Bailey v. Oregon-Wash. R. & N. Co.

191 P. 782, 97 Or. 471, 1920 Ore. LEXIS 252
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 27, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 191 P. 782 (Bailey v. Oregon-Wash. R. & N. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Oregon-Wash. R. & N. Co., 191 P. 782, 97 Or. 471, 1920 Ore. LEXIS 252 (Or. 1920).

Opinion

BENNETT, J.

There are many grounds upon which, as it seems to us, the demurrer of the defendants was properly sustained. We shall notice only one, which, as it seems to us, is conclusive of the case. There is no allegation in the complaint that Henry Ploch, before his death, had ever filed upon the land, or put his claim upon record with the [474]*474surveyor-general, or in the United States land office, and although more than sixty-five years had elapsed after his death before the bringing of this suit, there is no allegation that his heirs had in any way complied with the provisions of the Donation Act, or made any notification to the proper land officers of the claim of their deceased ancestor.

At the time the land was surveyed, and up to the time of the filing by Mrs. Thomas, the land appeared upon the government records as public land of the United States, subject to claim by any person under its land laws. . Save and except the claim of Mrs. Thomas, it would either have been taken by someone else or would still have appeared as public land, up to the beginning of this suit.

1. We do not think that Henry Ploch by merely settling upon the land, without designating his claim in any way, or making any notification thereof, obtained any title to the land, which would pass to his heirs by descent.

2. Neither do we think his heirs could take the land by purchase, under the Donation Act, without notifying the Land Department of his claim, or pointing out or designating its boundaries in any way, or making proof of his settlement, as required by that act.

It would be a dangerous holding indeed, and fraught with evil consequences, to say that a man, under the Donation Act, could, by simply building a cabin upon an unmarked and undesignated tract of land, and without notifying the government in any way of his claim, secure such right to the land that the government could not accept other filings upon or effectually convey the same; and that his heirs could come in many years afterward, as in this case, [475]*475and assert Ms title, and disturb the title of the grantees of other claimants, who had settled upon the land as government land, and obtained patent thereto from the government, and transferred their rights and title to their successors.

Up to the time of the survey by the government the donation claimant could not, in the nature of things, ordinarily, know the definite boundaries of the tract upon which he was settling — certainly he could not unless these boundaries were marked out upon the land in some way, and it is not alleged or claimed that anything of the kind was done by Ploch. Up to the time that the claim was marked out and designated by survey, the settlers’ rights were necessarily inchoate and more or less in the nature of a float.

It is alleged in the complaint that Ploch’s claim was bounded by the Pinice Caruthers donation land claim, on the north, the meander line of the west shore of the Willamette River on the east, the James Terwilliger donation land claim on the south, and on the west by a line 3,937.28 links from the said meander line of the said west shore of the Willamette River, and running parallel with the said meander line between the north boundary of the said James Terwilliger donation land claim and the south boundary of the said Pinice Caruthers donation land claim.

But it is clear that this description is an afterthought, and could not have been the definite boundaries of the claim of Ploch at the time he settled upon the land, for at that time the Caruthers donation claim on the north, and the James Terwilliger donation claim on the south, were themselves, unsurveyed and undefined. Indeed, it is alleged in the [476]*476complaint that the line of the Carnthers claim was afterward run by the government surveyor, in such a way as to run through the Caruthers house.

The meander line designated in the complaint along the Willamette River had not at that time been located, and of course ft was impossible to know just where it would-be located by the government; and the opposite line, which is now alleged to have run parallel with the meander line, was, of course, equally uncertain.

It is now well settled that a donation land claimant under such circumstances obtains no definite right to the land until his notification has been filed, and until he has otherwise complied with the law, and that the settler acquired no right to the land which would pass to his heirs upon his death, until he had completed his four, years of residence.

In Hall v. Russell, 101 U. S. 503, 513 (25 L. Ed. 829, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes), it is said:

“The object of Congress undoubtedly was to allow a settler’s heirs to succeed to his possession, and thus keep Ms rights alive. But for some such provision all rights of the settler would have been-lost by his death. As the law required full four years’ residence by the person who claimed the grant, if no provision had been made for a continuance^ of his possession, the land would have become vacant on his death and open for a new settlement by a new settler, if the law authorizing new settlements still remained in force. Hence it was provided that the possessory rights of a deceased settler should go to his heirs, and that they might get the land on making the requisite proof, without further residence and cultivation of their own. Their title to the land was to come, not from their deceased ancestors, but from the United States.”

[477]*477In Brazee v. Schofield, 124 U. S. 495 (31 L. Ed. 484, 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 604, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes), it is said by Mr. Justice Field:

“It is undoubtedly true that the Donation Act requires for the completion of the settler’s right to a patent, not only that he should reside upon the land and cultivate it for four years, but that he should notify the surveyor general of the precise land he claims. The object of the law was to give title to the party who had resided upon and cultivated the land, and who was, therefore, in equity and justice better entitled to the property than others who had neither resided upon nor cultivated it. But it ivas also of importance to the government to know the precise extent and location of the land thus resided upon and cultivated. It was necessary to enable the government to ascertain what lands were free from claims of settlers, and thus subject to sale, or other disposition.” (Italicizing above interpolated.)

In Fitzpatrick v. Du Bois, 2 Sawy. 434 (Fed. Cas. No. 4842), it is said:

“This notification by the occupant was what constituted him a ‘settler,’ and his occupation thereby became ‘a settlement’ under the act, as well as-in fact. Doubtless it should be held to relate back to the beginning of his occupation, or to the passage of the act, when the occupation commenced prior thereto. But without this notification the occupant could never acquire any legal relation to the land, or the government be deprived of its ownership thereof.”

We think the reasoning of these cases in relation to the necessity of notification and of proof of claim applies to the heirs as well as to the original claimant.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lough v. State Industrial Accident Commission
207 P. 354 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 P. 782, 97 Or. 471, 1920 Ore. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-oregon-wash-r-n-co-or-1920.