Bell v. Hearne

60 U.S. 252, 15 L. Ed. 614, 19 How. 252, 1856 U.S. LEXIS 443
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 27, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 60 U.S. 252 (Bell v. Hearne) 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
Bell v. Hearne, 60 U.S. 252, 15 L. Ed. 614, 19 How. 252, 1856 U.S. LEXIS 443 (1857).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CAMPBELL

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error to the Supreme Court of Louisiana, under the 25th section of the judiciary act of September, 1789. .

The plaintiff commenced a petitory action in the District Court of Caddo parish, Louisiana, for a parcel of land in the possession of the defendants. He claims the land by a purchase from the United States, and exhibits their patent for it, bearing date in June, 1850, with his petition. The defendant (Hearne) appeared to the action, and answered that the United States had sold the land to James Bell, and as the property of Jajnes Bell it had been legally sold by the sheriff of Caddo, under a valid judgment and execution against him, and that a person under whom he (Hearne) derives his title was the, purchaser at the sheriff’s sale. Anumber of parties were cited in warranty, and answered to the same effect. A judgment was given for the defendants in the District and Supreme Courts; and upon the judgment in the last, the plaintiff prosecutes this writ of error.

The title of the plaintiff consists of the duplicate réceipts of the receiver of the land office at Natchitoches, Louisiana, (No. 1,270,) dated in July, 1839, by which he acknowledges the receipt, from the plaintiff, of full payment for the lands described in the receipt and petition; a patent certificate, of the same date and number, from the register of that office, certifying *260 the purchase of the plaintiff, and.his right to a patent; and a patent, issued in due form-, for the said lands, in pursuance of the act of Congress and the patent certificate.

The case of the defendants originates in these facts: The register of the land office at Natchitoches, in making up his duplicate certificate of purchase, to be returned to the General Land Office, inserted the name of James Bell for that of John Bell. That certificate was sent to the General Land Office, with the monthly returns of the register, and in July, 1844, a patent was issued in the name of James Bell, and sent to the register at Natchitoches, who retained it in his office till 1849. In 1849,’ John Bell sent to the office of the register his duplicate receipts, and the patent in the name of James Bell was delivered to him. Upon a representation of the facts to the Commissioner of the General Land Office, this patent was can-celled, and a new one issued to the plaintiff

It appears, from the proof in the case, that the plaintiff had a brother, named James Bell, who was his agent for making the entry, and that the land was sold in March, 1844, as his property, by the sheriff of Caddo, as is stated in the answers of the defendants.

The act, of Congress of the 24th April, 1820, providing for the sales of the public lands of the United States, enacts, “That the purchaser at private sale shall produce to the register of the land office a receipt of the Treasurer of the United States, or from the receiver of public moneys of the district, for the amount of the purchase money on any tract, before he shall enter the same at the land office.” At various times, since the passage of the act, the modes of conductihg sales at the different land offices of the United States have been prescribed by the Commissioner, and the evidence to be afforded to the purchaser designated. The circular issued in 1831 contains , the instructions under which the local officers were acting at the date of this entry. The instructions pertinent to this case are, that “when an individual applies to purchase a tract of land, he is required to file an application in writing therefor; on such application the register endorses his certificate, showing that the land is vacant and subject to entry, which certificate the applicant carries to the receiver, and is evidence on which the receiver permits payment to be made, and issues his receipt therefor; the duplicate of this is handed to the purchaser, as evidence of payment; and which should be surrendered when a patent, forwarded from the General Land Office, is delivered to him. The other receipt is handed to the register, who must immediately indicate the sale on his township plat, and enter the same on his tract book, and is trans *261 mitted to the General Land Office with, tlie monthly abstract of sales and certificates of purchase.”

The certificates of purchase are made according to forms furnished by the General Land Office. One is issued to the purchaser, and another is retained,' to be sent to the Commissioner. They should be duplicates; and the instructions to . the register in regard to them are, “ that the designation of the tract, in the certificates of purchases, is always'to be it writing, not in figures. The certificates are tó be filled up in-a plain, legible hand, and great care is to be taken in spelling the names of the purchasers. The monthly return "must always be accompanied by the receiver’s receipts and register’s certificates of purchase.” From this statement of the act of Congress and the regulations of.the Land Office, it will be seen that the embarrassment in which this title is involved proceeds from an error committed by the register at Natchitoches in making up the duplicates of his certificate of purchase — the duplicate intended for the General Land Office — and .from which the monthly abstract was prepared.

- The plaintiff was nowise responsible for this. He had paid his money into the receiver’s office, and obtained the receipt prescribed by the act of Congress of 1820, before cited.

He had obtained his certificate of purchase, evincing his title to a patent certificate. At this stage of the proceeding, the register of the land office, in completing his office papers, and in making up his returns for "Washington city, committed a mistake, which was not detected by the officers at Natchitoches in comparing their returns, (as they are ordered to do,) and eluded the vigilance of the officers at Washington. It was discovered at Natchitoches, when an agent of the plaintiff applied for the patent, and surrendered his duplicate receipt and certificate.

It was then discovered that the Christian name.of the plaintiff had been'inaccurately set out in the returns at"Washing- - ton and the patent. The Supreme Court of Louisiana say: “It appears, from the evidence, that the plaintiff and his brother ' James Bell purchased the land in dispute from the United-States on the same day — 3d July, 1839 — and that the patent certificates were issued in their respective names by the regis- , ter of the land office at Natchitoches, Louisiana, bearing .the same number.”

We interpret the papers from the'land office differently from the Supreme Court. There is no evidence, in our opinion, of ' more "than one sale — that evinced by the receiver’s receipt— and, in that receipt, John Bpll, the plaintiff is named as the purchaser. “We think there was but one certificate of pur *262 chase issued to a purchaser — that in favor of John Bell. The certificate of. purchase which contains the name of James Bell is found in the General Land Office. If that was intended for a James Bell, there should have been another for John Bell. But there is only a single certificate there, and the conclusion is irresistible, that the name James was entered by mistake for John.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 U.S. 252, 15 L. Ed. 614, 19 How. 252, 1856 U.S. LEXIS 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-hearne-scotus-1857.