23 F. 741 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1885
This suit is brought by a citizen of Georgia, to obtain a decree enjoining the defendants, who are citizens of Oregon, from trespassing on certain lands situate in Umatilla county, Oregon, and that any claim they may have thereto may be declared null and vojd. The defendants answered separately, and the cause was heard on exceptions to the answer of the defendant Ewing for impertinence.
It appears from the bill that on August 20, 1881, Arthur Webb settled, as a pre-emptor under the laws of the United States, on and improved the S. of the N. E. J and the N. of the S. E. J of section 2, in township 2 N., of range 32 E. of the Wallamet meridian, and On the following day filed in the local land-office at La Grande his declaratory statement therefor; that on July 29,1882, after due publication of notice thereof, Webb made his final proof of such settlement and improvement to the satisfaction of the register and receiver of said office, and paid for the land at the rate of $2.50 per acre, or $396.20 in all, for which he received from said receiver “a certificate of purchase and entry of said land as by law required, ” which on July 31, 1882, was duly recorded in the county clerk’s office; that on the same day D. K. Smith purchased said land from said Webb, in good faith and for a valuable consideration, to-wit, $2,000; and took a conveyance thereof from said Webb, which was duly recorded on the same day; that on December 1, 1884, the.plaintiff purchased said land from said Smith, subject to a mortgage thereon given to the American Mortgage Company of $1,000, in good faith and for valuable consideration, to-wit, $1,000, and received a conveyance thereof from said Smith, and is now the owner and in possession of the premises, which are valuable for agricultural purposes and reasonably worth $5,500; that on or about July 10, 1883, the defendant Ewing wrongfully entered on the premises and built a dwelling-house thereon, in which he has since and now resides, and cultivates about five acres thereof and cuts timber thereon; and that he denies the plaintiff’s title and interest in said land, and disputes his possession thereof, and claims an estate or interest therein adverse to the plaintiff.
By his answer, the defendant Ewing admits that Webb erected a building on the premises, and filed a declaratory statement thereon and entered the same, as a pre-emptor, as alleged in the bill; but denies that the plaintiff, or those under whom he claims, were ever the owners of the premises, or that the plaintiff is in possession of the same; and alleges that on April 21, 1876, he, being duly entitled to the benefit of the pre-emption law, settled on the premises under said law and filed his declaratory statement thereon; and afterwards, on December 4, 1876, with the permission of the register and receiver, “duly changed” “said entry,”—meaning, I suppose, said “declaratory
The plaintiff excepts to so much of this answer as sets up the settlement and filing of Ewing on the premises in 1876, the contest thereabout with Webb in 1883, and the decisions thereon, and his subsequent entry of the land as a homestead, as impertinent. The ground on which this exception is based is that as soon as Webb entered the land at the local land-office, and received the certificate of purchase, it became his property; the legal title remaining in the vendor in trust for him until the patent should issue in due course of proceeding. That while any person interested may appear on the notice of final proof required by the act of March 3, 1879, (20 St. 472,) and contest the right of a settler to become a purchaser under the pre-emption law, and thereby prevent a certificate of purchase from, being issued to such settler, or cause the same to be canceled on an appeal from the decision of the local land-office allowing the entry to be made, yet the government of the United States, having satisfied itself through its local agents, in the manner provided by law, that Webb was entitled, under the pre-emption law, to purchase the land, and having thereupon sold if to him, cannot institute a contest in
Section 2273 of the Revised Statutes gives the register and receiver the right to determine “all questions as to the right of pre-emption arising between different settlers” on “the same tract of land,” saving the right of appeal to the commissioner and the secretary of the interior. But at the date of Webb’s entry and this alleged contest, /Ewing’s claim to the premises under his filing in 1876 was forfeited for want of final proof and payment within 30 months thereafter. Section 2267, Rev. St. He was then a stranger to the proceeding, and without interest in or relation to the land. No question could arise between Webb and him, as settlers thereon, nor as to the right of either to pre-empt the same. By reason of his neglect to make his final proof and payment, the effect of Ewing’s filing had ceased, and he had long lost his status as a claimant under the pre-emption law. Therefore this proceeding in the land department that resulted in the attempted cancellation of Webb’s certificate must be regarded, not as a contest under section 2273 of the Revised Statutes between two settlers on the same tract of land, but as an ex parte proceeding, instituted by the commissioner for the purpose of canceling Webb’s certificate, upon the suggestion of a stranger that it was fraudulently obtained. The fact that Webb saw proper to participate in it with a view of protecting his certificate, does not affect its character in this respect.
