Bailey v. Sanders

228 U.S. 603, 33 S. Ct. 602, 57 L. Ed. 985, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2403
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 12, 1913
Docket271
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 228 U.S. 603 (Bailey v. Sanders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Sanders, 228 U.S. 603, 33 S. Ct. 602, 57 L. Ed. 985, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2403 (1913).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Van Devanter

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit to determine which of two claims to a tract of land m the State of Idaho is the better one. The tract is withib the ceded portion of the. Nez Perce Indian Reservation, which was brought within.the operation of -the homestead law by the act of August 15, 1894, 28 Stat. 286, 332, c. 290, Bailey, the plaintiff,.claims as the grantee once removed of William W. Hately, who made a preliminary entry of the tract in 1899, commuted the entry in 1901, and received the usual receipt and certificate. Sanders, .the defendant, claims ..-under an entry subsequently made and upon which he has obtained a.patent. The real controversy is over the effect to be given to certain contest proceedings in the Land Department which resulted in the cancellation of Hately’s entry and in the allowance of that of the defendant. In his bill of complaint the plaintiff sets forth all or the major part of the proceedings and evidence in the contest and calls in question the cancellation of Hately’s entry. A demurrer to the bill was sustained by the Circuit Court, and the. bill was dismissed. The decree was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals, 177 Fed. Rep. 667, and the plaintiff brings the case here.

We shall refer briefly to such parts only of the case made by the bill and the exhibits as have a direct bearing on the questions requiring decision by us. ,

As soon as Hately’s entry was commuted he conveyed the land to one Beach, as the result of negotiations with Bailey, the plaintiff, who claimed to be acting for Beach; *605 The. contest against the entry originated in a charge preferred by Sanders to the effect that a fraud had been perpetrated in obtaining the conveyance to Beach and that Bailey had for a long time been resorting to irrégular methods to secure the land. The charge was somewhat vaguely stated and pointed more to a fraud on Hately than to one on the United States, but the Commissioner .of the General Land Office regarded it as requiring investir gation and ordered a hearing in the local office, of which Hately, Beach and Sanders were to be notified and in which each was to be heard, “in order that all the facts in the case might be-brought out.” The hearing was had, Hately and Sanders appearing in, person and Beach being represented by Bailey. Upon thé evidence adduced the local officers found,' among other things, that two or three months.before Hately made his commutation proof an agreement was made between him and Bailey whereby the latter was. to pay the expense of the commutation and. Hately was to convey the land to Bailey for an additional consideration of $600 when the commutation was effected, and that the conveyance to Beach was'made at Bailey’s instance in pursuance of the agreement. By successive appeal's the contest was carried before the Commissioner of the General Land Office and the Secretary of the Interior, with the result that the finding of the local officers' was sustained <#nd the entry cancelled because of the agreement to convey. The conveyance from Beach to Bailey was.made after the contest-was heard by the local, officers and while it was pending on appeal before the General Land Office.

1. It is insisted that no evidence was adduced in the contest tending to. show the making of such an agreement as was described in the finding of the Land Department, and therefore that the cancellation of the entry was wholly arbitrary and unauthorizéd. -The evidence is set forth. in one of the exhibits to the bill, and it there appears that *606 Hately.gave the following testimony: “Q. When did you first come to know Mr. Bailey, or where did you first meet him? A.-Some time in January, 1901, Woodland, Idaho [the entry was commuted in March following]. Q. What, if any, conversation did he have with you on that occasion concerning the. land in controversy? A. He didn’t say much about it. \ . . Q. What did Mr. Bailey say to you about proving up .on your land, assisting you to prove up, if anything at that time? A. He said he had some folks that .wanted a piece of land in the timber: Well, he wanted .a deed to the place, and I told him if I had to make the deed what it would take to get the land. -Q. How much did you tell him you would take? .A. I told him it would take $600' besides the expense. Q. Were you living upon your land at that, time? A. Yes. Q. Was- there any special agreement made by you and Mr. Bailey at your house or place? A. He drawed up some kind of an agreement, but I don’t know what it was. Q. Did he read it to. you and inform you of the purport of the paper? A. Yes. Q'. Did Mr.-.Bailey subsequently have you appear before some officer in order to consummate your final proof of the land in question? A.- He did. Q. When did Mr. Bailey have you execute this deed which has been offered in this case,. marked Exhibit 'A’ [deed to Beach] alleged to have been signed by yourself and wife? A. Some time in March, 1901.” There was also testimony to the effect that shortly before the hearing Beach disclaimed any personal interest in the land; and in the decision of the local officers, which is an exhibit-to the bill, it .is stated that the commutation price was paid by Bailey, and- that, although present at the hearing, he refused to be sworn. In these circumstances we think it cannot be said that the finding of the Land Department respecting the agreement to convey was arbitrary or without evidence to support it. -

.2. .Another objection urged against the .action of the Land Department is that the charge upon which the hear *607 ing was ordered did not clearly or certainly assail Hátely’s entry on the ground that, before perfecting it, he had entered into a prohibited agreement to convey the land to another. It is true that the charge was vaguely stated, but it does not appear that any prejudice resulted from this. The principal testimony relating to the agreement was given by Hately, and no objection was made to his being interrogated on that subject. Nor was any effort made to weaken that part of his testimony by cross-examination. Bailey,, with whom Hately said the agreement was made, represented Beach at the hearing and could have contradicted Hately’s testimony, if it was not true, but he did not attempt to do so. True, there is in the bill an allegation that the local officers refused to permit Beach to adduce evidence in rebuttal, the nature of which is not stated in that connection, but it appears from the exhibits to the bill that this evidence related to a matter which is of no moment here, namely, the reason why Beach had hot paid a draft given by Bailey to Hately for the deed from the latter. The real situation, then, in respect of the proof of the prohibited agreement is that it. was introduced without objection, in circumstances where it' could have been controverted if untrue, and that no attempt was made to dispute it. This being so, the present objection must fail as did a similar one in Lee v. Johnson, 116 U. S. 48. There an unsuccessful homestead claimant, whose entry. had been cancelled as the result of a contest before the Land Department, sought to charge the successful claimant, whose entry had been passed to patent, as- a trustee of the title.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 U.S. 603, 33 S. Ct. 602, 57 L. Ed. 985, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-sanders-scotus-1913.