Calhoun v. Violet

173 U.S. 60, 19 S. Ct. 324, 43 L. Ed. 614, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1417
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 20, 1899
Docket180
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 173 U.S. 60 (Calhoun v. Violet) 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
Calhoun v. Violet, 173 U.S. 60, 19 S. Ct. 324, 43 L. Ed. 614, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1417 (1899).

Opinion

Mr. Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff sued to recover a described.piece of land upon the assumption that the defendant held it in trust for him. The prayer of the petition was that the trust be recognized' and the defendant be decreed to make conveyance of the land. A demurrer was interposed, which was sustained by the trial court, and the suit was thereupon dismissed. On appeal to the Supreme Court of the Territory, the action of the trial court was affirmed. The present appeal was then taken, and the issue which arises is this: .Did the court below err in deciding that the petition of the plaintiff did not state a cause of action ?

The facts alleged in the petition and shown by the exhibits which were .annexed to it are as follows: The plaintiff Calhoun, an honorably discharged soldiei’, ivho was in all general respects qualified to claim a homestead under the law, Rev. Stat. §§ 2304 et seq., seeking to avail himself of his right, entered, on April 23, 1889, at the United States land office at *61 Guthrie, Oklahoma, “ lots 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10 of section 3, township 11 north, range 3 west, in the aforesaid land district.” The petition alleged that. Calhoun had performed all the subsequent acts required by law to make the entry valid. On May 21, 1889, Theodore W. Echelberger contested the entry on the ground that Calhoun had come into the Territory of Oklahoma before the time when by law he had a right to do so, in violation of the statute df the United States and of the proclamation of the President issued in pursuance thereof. 25 Stat. 980, 1004; Payne v. Robertson, 169 U. S. 323; Smith v. Townsend, 148 U. S. 490. On the 27th of May, 1890, James McCornack also filed a contest against both Calhoun and Echelberger, alleging that they were both disqualified because they had during the prohibited period entered the Territory. On June 29, 1890, contest was also filed by Thomas J. Bailey, charging the illegality of the claims of Calhoun, Echelberger and McCornack, averring that he, Bailey, was the first legal settler on the land and entitled to it. On January 25, 1890, one Linthicum filed a contest against lot No. 10, embraced in the entry made by Calhoun, on the ground that that lot was on a different side of the Canadian River from the balance of the land embraced in the entry, and as the Canadian River was a meandering stream j the entry could not lawfully cover land situated on both sidqs thereof, hence lot 10 had been illegally included in the Calhoun entry.

In February, 1890, the Commissioner of the General Land Office instructed the local land office to suspend, among others, the entry made by Calhoun, because the land covered by it was on both sides of a meandering stream, and hence entry thereof had been improperly allowed. The instruction transmitted to the local officer concluded as follows: “You will notify the claimant of this fact” (that is, of the suspension of his entry) “ and allow him thirty days from receipt of notice in which to elect which, portion of his claim he will relinquish, so that the land remaining will be -confined to one side, of such stream. Should any of the parties desire to do so, he may relinquish his entire entry; in which event an applica *62 tion to make a second entry of a specific tract will receive due consideration. If .any of the entrymen fail or refuse to take action within the time specified, his entry will be held for cancellation. Notify the parties in accordance with circular of October 28, 1886, (5 L. D. 204,) and in due time transmit the evidence of such notice with the report of your action to this office.” Conforming to this notice, Calhoun, on the 17th of March, 1890, filed in the local office a formal relinquishment of “all that portion of land on the right bank of the North Canadian River known and designated as lot No. 10 (ten) in the N. W. quarter of section 3, township 11 N., range 3 west, Guthrie land district, the same having been embraced within my original entry No. 19, dated April 23, a.d. 1889.”

On the 30th of October, 1890, all the contests above referred to were duly heard before the register and receiver of the local office, and it was decided that both the plaintiff and Echelberger were disqualified from taking the land because they had gone into the Territory before the time fixed by law, and that McCornack was entitled to enter the land. The claims of Bailey and Linthicum were rejected. From this decision the contests were carried to the Commissioner of the General Land Office, by whom uhe action of. the local officers was affirmed, and thereupon an appeal was prosecuted to the Secretary of the Interior, with a like result. Subsequently, in 1894, on a petition for review by Calhoun and another of the parties, the Secretary of the Interior reiterated the previous ruling, affirming the action of the Commissioner of the General Land Office in rejecting the claims of Calhoun and others on the ground that they had been made in violation of law. Pending the appeals and decisions thereon as above stated, Calhoun filed with the Commissioner of the General Land Office- an application complaining of the order which had compelled him to elect to which side of the river he would confine his entry, asserting that the action of the Department was illegal, as the stream was not a meandering one, and asking a revocation of the order.

. The petition filed in the court below moreover contained an *63 averment that the rulings of the local land officers, of the Commissioner of the General Land Office and of the Secretary of the Interior, above stated, were null and void, because all these officers had misconceived the evidence and' disregarded its weight, and was in violation of law, because the section of the act of 1889, forbidding going into the Territory before a named date of persons desirous of taking land therein, had no application to honorably discharged soldiers entitled as such to make a.homestead entry; The land as to which it was averred the trust existed and.a conveyance of which was sought was lot 10, as to which the relinquishment had been filed, under the circumstances above mentioned. It was charged that, despite the protest of Calhoun, a final certificate for this lot had been issued to the defendant, with full knowledge on his part of the claim of Calhoun, hence it was asserted the trust arose and the obligation to convey resulted.

The court below held that it was bound by the action of the Land Department in so far as that department had decided as a matter of fact that Calhoun had made entry of his land by going into the Territory contrary to the restrictions imposed by the act of Congress, and that in so far as the ruling of the Land Department rested upon a matter of law, it had been correctly decided that Calhoun, as a discharged soldier, was not entitled to go into the Territory contrary to law, and thereby acquire a priority over other.citizens.

The first of these rulings was manifestly correct.

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Bluebook (online)
173 U.S. 60, 19 S. Ct. 324, 43 L. Ed. 614, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calhoun-v-violet-scotus-1899.