254 F. 266 | 8th Cir. | 1918
(after stating the facts as above). [1, 2] The Act of Congress of March 3, 1891, c. 561, § 8, 26 Stat. 1099 (Comp. St. 1916, § 5114), provides:
“That suits by the United States to vacate and annul any patent heretofore-issued shall only be brought within five years from, the passage of this act, and suits to vacate and annul patents hereafter issued shall only be brought within six years after the date of tho issuance of such patents.”
But this statute is construed and enforced pursuant to decisions of the federal courts in co-operation with the familiar equitable principle that where the victim of a concealed fraud exercises reasonable diligence to discover it and fails so to do, or to receive such notice thereof as would excite the attention of, and incite a person of ordinary prudence and ability in his place to an inquiry which would have led to a discovery of the fraud, the cause of action for the fraud does
“That where the party injured by the fraud remains in ignorance of it without any fault or want of diligence or care on his part, the bar of the statute does not begin to run until the fraud is discovered, though there be no special circumstances or; efforts on the part of the party committing the fraud to conceal it from the knowledge of the other party.”
So the rule is that, whether -the fraud is concealed by special acts of the perpetrator after its commission or is so committed that it conceals itself, reasonable care and diligence of the injured party to discover it are indispensable conditions of the maintenance of a cause of action upon it after the bar of the statute has fallen. The act of Congress declares that suits by the United States to vacate patents for fraud shall nof be brought subsequent to 6 years after the date- of the patents. When the 6 years have expired such suits are therefore presumed to be barred. And when the injured party invokes the aid of a court of equity to release him frofn that bar, the burden unavoidably falls upon the plaintiff to plead and prove (1) that it exercised reasonable care and diligence to discover the fraud before the statute of limitations ran; (2) that it had no knowledge or notice of any action which would have excited the attention of and would have incited a person of ordinary prudence and ability in the plaintiff’s situation to an inquiry which would have led to a discovery of the fraud; and (3) that the defendant concealed the fraud by trick or artifice, or so committed it that it concealed itself. Hence the question which the case presents is whether or not the United States has so pleaded these facts as to entitle it to relief by a court of equity from the plain bar of the statute.
The Supreme Court quoting from Angell on Limitations, § 187 and note, said in 101 U. S. 141, 25 L. Ed. 807:
“The presumption is that if the party affected hy any fraudulent transaction or management might, with ordinary care and attention, have seasonably detected it, he seasonably had actual knowledge of it.”
The transaction here was in reality a sale of the lands by the United States for cash through its local land officers. The fraud alleged was that the United States was induced by the false representations of the coal company and its agents,* the entrymen, to sell the lands to the coal company in the belief that it was selling them' to the entrymen. But the coal company was in possession of the lands at the time the sale was made and has been in possession of them and operated them ever since. Possession of real estate is notice to the world of the possessor’s title. The entrymen conveyed all these lands to the coal company prior to the year 1904. There is no averment in the bill of complaint that these conveyances were not seasonably recorded. In reality this is a suit to rescind a sale for cash of speculative mining property, a proceeding which demands extraordinary promptness and diligence on the part of him who would rescind, on account of the changing values of the property. It is incredible that, under this state of facts, a ven
“The party who makes such appeal should set forth in his hill speciiieally what were the impediments to an earlier prosecution of his claim, how he came to he so long'ignorant of his rights, and the means used by the respondent to fraudulently keep him in ignorance, and how and when he first came to a knowledge of the matters alleged in his bill; otherwise the Chancellor may justly refuse to consider his case, on his own showing, without inquiring whether there is a demurrer or formal plea of the statute of limitations contained in the answer.”
The bill of complaint fails to contain the allegations thus specified and adjudged indispensable to the complainant’s alleged cause of action. It contains no averments of any impediments to an earlier prosecution of the plaintiff’s claim other than the immaterial fact that it was ignorant of its claim in 1903 and aware of it in 1916. The agreement and understanding of the coal company and the entrymen, to keep silent about and conceal the fraud, is alleged to have been made before it was committed and is therefore merged therein. United States v. Puget Sound Traction, etc., Co. (D. C.) 215 Fed. 436, 440. The complaint contains no allegation of any means used by the coal company after the completion of the fraud in 1903 to keep the plaintiff in ignorance of it. There is nothing in the complaint to show why the fraud could not have been discovered and the suit brought as well at any time after 1903 and prior to 1915 as after the latter date. There is no material averment in it of how and when the plaintiff first came to a knowledge of the matters alleged in the bill. The averment on that subject fails to state any pertinent or material fact except that the plaintiff and all its officers having authority in the premises were ignorant of the fraud until and except that in November, 1916, a special agent of the Interior Department filed a report on the entries on which complaint is made. But the bill contains no statement of the facts this report revealed, of who discovered them, when they were discovered or how or why the special agent made the report, or of any other material facts tending to show that the knowledge of the fraud could not have been discovered a9 well in 1904 as in 1916. And the conclu
The decree below must therefore be affirmed; and it is so orderéd.