85 F. 517 | 5th Cir. | 1898
On the 9th day of September, 1842, a land certificate was issued by the proper authority in Texas to Gonefácio Herrera, for 1,280 acres of land. This certificate she transferred on September 11, 1847, to James P. Dumas. On September 20,1859, he located the certificate on the land in controversy, receiving from the then county surveyor of Tarrant county duly-certified field notes, which were filed in the general land office on October 1, 1859. The land is situated in a part of the country that is described as “wild prairie land,” and appears to have been vacant public domain, surrounded by prior locations and surveys which had been projected according to the system which obtained in Texas, with nothing tangible to mark the lines dividing them from this unlocated portion of the public domain. The first field notes of the survey of the location of the land in controversy called to begin at a stake the southeast corner of a previous survey, and thence calling for a stake in different lines- and corners of the numerous surrounding surveys, without any call for natural objects or permanent tangible marks. On December 8, 1869, the county surveyor certified to a correction of the field notes of this survey, which certificate was filed in the general land office January 4, 1870. On April 25, 1871, the then county surveyor certified to second corrected field notes of this survey, which were filed in the general land office, May 8, 1871. Third corrected field notes appear to have been made by the then surveyor of the county on September 18, 1873, and filed in the general land office on September 26, 1873. On December 19, 1871, the commissioner of the general land office issued a certificate for the unlocated balance of the Gonefacio Herrera certificate of 1,280 acres of land, said unlocated balance being for 1,164 acres to be located, 116 acrés of other land having been located under the original certificate. This action of the commissioner appears to have been predicated upon some verbal communications between Hon. J. D. George, then a member of the legislature, and the commissioner, touching the Herrera certificate. The certificate for unlocated balance was sent by mail to. the owner of the Herrera certificate, J. P. Dumas, who promptly returned it by mail, in a letter to the commissioner of the land office dated January 10, 1872, in which he claimed that his certificate was located, that he did not wish to abandon the location, that he had not abandoned it, that he had authorized no person to suggest that he had, and asking that the certificate for the unlocated balance thus issued without authority be canceled, and a patent issue to him on. the last corrected field notes, and that there be issued to him an unlocated balance for about 70 acres, unexhausted by this location. The commissioner, declining, again sent the unlocated balance certificate by mail to Mr. Dumas, who lived in Grayson county, 75 miles from the land in controversy. On getting this last advice from
Some time in January, 1875 (the exact date is not fixed), Dumas , brought suit in the state court, in Tarrant county, against A. G. Leedy and others, who were claiming under the Leedy certificate and patent, to quiet his title, and to have the patent canceled. Madison Leedy had died before the Leedy certificate issued, and more than 30 years before the patent issued. There appears to have been some difficulty in ascertaining correctly the names and residences of all of the parties interested in the certificate and patent. On the 1st-day of February, 1875, James P. Dumas died. At the March term, 1876, the death of Dumas was suggested, which operated a continuance; and, for one cause or another, the suit did not come to trial before March 29,1876, on which date the court house was burned, and most of the records, and all the files in the suit of Dumas against A. G. Leedy, were destroyed by that fire. The case was continued at the August term, 1876, to* make parties, and to substitute the record. At the March tern, 1877, it was continued to substitute the record. The records were not substituted; and on August 27, 1877, it appearing to the court that the plaintiff had used no diligence to substitute the papers and pleadings, the case was dismissed. On January 1, 1882, the appellee, M. A. E. Dumas, took possession of the land in controversy by her lessees, Brown & Kemper, and has held possession of the whole land continuously since that date. There had been no previous possession by any one, and there has been no conflicting occupation by any one since then. On March 25, 1885, Harry W. Ogden filed in the circuit court of the United States, for the Northern district of Texas, a real action at law, against the appellee and the appellants, to try the title, and recover possession of the property in controversy. To stay this action at law, to establish appellee’s title, and to cancel the patent issued on the Leedy certificate, this bill was exhibited. At the hearing, the circuit court found that the bill was fully sustained by (he proof and the law applicable thereto, and
The assignments of error assume that previous to the location of the Leedy certificate, November 28, 1872, the land in controversy was vacant public domain of the state of Texas. The record in this ■case does not show anything to the contrary of this assumption, except the claim of the appellee, who deduces her right from a location made by her husband on this land in September, 1859. As between these parties, therefore, it may be safely assumed that the land in controversy was vacant public domain of the state of Texas, in September, 1859. The genuineness of the Herrera certificate, and J. P. Dumas’ ownership thereof, is not questioned. It clearly appears that the first field notes returned by the county surveyor of Tarrant county of the survey made on the location of the Herrera certificate, and certified to on the 20th of September, 1859, embraced the land in controversy. There is nothing to show that there was any suggestion on the part of