Adams v. Burke

1 F. Cas. 97, 3 Sawy. 415, 1875 U.S. App. LEXIS 1263
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedAugust 20, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 F. Cas. 97 (Adams v. Burke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Burke, 1 F. Cas. 97, 3 Sawy. 415, 1875 U.S. App. LEXIS 1263 (uscirct 1875).

Opinion

FIELD. Circuit Justice.

Two actions of ejectment were brought by the plaintiff, each for a portion of the demanded premises, against the tenants in possession. The landlords having appeared in both, the actions have been consolidated. The premises constitute the west half of lot four of block eighteen in the city of Portland. The plaintiff deraigns title to them from the children and grandchildren of Daniel H. Lownsdale, who had in September, 1852, by previous settlement upon land which includes the premises, and continued residence thereon, and cultivation, acquired a right to a patent of the United States under the act of congress [98]*98of September 29, 1850, [9 Stat. 496,] known as the “Donation Act.” The defendants controvert the claim of title by the plaintiff, and assert an adverse possession of twenty years under claim and color of title, in bar of the action.

By the fourth section of the donation act a grant of land was made to every white settler or occupant of the public lands in Oregon above the age of eighteen years, who was a citizen of the United States, or had made a declaration according to law of his intention to become a citizen, or should make such declaration on or before the first day of December, 1S51, and who was at the time a resident of the territory, or might become a resident on or before the first day of December, 1850, and who should resido upon and cultivate the land for four consecutive years and otherwise conform to the provisions of the act. The grant was of 320 acres of land if the settler or occupant was a single man, but if a married man, or if a married man, or if he should become a married man within a year from the first of December, 1850, then the grant was of 640 acres, one-half to himself and the other half to his wife to be held by her in her own right. The surveyor-general of the United States was required to designate ihe part of the land thus granted inuring to the husband and the part inuring to the wife, and enter the same on the records of his office; and the act declares that in all cases where such married persons complied with the provisions of the act so as to entitle them to the grant, whether under the preceding provisional government or subsequently, and either should die before the patent issued, the survivor and children or heirs of the deceased should be entitled to his or her share or interest in equal proportions, except where the deceased should otherwise have disposed of the same by will.

' At the time of the passage of this act, Daniel H. Lownsdale was of the class of persons designated who were entitled to the benefit of its provisions; he was a settler in Oregon, and had been for years, and he was a citizen of the United States; and he was either a married man or became so within a year from the first of December, 1850. He had e-'^ed upon land now covering a large portion of the city of Portland, and he at once became a claimant under the act dating the commencement of his settlement on the twenty-second of September, 1848. This settlement was followed by his continued residence and cultivation up to September 22, 1852, the period of four years prescribed by the act. Due proof of this residence and cultivation was made to the surveyor-general and by him the land was assigned to the husband and wife in equal proportions, the east half to the husband, and the west half to the wife. The premises in controversy lie within the portion assigned to the husband.

In October, 1S60, a patent certificate was issued in favor of Lownsdale and wife by the register and receiver of the land office in Oregon, in the usual form, and containing recitals of the claim asserted by Lownsdale of a donatiou right, and that proof had been made of the commencement of the settlement, and of tile subsequent continued residence and cultivation required by the act. The certificate, accompanied by evidence of the facts recited, was forwarded to the commissioner of the general land office at Washington in order that a patent might issue thereon, if no valid objection was made to it No objection, so far as we are informed, was made to the certificate, or to the sufficiency of the accompanying evidence, and in June, 1865, a patent of the United States was issued to Lownsdale and wife, in terms granting to them the property claimed, the east half to Lownsdale and the west half to his wife. Both husband and wife died intestate, before the patent issued; the wife in April, 1S54; the husband in May, 1862.

Where, as in the present case, there had been a previous settlement, the act of congress vested the title in the settler immediately upon its passage. The act is a grant in praesenti; its language is, that - there “shall be and hereby is granted” to the settler or occupant, language which imports an immediate transfer of the interest of the grantor, not a promise to transfer that interest at a future period. But it is a grant subject to the conditions of continued residence and cultivation of four years from the settlement: if these conditions had not already been performed on the passage of the act they were to be performed subsequently. Until performed, Lie estate granted was defeasible; when performed, the estate became indefeasible.

When the certificate of the register and receiver was received by the commissioner, and accepted by him as satisfactory, the light of Lownsdale and of his wife to a patent was perfected. The estate as already observed passed by the act; the patent which the United States subsequently issued was record evidence on the part of the government, furnished for the security and protection of the donees or their successors in interest, of the settlement of Lownsdale and of the performance of the conditions annexed to the grant, and of the due assignment to him and to his wife of their respective portions; but it had no other or greater operation upon the title. “In the legislation of congress,” said the supreme court in a recent case, “a patent has a double operation. It is a conveyance by the government when the government has any interest to convey, but where it is issued upon the confirmation of a claim of a previously existing title, it is documentary evidence, having the dignity of a record, of the existence of that title, or of such equities respecting the claim as justify its recognition [99]*99and confirmation. The instrument is not the less efficacious as a record of previously existing rights, because it also embodies words of release or transfer from the gov-•emment.” Langdeau v. Hanes, 21 Wall. [88 U. S.] 529.

[NOTE. In Hall v. Russell, 101 U. S. 503, it was held that, under section 4 of the donation act, “there was no grant of the land to a settler until he had qualified himself to take as grantee by completing his four years of residence and cultivation, and performing such other acts in the meantime as the statute required in order to protect his claim and keep it alive. Down to that time he was an authorized settler on the public lands, but not a grantee. His rights in the land were statutory only, and cannot be extended beyond the just interpretation of the language congress has used to make known its will.”]

[99]*99Upon the death of the wife in 1854, intestate, she not having previously transferred her interest, her portion of the land — that is, the west half — vested under the act of congress in the surviving husband and her children in equal shares. No patent had then issued, and the act declares who shall in such case succeed to the estate of the deceased.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 F. Cas. 97, 3 Sawy. 415, 1875 U.S. App. LEXIS 1263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-burke-uscirct-1875.