254 F. 656 | 8th Cir. | 1918
This is a suit by the United States to enjoin the Redondo Development Company from fencing and cutting timber from a tract of land in New Mexico' known as “Baca Location No. 1,” outside the exterior boundaries thereof as established by the official government survey and marked upon the ground by the surveyors. The defendant affirmatively sought a judicial confirmation of its boundary claim. Upon final hearing the trial court held that the true boundaries were delineated in the field notes and plat of the survey officially reported, were not correctly marked upon the ground, and that the fencing of the defendant was upon the right lines. It dismissed the complaint of the government but retained jurisdiction of the cause for further orders if defendant was interfered with. The government appealed.
The Baca floats, locations, or grants as variously called, are five in number, and their history may be found in Shaw v. Kellogg, 170 U. S. 312, 18 Sup. Ct. 632, 42 L. Ed. 1050, involving No. 4, and Lane v. Watts, 234 U. S. 525, 34 Sup. Ct. 965, 58 L. Ed. 1440, and 235 U. S. 17, 35 Sup. Ct. 3, 59 L. Ed. 104, involving No. 3. See, also, Maese v. Herman, 183 U. S. 572, 22 Sup. Ct. 91, 46 L. Ed. 335. Only so much will be recited as is necessary to exhibit the present controversy. By Act June 21, 1860, c. 167, 12 Stat. 71, and proceedings under it, the heirs of Luis Maria Baca were entitled to select from the vacant, nonmineral, public lands in the then territory of New Mexico an aggregate of 496,446.90 acres in not more than five square tracts or bodies. In December, 1860, they made selection No. 1, to contain one-fifth of the quantity, or 99,289.39 acres, and located it by describing a point, definitely determinable by reference to section, township, and range of a distant government survey, “as a common center, and extending north, south, east, and west a sufficient distance to embrace the area last above mentioned, and that the boundaries of said location shall conform to the cardinal points of the compass.” A few .days later the surveyor general of New Mexico, being duly authorized, certified that he approved and had located the selection. His certificate recited the quantity and the description furnished by the heirs. The Commissioner of the General Land Office approved the selection. A survey was necessary to segregate the lands from the public domain. Lane v. Watts, supra.
In 1876 the Commissioner of the General Land Office directed the surveyor general to make survey in accordance with the selection and location. Following the practice which obtained in those days, the surveyor general contracted with a firm of surveyors to do the work, and in June, 1876, they returned field notes and plat showing a survey in exact accordance with the selection and location; that is to say, of a tract of land in square form containing the number of acres mentioned and with boundaries on the cardinal points of the compass equidistant from the center designated. The survey as reported was approved by the officials of the Department of the Interior. The lands in the location and the surrounding country were wild, mountainous, and principally in forest, unsettled in 1860 and ever since. In October, 1909, the defendant purchased the location, relying solely upon
The field notes and plat of the survey of 1876 conformed to the selection and location and embraced the quantity of land intended to be confirmed to the locators. But it clearly appears that the surveyors practiced a gross fraud in that part of their duty which consisted in marking the boundary lines upon the ground. A tracing of the lines according to such of their marks and monuments as could be found disclosed a shortage in the required area of nearly 10,000 acres. In very few, if any, instances were the marks and monuments at the places indicated in their report, and for long distances none whatever were found. It is quite apparent that a considerable part of the exterior lines was not traversed at all by the surveyors. They reported a completion of their work in about one-sixth of the time reasonably necessary for a faithful performance by the force they employed; their contract rate of compensation was by the mile. We think that their marking of the lines upon the ground was fully discredited. To sustain them it is necessary that the intent of the government and the Baca heirs and the field notes and plat reported by the surveyors be put aside. The case is not one of mere deviation from mathematical accuracy, but one in which a part of what is comprised in the term “survey” may be said not to have been performed.
“So monuments control courses and distances, and courses and distances control quantity; but, where there is uncertainty in specific description, the quantity named may be of decisive weight, and necessarily so if the intention to convey only so much, and no more, is plain.”
A series of cases in this circuit involving a fraudulent government survey in Minnesota are particularly in point. The surveyor’s report of the shores of a permanent lake as a boundary of surveyed tracts of land, officially approved and made of record, and upon which patents issued to innocent persons, was annulled years afterwards as fraudulent, and a correct survey was made by the government and judicially sustained. Security Land & Exploration Co. v. Burns, 193 U S. 167, 24 Sup. Ct. 425, 48 L. Ed. 662; Id., 87 Minn. 97, 91 N. W. 304, 63 L. R. A. 157, 94 Am. St. Rep. 684; Kirwan v. Murphy, 189 U. S. 35, 23 Sup. Ct. 599, 47 L. Ed. 698; Murphy v. Tanner, 100 C. C. A. 125, 176 Fed. 537. The call of the lake as a permanent natural monument for the boundary line gave way to distances and quantity. In the first of these cases the Supreme Court said:
“The rale as to natural monuments is not, however, absolute and Inexorable. It is founded upon the presumed intention of the parties, to.be gathered from the language contained in the grant, and upon the assumption that the description by monuments approaches accuracy within some reasonable distance, and places the monument somewhere near where it really exists.”
Again:
“It seems plain that the intention was to convey no more than the number of acres actually surveyed and mentioned in the patents. In Ainsa v. United States, supra, this is deemed to be a very important and sometimes a decisive fact.”
These rules may work both ways — in favor of or against the United States. They are applicable in a direct proceeding to which it is a party, and in which it is seeking to give effect to a fraudulent survey to the injury of a private person. A definite and very important feature of Baca location No. 1 was the area. It w'as to contain 99,289.39 acres of land. Quantity was a primary, not a secondary, consideration. Moreover, it was not a largess or bounty to- the Baca heirs, but á right founded on treaty obligations recognized by Congress, which thereafter no officer or employé of the government could deny or impair. The selection and location were made specifically to comprise the designated area, and all the official actions of the Rand Office, including the report of the survey and the approval of it, were in accord with the right of the locators. The only thing out of harmony with the manifest intention of both parties as regards the quantity and the lines necessary to embrace it was the fraudulent conduct of the surveyors, which did not appear in their report. In the very nature of things, when the survey was approved in 1876, the government officials acted upon the field notes and plat, which were fair on their face. They could not have known of the marks on the ground. We find nothing in the case warranting a holding that defendant and its predecessors in title acquiesced in the error or are estopped.
The decree should be modified, so that the dismissal of the complaint upon the merits be without prejudice to the right of the government to make a correct resurvey by marking the boundaries of Baca location No. 1 upon the ground according to the selection and location, the field notes and plat of 1876, and to contain the area specified, and when so made to require the defendant to adjust its enclosure accordingly.
As so modified, the decree is affirmed.