Caldwell v. Bush

45 P. 488, 6 Wyo. 342, 1896 Wyo. LEXIS 19
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 45 P. 488 (Caldwell v. Bush) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caldwell v. Bush, 45 P. 488, 6 Wyo. 342, 1896 Wyo. LEXIS 19 (Wyo. 1896).

Opinions

Groesbeck, Chief Justice.

This was an action brought by the plaintiffs in error in the district court for Albany County, to, in effect, restrain the defendant from continuing trespasses upon a tract of one hundred and sixty acres of land in that'County. The plaintiffs claim title under a final certificate of purchase from the United States issued to one Simon Bales, a desert-land entryman, for lands embracing the lands in controversy, and by conveyance from Bales to plaintiffs. They also claim to be in actual possession of the land in controversy, and that defendant pretending that the title of plaintiffs has been avoided by the cancellation of the entry of their grantor, Bales, and that he has obtained a right through his homestead filing on said land, is guilty of forcible, repeated, and continuing trespasses upon the land to the permanent and irreparable injury of the plaintiffs. The defendant in his answer and cross petition admits the issuing of the final certificate of purchase to the grantor of plaintiffs, the conveyance by him of the land to the plaintiffs, the assertion of his own claim and his entry upon the land, and that he continues and intends to continue in possession of said land under his homestead entry thereon. He further sets up that after the delivery of the final certificate to Bales the grantor of the plaintiff, the commissioner of the General Land Office, upon the report of a special agent, held the entry of Bales for cancelation, and after notice to the entryman, instituted a hearing upon which certain findings were made by the Register and Receiver of the U. S. Land Office, at Cheyenne, Wyo., to the effect that the land had not been irrigated, that the entryman, Bales, did not own a sufficient water right for the purpose of irrigating the tract filed on by him, that the entry was not for his use, but for the use .of the plaintiffs, that the land was natural meadow land, and was not subject to entry under the desert-land act; and that thereupon, the said local land officers decided that the entry was fraudulent and void, and recommended the cancellation thereof.

[350]*350The answer and cross petition further alleges that the said Commissioner of the General Land Office, upon a review of the evidence and findings of the local land officers, approved the same, and cancelled the certificate of purchase; and that after the cancellation of the desert-land entry, the defendant, Bush, made a homestead filing on 160 acres included in the desert-land entry of Bales, and entered the lands in controversy by virtue of said filing.

This pleading further sets up that the hearing béfore the local land office was made upon the application of Bales, the desert-land entryman and his grantees, the plaintiffs herein, who were notified of the time and place of said hearing; that Caldwell, one of the plaintiffs, was present at the time of said hearing, and that Messrs. Lacey & Liner appeared as attorneys for Bales, the original entryman.

The reply denies that the application for such hearing was made by the desert-land entryman and his grantees; denies notice of the hearing; denies the truth of the findings of the Register and Receiver of the land office; alleges that the evidence upon which said findings were made was false and fraudulent, and that the officials of the land office were thereby fraudulently imposed upon, deceived, and misled in their conclusions. In support of the petition, the reply further alleges an “exclusive,” peaceable and actual possession and occupation of the lands by the plaintiffs and their grantor, and that they have at all times enclosed them with a substantial fence since September 14, 1884, and for that reason, the said lands were not subject to entry. Other new matters set up in the reply, as it is termed' in the brief, are waived by counsel for plaintiffs in error as not pertinent to the present inquiry.

The case was finally heard upon the pleadings and the evidence by the trial court, and after its refusal to find specifically certain facts requested by the plaintiffs, it made its findings of fact and conclusions of law thereon, and rendered judgment and decree for the defendant, [351]*351that the plaintiffs take nothing by the action, and that the defendant recover costs. A motion for a new trial was made and overruled by the court, and the cause is before us on the pleadings, and a bill of exceptions containing the evidence.

The plaintiffs in error, who were plaintiffs below, contend that the determination of the case rests upon four propositions, any one of which, if established, is sufficient to maintain the position of the plaintiffs in error and to warrant a reversal: 1. The Commissioner of the General Land Office has no power to cancel a final certificate of purchase in the sense of judicially determining the rights of the holder. 2. The proceedings which resulted in the pretended cancellation of the desert-land entry were without jurisdiction for want of notice. 3. That the desert-land entry is within the protection of section 7 of the Act of Congress of March 3, 1891, entitled, “An Act to Repeal Timber Culture Laws and for Other Purposes” (Sup. Rev. Stat. U. S., 2d ed., p. 943), and therefore beyond the power of the Commissioner of the General Land Office to affect it in any manner. 4. That the entry of the defendant upon the land in controversy was a forcible intrusion and trespass upon the actual possession and enclosure of the plaintiffs, and that the defendant by such entry could not gain any rights whatever in the land in controversy. These propositions will be disposed of in their order.

1. There can be no doubt now, after repeated decisions of the Federal courts, followed by the State courts, that the land department is a tribunal established by Congress for the purpose of regulating the method of disposing of the public domain open to entry and settlement. It may decide the rights of conflicting claimants to portions of the public lands, and is also empowered to cancel a fraudulent entry of public lands allowed by the register and receiver of the local land office or other officials of the land department, upon false proofs of settlement, occupancy, and improvement, and undoubtedly of their rec[352]*352lamation of desert lands, where patent is not issued, and where the legal title to the land is still in the government. This was decided in an early case, which has been frequently sanctioned in later decisions. (Harkness v. Underhill, 1 Black, 316, 325, followed in the recent case of Orchard v. Alexander, 157 U. S., 372.) The sovereign owner of these lands may prescribe rules for the acquisition of title to any portion of the public domain by its citizens, and for parting with its title thereto, and has so provided by many legislative acts by creating a department to take initial proof of the rights of claimants to the bounty of the government. To secure the title to lands under the desert-land laws, there must be proof that the land is desert in character, and that it has been reclaimed from such condition. This is as necessary as to make the payment for the lands. It is part of the consideration moving to the government that the land shall be unfit for agriculture in its natural state, and has been reclaimed from its barren condition by irrigation and cultivation. The entry man, when he has fully reclaimed the land and made final proof thereof to the satisfaction of the land department, is entitled to a patent certificate, as it is conveniently termed. Prior to the delivery of this receipt, the entryman has not a title, but the right to one, upon compliance with the conditions imposed upon him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 P. 488, 6 Wyo. 342, 1896 Wyo. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caldwell-v-bush-wyo-1896.