any one, or any knowledge on the part of any one, that the field notes thus and then returned to the land office conflicted with any adjacent surveys, until December 8, 1869, when the first corrected field notes were certified, and subsequently, on January 4, 1870, filed in the general land office, which correction shows that the vacancy located upon did not contain 1,164 acres, and that the field notes of adjoining surveys required, some correction in the course and distance of certain lines called for in the original survey. When these corrections were applied in the general land office, it appeared that they did not relieve the survey made under the Herrera certificate from a partial conflict with certain of the surrounding surveys, and hence the field notes were not in a shape to be carried into a patent for the land, of which memorandums were made in the land office, and the owner of the survey was notified by letter of the commissioner of the general land office, of date July 15, 1870. Second corrected field notes were certified April 25, 1871; and third corrected field notes resurveyed September 16th and 17th, and certified the 18th of September, 1873. Locations of land in Texas were made in the office of the county surveyor or of a district surveyor. These officers' held for short terms, and, being chosen by popular election, changes of the incumbent frequently occurred. Great difficulty had been experienced-up to October, 1871, in obtaining correct or correctly corrected field notes of surveys made foi; parties making locations under genuine certificates; so much so that on the 24th of October, 1871, the legislature provided by statute
“It is hereby made the duty of surveyors, who shall make and deliver incorrect field notes, upon the requisition of the commissioner of the general land office, provided for in section 1, or of the party interested, to make corrected field notes, and return the same to the general land office without delay, without any additional compensation.” Laws 1871, p. 12.
These provisions of the statute seem clearly to imply, and the nature of the case and the general system of making locations in Texas as clearly show, that it was the duty of the land office and Ihe surveyor's office to make corrected field notes embracing the land located upon by the holder of a genuine certificate who applied for a location on vacant public domain, and paid or tendered the fees prescribed by law. It clearly appears that,' at the time this law was passed, Dumas was using all reasonable exertions to get the county surveyor of "Tar-rant county, and the surveyor himself was using all reasonable exertions to make the required correction of the field notes of the survey originally made on the Dumas location of the Herrera certificate on the land in controversy. All the proof supports the conclusion that Dumas was making strenuous efforts to obtain in 1872 a patent to ihe land upon which he had located the certificate in 1859; that, these efforts had been continuous from July 4, 1870, when he made his first application to Jacob Keuchler, commissioner of the land office, for patent or a statement in reference to this location. There is nothing in the memorandum that he gave Hon. J. D. George, or any of the letters that he is shown to have written to the commissioner, to indicate any intention or wish to abandon the location, but everything to ihe contrary. The testimony of George is clear to the effect that he had no authority from Dumas, either verbal or written, to suggest to the commissioner or any one in the land office that Dumas had abandoned, or wished to abandon, or intended to abandon, his location made in 1859. The then commissioner, in his testimony now as á witness, is naturally not able to recall any verbal suggestion, but concludes from what was done in the land office that some such suggestion must have been made, -a conclusion which we think is not only not supported, but is fully refuted by all the proof in the case.
Prior to the act of August 30, 1856, it had been much the practice to lift and float certificates in the surveyors’ offices in Texas, and, though ihe practice had grown into a great abuse, it had become so general, and so many rights had grown up and depended upon it, that the courts could not disturb it; and it was therefore provided in that act in what manner locations should be made, and that there
The location of the Leedy certificate was therefore made on land that was not vacant or subject to location, and, as against the owner of the location and survey under the Herrera certificate, the parties claiming under the patent issued on the location of the Leedy certificate do not show title that could prevail in the Texas courts, or a superior equity that would enable them to prevail in the courts of equity of the United States. The appellee, having gone into quiet, peaceable, exclusive possession of the land under a title thus paramount, which did not need actual possession of the land to strengthen the title, and retaining undisturbed exclusive possession that could not be disturbed by any suit in the local courts whose peculiar province and jurisdiction it was to settle and assure title to land (which jurisdiction, as between domestic parties, was exclusive), cannot reasonably be charged with laches for not applying to a court of equity of the United States to quiet her title or to cancel the junior patent-, until she, at least, had accurate knowledge that some person entitled to sue in the United States court was claiming under the patent. This knowledge she obtained when Ogden brought his action at law. It appears that thereupon the parlies agreed between themselves that, without any regard to the distinction of law and equity, the United States circuit court should hear and determine the whole controversy between the parties, and, under this agreement, that action proceeded until it was ready for trial, when the judge of the circuit court declined to proceed under that agreement, and the appellee (one of the defendants in the action at law) was