the north tier regularly from west to east, running from 9-to 14. The locations and transfers presumably are according to the Fogelstrom or Ruud map or plat, Plaintiffs’ Exhibit No. 2.
G. W. Hinchman, also a party plaintiff, claims to be the owner and in possession of lots 7 and 8, block 3, Exhibit 1, which correspond with lots 11 and 12, Fogelstrom plat. Hinchman testifies that lots 7 and 8 are his lots; that he has occupied them since the fall of 1903; that he bought lot 8 from M. W. Lane, and the other from Bjornstad; and then describes the improvements. The record shows deed from M. W. Lane to George W. Hinchman to lot 11, Fogelstrom map, of date October 8, 1903, and deed from M. W. Lane to Carl Bjornstad to lot 12, of date July 5, 1907. It does not appear that any location was ever made of these lots by any one.
Thomas Vogel claims lot 1, block 2, Exhibit 1, which corresponds in a measure with lots 1 and 2, Fogelstrom map. He testifies, under the name of Tim Vogel, that he is the owner of part of lot 1 and 45 feet of lot 2. He says he did not locate, but bought from E. L. Wilson. The record shows that location was made of lot 1 by Daniel Morris, January 26, 1898, and of lot 2 by A. Blonde, February 12, 1898. There are no conveyances from either Morris or Blonde. Vogel conveyed to W. H. Spencer, March 13, 1903, a parcel lying in the northeast, corner of lot 1, being
S. J. Weitzman claims lot 3, block 1, and R. L. Weitzman, his wife, lots 12 and 13 of the same block, according to Exhibit 1. These lots cover parts of 3 and 4 and 11 and 12, Fogelstrom map. Weitzman testifies that he located lot 3, and that his wife bought 12 and 13 from Cronen, the original locator. The record shows Harry Fay located lots 3 and 4, Fogelstrom map, December 14, 1897, and that Harry Fay and wife deeded to James Fay lot 3 and the east half of lot 4 October 2, 1903. As to lots 12 and 13, or 11 and 12 Fogelstrom map, the record shows no location whatever. E. B. Cronen conveyed these lots, July 6, 1901, to R. L. Weitzman, and on October 30, 1902, R. L. Weitzman and husband conveyed 25 feet off the south end to D. Butterick.
W. W. Warne sues for lots 7, 8, 9, 10, and 11, of block 2, Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 1. These correspond with 5, 6, 10, 11, and 12, Fogelstrom map. As to these lots W. B. Stout testifies that he thinks Rev. Mr. Warne claims them, that Warne is now in North Dakota somewhere, and that he placed some foundations for buildings on the lots and built a good fence around them several years ago. The record shows that lots 10, 11, and 12 were located by Adele Big-ford December 14, 1898, and that lot 10 was again located September 6, 1906, by Cortes Ford, lot 11 on the same date by Frank Bruskers, and lot 12 .by T. Wilder Ford. As it pertains to lots 5 and 6, Fogelstrom plat, there has been neither location nor deed of any sort.
Kate Kabler claims to be the owner of lot 1, block 4. As to this parcel the two maps correspond. It is shown that Mrs. Kabler is not in Haines, and that the lot is unoccupied; that it has a house upon it, but no other improvements. The record shows that W. W. Warne located it December 15, 1897, for trade and manufacturing purposes, and that E. Sanderson again located the same lot, under the alleged townsite, January 31, 1898.
These instances well illustrate the record testimony respecting the title to the property concerned. In other cases,
On the other hand, Ripinsky claims to have obtained possession and title to his claim from one Sarah Dickinson and Billy Dickinson, her son, who were the wife and son of George Dickinson, under deeds dated December 2 and December 21, 1897, respectively, which were intended to convey 16 acres of land adjoining the Presbyterian Mission on the north, less 1 acre that had been sold to Dalton; the description being very indefinite. However, Ripinsky further claims that, immediately after the receipt of such deeds, he went into possession of the whole of such tract of 16 acres, less 1, and fenced the same by means of posts and wires, and was in the sole possession thereof, claiming the whole, before any person located thereon, either as a town-site locator or for trade and manufacturing purposes. Ripinsky further asserts that he continued in such exclusive possession, save that a number of persons unlawfully invaded his holding, until June 23, 1903, when he filed a notice of location of homestead, claiming the land as a homestead. More than two years later, namely, on or about December 18, 1905, he filed an amended notice, by which he claimed actual personal and continuous occupation of the land described, and settlement thereon, since December, 1897, and the exclusive legal right to and ownership of the tract through mesne conveyances and transfers thereof from the original claimants, who settled upon and exclusively occupied the same according to law from the year 1878 to date
This statement sufficiently shows the relative claims of the disputants, so that the legal questions involved may be intelligently resolved and determined. Counsel for Ripinsky insist upon two propositions, which it is claimed are fatal to the maintenance of plaintiffs’ suit :• First, that there is a misjoinder of causes of suit; and, second, that plaintiffs are without sufficient title upon which to base a suit for removal of cloud.
The first question was raised by demurrer, and is now here insisted upon. As to this the plaintiffs contend that the present “is not a suit to establish the title of the appellees as against all the world; it is an action brought by them as owners of property in the town of Haines, an unincorporated town (but surveyed and a plat thereof recorded in January, 1898), to remove from all of the property embraced within the limits of the town, as platted, the cloud cast upon its title by appellant’s homestead claim (survey No. 573).” And thus it is argued that this is in reality a suit on the part of the citizens of the town to relieve the town of the alleged cloud cast upon the title to the lots and blocks with which survey No. 573 is in conflict; that, while it was not brought in behalf of the plaintiffs and all other persons similarly situated, it should have been so instituted, and ought now to be so treated; and that the appropriate relief is a decree removing the cloud in toto as it affects the town in any of its scope.
