Adams v. Couch

1891 OK 2, 26 P. 1009, 1 Okla. 17, 1893 Okla. LEXIS 3
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 4, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1891 OK 2 (Adams v. Couch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Couch, 1891 OK 2, 26 P. 1009, 1 Okla. 17, 1893 Okla. LEXIS 3 (Okla. 1891).

Opinion

*25 The opinion of the court was delivered by

SEAY, J.:

The facts as alleged and denied in the pleadings may be briefly summarized as follows: The petition substantially states that plaintiff being a citizen of the United States, having the right so to do filed his homestead entry (No. 9) for the S. W. of sec. 33. tp. 12, N. of range 3 W., in the United States local land office and that upon full compliance with the law and residing upon, and being in possession of a part, he became the •equitable owner and legally entitled to the possession of the whole of said tract of land.

That the defendants - afterward unlawfully entered upon and occupied part of the land to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $500 for the possession of which and •damages, he asks judgment.

Defendant, Cynthia Couch, says her husband in. his .lifetime settled upon, improved and began a residence on the property in dispute on April 22d, 1889, and continuously resided thereon until his death. Since which time she has resided thereon and held unbroken possession of his title; that within 90 days after the 22d of April, 1889, he took steps in pursuance of law to enter said land and his application was rejected because of the previous entry of the land by plaintiff, whereupon he filed his contest as provided by law, and asked the cancellation of plaintiff’s entry for the reason that plaintiff entered the Territory subsequent to the 2d of March and prior to the 22d day of April, 1889, in violation of the law. That contest is now pending before the local land office at Oklahoma City, which has exclusive jurisdiction to hear and determine all matters of controversy between them, and that this court has no jurisdiction to interfere with her use and occupancy of the land described.

John M. Dawson, after denying each and every allegation of the petition and charging plaintiff with having *26 forfeited his rights by entering the Territory prior to 12 o’clock, noon, of April 22d, 1889, and occupying a portion of the land in controversy avers, that he (Dawson) on the 23d day of April, 1889, filed his contest affidavit charging the plaintiff with the violation aforesaid, and avering that he, defendant, was the first legal settler and occupant upon said land, and that said contest is now pending and undetermined before the local land office at Oklahoma City; that the title is still in the United States, but by reason of the foregoing facts he has an equitable title, and on account of his prior settlement and occupancy he is entitled to the possession of the land; that a judgment of ouster would destroy his title and deprive him of his home which is of the value of $1,500 and which he built upon the land and in which he now resides with his family.

Dawson then pleads the pendency of the contest proceedings as a bar to this action and denies the jurisdiction of this court to hear and determine it.

Robert W. Higgins relies upon the stipulations which seem to be broad enough to' cover all the questions raised by the answers of Couch and Dawson.

.The plaintiff bases his right to recovery in this case upon the fact that he entered the land and that his receipt of the receiver entitles him to the posession of the whole tract under the provisions of section 411, p. 907, Nebraska Statutes, which was put in force here by the organic act.

The defendants rely for their defense mainly upon three propositions.

I. That the plaintiff entered the Territory for the fraudulent purpose of securing a homestead prior to the 22d day of April, 1889, without authority of law.

II, That they are prior settlers and took legal steps to secure their rights within 90 days after actual settlement.

*27 III. That the matters now in controversy are pending before the local land office, which has exclusive jurisdiction to hear and determine them, and that this court has no jurisdiction in the premises

Plaintiff by demuring to the defendants’ answers admits all the facts well pleaded therein, and asks this court to declare as a matter of law said facts are .sufficient to constitute any defense to the cause of action as stated.

The case of Wilson v. Fine, 38 Fed. Rep. 789, is referred to as authority for plaintiff. This is an ejectment case in which plaintiff claims under a “duly certified final certificate from the proper officers of the United States land department under the homestead laws; that plaintiff being in possession of the premises as the legal owner, the defendant unlawfully and with force entered upon the same and ejected the plaintiff therefrom and has ever since wrongfully held posession thereof from the plaintiff.”

To this complaint the defendant demurred for that the same “does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.” The only question was as to the sufficiency of the petition.

The court said this plaintiff is “the assignee and vendee of a recognized settler on the premises under the homestead law to whom a certificate was issued to the effect that he had complied with the law and was entitled to a patent.” The defendant being a mere intruder and trespasser, and plaintiff being entitled to the patent, wc- think the demurrer was properly overruled.

The case of John Calwell v. J. E. Smith, Washington 922, (Decided in i860,) is also quoted as authority for the position taken by the plaintiff.

We are unable to see that it supports plaintiff’s contention. The complaint alleges that plaintiff, claiming *28 under the preemption law of the United States, was in the exclusive possession of 160 acres of land, was wrongfully ousted and deprived of his possession by the defendant and seeks a writ of restitution.”

The case was tried by a jury who found that plaintiff was in the possession of the whole tract, and was wrongfully ousted by defendant.

It does not appear that any answer was filed, or whether any defense was set up,-and yet the court held that it had no jurisdiction to determine upon conflicts between two persons claiming by priority of settlement, (both of whom are in actual possession of different portions of the tract) so far as to dispossess one or the other from the entire claim, and then declined to give the plaintiff any relief until he filed a stipulation not “to deprive the defendant of such possession as he may have, of his dwelling house or enclosures made and exclusively occupied by himself.”

The court in that early day saw the necessity of leaving such conflicts under the control of the proper officers of the land department.

Section 411, supra, provides that:

“The usual duplicate receipt of the receiver of any land office * * * is proof of title equivalent to a patent against all but the holder of an actual patent.”

What sort of a receipt is meant by this section? Is it what is known as the “filing papers,” which is the initiatory step to secure the inceptive right to the land, or does it refer to the “final receipt,” which entitles the holder to a patent?

In Morton v. Green, 2 Neb.

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Bluebook (online)
1891 OK 2, 26 P. 1009, 1 Okla. 17, 1893 Okla. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-couch-okla-1891.