Has the commissioner any such, power ? It is not given to him in terms by any act of congress that Tam aware of. His right to pass upon conflicting claims to land under the pre-emption law seems confined to cases that come before him on appeal from the decision of the register and receiver, in case of a contest between two or more settlers under such law. Doubtless the commissioner may also refuse to give effect to a certificate, and issue a patent thereon, when it appears from the face thereof, or the proof accompanying it, that it was issued contrary to law. But if the land is open to pre-emption, and the proof is formally sufficient, as that it is made by the oaths of the proper and prescribed number of witnesses to the necessary facts, the commissioner cannot disallow the certificate, or refuse to issue a patent thereon because the proof is not satisfactory to his mind, or because it is suggested to him that it is false. The law devolves the determination of that question on the register and receiver, (Rev. St. § 2263,) and it can only come before the commissioner on an appeal from their decision by a party to a contest before them.
When a certificate of purchase has been issued to a pre-emptor in due form, and no appeal has been taken from the decision or action of the register and receiver, the land described in the certificate becomes the property of the pre-emptor. He has the equitable title thereto, and has a right to the legal one as soon as the patent can issue in'the due course of proceeding; and he can dispose of the
In Carroll v. Safford it was ruled that land hold under a certificate of purchase from the United States land-office was subject to state taxation as the property of the purchaser. In delivering the opinion of the court, Mr. Justice McLean said:
“When the land was purchased and. paid for it was no longer the property of the United States, but of the purchaser. He held it for a final certificate, which could no more be canceled by the United States than a patent. It is true, if the land had been previously sold by the United Stales or reserved from sale, the certificate or patent might be recalled by the United States, as having been issued through mistake. In this respect there is no difference between the certificate holder and the patentee.”
In Moore v. Robbins, 96 U. S. 538, it was held that a patent, issued by the land department, acting within the scope of its authority, passes the legal title to the land, and all control of the executive department of the government over the title thereafter ceases; that if any wrong has been done to the United States, the courts of justice are open to it, as in the case of an individual, to have redress by cancellation of the patent or reconveyance of the laud. But whether a final certificate or certificate of purchase, issued in due form to a pre-omptov or other purchaser of public land by the register and receiver of a local land-office, is within this rule, subject to the right of the commissioner or secretary to modify or set the same aside upon a direct appeal to either of them, the supreme court has not decided, that I am aware of. The cases of Lytle v. Arkansas, 9 How. 314, Garland v. Wynn, 20 How. 6, and Harkness v. Underhill, 1 Black, 316, have been cited and considered, but however they may bear on the question, they are not, in my judgment, decisive of it.
To my mind, the certificate of purchase, subject to the condition mentioned, is within the reason of tae rule laid down in Moore v. Robbins, in the caso of a patent. The issue of a patent or final conveyance on such a certificate is a mere ministerial act, of which the purchaser, in the case of private parties, might compel the performance. Several of the state courts have decided that the certificate of purchase, when issued in due form, for land subject to entry, is beyond the power of the commissioner, otherwise than on a* direct appeal from the register and receiver. In Perry v. O'Hanlon, 11 Mo. 585, the supremo court of Missouri held that a cancellation of a preemption certificate by the commissioner was a nullity. To the same effect is the ruling in Brill v. Stiles, 35 Ill. 309; Cornelius v. Kessel, 58 Wis. 241; S. C. 16 N. W. Rep. 550.
The statement in the answer as to the time and manner of insti
On the argument counsel for the plaintiff laid great stress on the fact, as he assumed it to be, that he was a purchaser in good faith for a valuable .consideration, claiming that, as the defendant had not answered the allegation of the bill to that effect, it was admitted to be true. But such is not the rule in equity pleading, though it would be very convenient if it were so. An allegation in a bill which is neither admitted nor denied by the answer is still only an allegation, and must be proved before the plaintiff can have any relief based on it/ If he wishes to prove it by the answer of the defendant, he can compel the latter to testify upon the point by excepting to the answer for insufficiency.
But whether this rule is applicable to a purchase made from a preemptor after entry and before patent issues may be a question. Begarding the sale of the land, however, as completed when the proof of compliance with the law is made to the satisfaction of the agents of the vendor,—the register and receiver,—and the purchase price paid to them, my impression is that an innocent purchaser for a valuable consideration from the party having the certificate of purchase takes the land, and the right to the patent, purged of any fraud that may have been committed by his grantor in obtaining such certificate, Of course, where the invalidity of the certificate is apparent on its face or is a matter of law, of which all persons are presumed to have knowledge, the purchaser would take with notice of such invalidity, and bo bound by it accordingly. But be this as it may, my conclusion is that a certificate of purchase issued in due form, in favor of a pre-emptor, for land subject to entry under the pre-emption law cannot be canceled or set aside by the land department for alleged fraud in obtaining it; and that in such ease the government must seek redress in the courts, where the matter may be heard and determined according to the law applicable to the rights of individuals under like circumstances. The right of a party holding a certificate of purchase of public land, and that of his grantee, is a right in and to property of which neither of them can or ought to be deprived without due process of law.
The exceptions to the answer are allowed.