The answer to this contention is that the suit was not so instituted. But, if it had been, the case would be no different, as the basis thereof must needs be the claim and title of the individuals, not of the town. Indeed, the town can make no claim of title to any of the lots and blocks within its borders, especially an unincorporated town, which practically has no borders. The rule that a court of equity will interpose its jurisdiction to avoid a multiplicity of suits, “where a number of persons have separate and individual claims and rights of action against the same party, A., but all arise from some common cause, are governed by the
In the case of Osborne et al. v. Wisconsin Cent. R. Co. (C.C.) 43 F. 824, which is cited by plaintiffs, there was a single question presented, namely, whether the lands held by the plaintiffs were granted by a certain act of Congress for the benefit of the railroad, or reserved to the United States and thus excluded from the grant. It was said that there was a common source of title among the complainants, namely, the action of the land department in opening up the lands for entry; all of the complainants being supposedly entrymen in pursuance of law. In other words, there was there uniformity of title among the complainants. Not so here, for there is the claim as locators under a town site, the claim of locators discarding the town site, the claim as holders under prior deed without tracing title to any location, and claim by the merest shade of possession only, among which there is such manifest lack of uniformity of title as to put the plaintiffs beyond the scope of the rule. Instead of there being a single question, dependent upon a law of Congress, there arise here as many different questions of fact as there are claimants suing, and the defend
Nor is the case of Prentice v. Duluth Storage & Forwarding Co., 58 F. 437, 7 C.C.A. 293, which on principle is like the Osborne Case, in point. There the court says, at page 441 of 58 F., at page 296 of 7 C.C.A.: “The law and the facts which determine the validity of the title of one such owner also determine the validity of the title of every such owner.”
And the court continues that: “While they are owners in severalty, they are united in interest in the sole question at issue in such a case, the validity of the title of their common grantor.”
The titles here depend, on the one hand, upon the act of Congress relative to town sites, as applied to Alaska, and the purchase of land for trade and manufacture, and, on the other, upon the homestead act, also as applied in Alaska, as well as upon a great diversity of facts peculiar to each particular claimant. The case at bar is rather to be controlled by the principle applied in the case of Utterback v. Meeker, 16 Wash. 185, 47 P. 428. Manifestly, the attempt here, as there, is to unite in one action several distinct and separate causes existing in favor of distinct parties, whose interests are several, and none of whom has any interest in the causes of the others. Their positions may be similar, arising from the fact that each has an alleged right of action against the same person for causes of some resemblance upon the facts; but this is not sufficient. See authorities cited in the above case. There is, to our minds, an improper joinder of causes of suit in the case at bar.
The second question is whether plaintiffs are possessed of title sufficient upon which to base their action. The general rule, in a suit to quiet title or to remove a cloud, as well as in ejectment, is that the plaintiff must succeed upon the strength of his own title, and not on the weakness of that of his adversary. The very idea of removing a cloud from title presupposes that the plaintiff has a title of some order to defend or to relieve of an alleged or threatened incumbrance or cloud. One in possession merely, without legal
Under the statute of Alaska, which goes somewhat further than the Oregon statute, it was held by this court that a valid location of a mining claim, accompanied by possession, was title sufficient upon which to base a suit. Fulkerson v. Chisna Min. & Imp. Co., 122 F. 782, 58 C.C.A. 582. And such is undoubtedly the rule as applied in mining claims. That case does not go to the extent, however, that mere possession, unaccompanied by a claim of right under some law or authority, is sufficient within itself.
From the facts as portrayed by the testimony, it appears that some of these complainants have no shadow of claim of title, except mere possession. They have no location under the alleged town site of Haines, no deed from previous holders, if this were sufficient, and no pretense that they are claiming under authority of Congress. It is not even shown that a site has ever been entered for townsite purposes in pursuance of the laws of Congress as extended to Alaska. Section 11, Act March 3, 1891, c. 561, 26 Stat. 1099 (48 U.S.C.A. § 355). And the extent of the right acquired in alleged pursuance of the town-site statute is that of mere possession only, with the privilege, perhaps, of regularly entering a town site in the future, if the citizens so desire, when their rights will depend upon prior possession. It does not seem to us that such possession exhibits a sufficient equitable title upon which to base a suit to remove a cloud, and we so hold.
Further than this, the defendant’s claim for homestead is now pending in the land department, and a judgment of this
It may be remarked, further, that it appears from the prayer of the plaintiffs and the decree of the court that the scope and purpose of the suit was to determine the extent of the defendant’s claim and right, even beyond any effect it might have in clouding the plaintiffs’ titles. Thus it appears, by plaintiffs’ own showing, and especially by Exhibit 1, which they produced, that Ripinsky’s claim extends to the east of the alleged town plat, ranging from 270 tó 283 feet, with a width of about 150 feet, and to the west of such plat some 150 feet for the full width of the claim; and yet the decree declares plaintiffs are the owners and entitled to the possession of all lands covered by said claim, except a parcel at the extreme easterly end thereof, 100 by 150 feet in extent, and another parcel within the alleged town site, 25x50 feet in area. This would work a patent injustice to the defendant. But, waiving this, as it could be remedied by a modification of the decree below, the plaintiffs are not entitled to the relief demanded, because of a misjoinder of causes of action and the want of sufficient title upon which to base the action.
.The cause, therefore, will be reversed and remanded to the trial court, with directions to dismiss the same.