Berry v. Ginaca

5 F. 475
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 F. 475 (Berry v. Ginaca) 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
Berry v. Ginaca, 5 F. 475 (uscirct 1880).

Opinion

Hillyer, D. J.

The complaint in this suit states that on December 1, 1874, the plaintiff sold to the defendants J. Ginaca and A. Gintz, jointly, certain real estate, describing it, for the sum of $1,998.80; that no part of this has been paid, and that plaintiff has a lien as vendor upon the lands described for such unpaid purchase money; that Friend, Terry, and Doane claim some interest in the land which is subordinate to the vendor’s lien. The prayer is for judgment against Ginaca and Gintz for the $1,998.80, with interest; for a decree subordinating the claim of Friend, Terry, and Doane to [476]*476the plaintiff’s vendor’s lien; for a sale of the lands, etc. There is nothing in the complaint to indicate that the sale by plaintiff to Ginaca and Gintz was made by him as town-site trustee, or in any other than his individual capacity. Ginaca and Gintz demurred; the demurrer was overruled, and they assigned to answer in 10 days. Having failed to answer in that time, default was entered against them.

The defendants Friend, Terry, and Doane answered, denying any sale from Berry to Ginaca and Gintz, or conveyance by him otherwise than as a town-site trustee, and setting up a purchase by them at sheriff’s sale, upon an alleged judgment obtained by them against Ginaca and Gintz by confession.

The laws of the United States (Bev. St. § 2387) authorize, in a given case, a county judge to enter at the proper land-office land settled upon and occupied as a town site “in trust for the several use and benefit of th'e occupants thereof, according to their respective interests; the execution of which trust, as to the disposal of the lots in such town and the proceeds of the sale thereef,” to be regulated by the state legislature.

The legislature of Nevada, after providing a mode of ascertaining the interests of the respective occupants, has required the trustee to convey, by a good deed, any parcel of the land to the person entitled, according to the right as it existed at the time the entry was made. 2 Comp. Laws Nev. § 3857.

After the patent has issued to the trustee from the United States, he is required to make such deed to the person legally entitled “on payment of his * * * proper and due proportion of the purchase money for said land,” together with certain other allowances to the trustee for making the deed, acquiring the title, and administering the trust, “and the foregoing charge shall be full payment for all expenses attending the execution, except for revenue stamps.” Id. § 3862.

Any shares or parcels of the land not legally conveyed within a fixed time are to be sold to the highest bidder for the benefit of the town in the erection of public buildings, to [477]*477which purpose the proceeds must be applied after paying purchase money and expenses. Id. § 3863. With these laws in force the plaintiff, Berry, in the year 1870, he then being district judge of Humboldt county, entered in conformity therewith 640 acres of land in trust for the several use and benefit of the inhabitants of the town of Winnemucca. After a contest with the Central Pacific Railroad Company about a part of the land so entered, the plaintiff, about May, 1874, received a patent for 200 acres as trustee for the inhabitants and occupants thereof, under the law of the United States above set forth. When the time for payment came, before the patent issued, the plaintiff sought from the inhabitants of the town the money to pay for the land, but they declined to furnish it. He then, in a conversation with a few of the inhabitants, agreed to furnish the money himself if they, the inhabitants, would allow him to take the vacant and unoccupied lands within the limits of the quarter section, to which they assented. Ginaca, one of the defendants, at that time had a quartz mill on one of the quarter sections, and agreed to furnish the money to pay for that quarter section at the land-office, and also to pay the plaintiff as trustee the town-site charges. Ginaca furnished §400 to enter the 160 acres on which his mill stood. Before the patent came Ginaca became considerably indebted to plaintiff, and asked him to let the §400 go into the general account, promising to pay for the land when the plaintiff should give him title. Six months later the plaintiff, as trustee under the laws aforesaid, deeded to Ginaca and Gintz 99 99-100 acres, that being the portion of the quarter section to which there was no other claimant. At this time no purchase money was paid by Ginaca and Gintz, other than the §400 as stated. The value of the land at the town-site rates would be about $30 an acre.

The foregoing is the substance of the plaintiff’s own version of the transaction, (Ginaca being dead, his version of it has not been obtained;) and it appearing from it that he took the legal title to these lands, as a trustee under the statute, for the use and benefit of those legally entitled as occupants, [478]*478the question is whether the plaintiff can under such circumstances have a vendor’s lien upon the land in dispute. We think it is clear that he cannot.

The authorities cited by plaintiff to show that a trustee may have a lien, have no reference to a vendor’s lien. They merely state the doctrine that in suits between trustee and cestui que trust, if there is a fraud under the control of the court, the costs as well as the charges and expenses of trustees, when properly incurred, constitute a lien on the trust fund or estate in favor of the trustee, and he will not be compelled to part with the legal title until his claim is dischargd. Hill on Trustees, 567.

In this ease there is no fund in court, nor is the cestui que trust calling for the legal title. The trustee has long since conveyed the legal estate to him. Under the statute, before so doing the trustee has a right to demand from the occupant to whom the deed is made everything to which he is entitled. This includes the occupant’s share of the purchase money paid to the United States for the land, and some other sums for expenses of administering the trust. It is only upon payment of all these that the occupant is entitled to demand a deed. Indeed, in most if not all cases, it would be an abuse of the trust to convey without at least a prepayment of the grantee’s share of the original purchase money. At all events, there is nothing in the statute giving the trustee a lien for these .charges should he see fit to convey before they are paid. A vendor’s lien can exist only for unpaid purchase money, if we admit the trustee in this case may be called, properly, a vendor.

It .is a misapplication of terms to call the charges and expenses of a trustee, in administering his trust, purchase money, when he deeds the legal estate to his cestui que trust in execution of his duty as trustee. If the money paid to the United States is to be distinguished from the costs and charges, then that ’money G-inaca has paid. The testimony shows that before the cash entry was made by the plaintiff, as trustee, he received from G-inaca $400, to be applied to the payment of the land so entered at the rate of $2.50 per acre, The quan[479]*479tity actually conveyed, by the plaintiff to Ginaca and Gintz was a fraction less than 100 acres, so that the plaintiff in fact received from Ginaca before entry of the land more than the amount which can properly be called purchase money.

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Bluebook (online)
5 F. 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berry-v-ginaca-uscirct-1880.