108 Ala. 483 | Ala. | 1895
The action is common-law ejectment by the appellant, to recover .the lands described in the complaint. The plaintiff at no time held the actual possession of the lands. It must, therefore, recover upon the strength of its legal title. The material question presented by the abstract of the case,is whether the title vested in the grantors of the defendant, by virtue of the patent of the United States, issued to them, enured to the grantee of their ancestor by virtue of his covenants of warranty and deed of conveyance, executed before the issuance of the patent, through whom the plaintiff claims title. The plaintiff and defendant claim through the same patent. Neither party can impeach its validity.
Presumptively the patent vested the legal title in the parties to whom it was issued, and prima facie, all the preliminary requirements to its granting had been complied with. — Minter & Saltmarsh v. Crommelin, 18 How. 87 ; Smelting Co. v. Kemp, 104 U. S. 363.
If upon any state of facts the law authorized the issue of the patent to the heirs of Wiley B. Godfrey, upon collateral attack, the law will presume the existence of these facts. Section 2269 of the revised statutes of the United States, of 1869 reads as follows : “Where a party entitled to claim the benefits of the pre-emption laws, dies before consummation of his claim by filing, in due time, all the papers essential to the establishment of the same, it shall be competent for the executor or administrator of the estate of such party or one of the heirs, to file the necessary papers to complete the same, but the entry in such cases, shall be made in favor of the heirs of the deceased pre-emptor, and a patent thereon shall cause the title to enure to such heirs, as if their names had been specially mentioned.”
Affirmed.