Cameron v. United States

148 U.S. 301, 13 S. Ct. 595, 37 L. Ed. 459, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2233
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 27, 1893
Docket42
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 148 U.S. 301 (Cameron v. United States) 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
Cameron v. United States, 148 U.S. 301, 13 S. Ct. 595, 37 L. Ed. 459, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2233 (1893).

Opinion

Me. Justice Brown,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

This case was originally dismissed upon the ground that the question at issue between the parties' being the fact whether defendant had claim or color of title to the lands in .question,: acquired in good faith, there was no evidence of the .value.of such claim or color of title, even if the same were capable of pecuniary estimation) of wThich the court expressed a doubt. 146- US. 533.

The case was subsequently reinstated upon its being made to appear that the enclosed tract contained 1200 acres; that, defendant bad been engaged since 1883 in the business of grazing cattle upon this grant and the lands adjacent thereto; that his fence enclosed and controlled the only unappropriated water in a section of grazing country embracing not less than 100 square miles; that without such fence.the use and control of the enclosed land and water would be of no use to him; that if he had. not the ability to maintain the fence, the land and water would be at once seized and appropriated by other persons, and defendant’s cattle driven and kept away; that he would be unable to conduct his cattle business, in. .this sec *304 tion; and that the possession, use. and occupation of such enclosure exceeds the value of $10,000. These facts make a wholly different showing, and the case is therefore properly before us on its merits.

1. A preliminary objection is made by the appellee to the consideration of the case upon the ground that the proceeding is in the nature of a common law action; that it was tried without the intervention of a jury, and without a stipulation waiving a trial by jury; that the Supreme Court of Arizona could .not properly consider any of the matters raised by the bill of exceptions, nor can this court do so; that all the Supreme Court could do was to affirm the judgment of the District Court; and that all this court can do is to affirm the judgment of the Supreme Court of Arizona. By section 2 of the act of February 25, 1885, under which this prosecution was commenced,- the district attorney was given authority “ to institute a civil suit in _ the proper . . . Territorial District Court in the name -of the United States, and against the parties named or described who shall be in charge of or controlling the enclosure complained of as defendants; and jurisdiction, is also hereby conferred on any . . . Territorial District Court having jurisdiction over the locality where the land enclosed, or any part thereof, shall be situated to hear and determine proceedings in equity, by writ of injunction, to restrain -violations of the provisions of this act. ... In any case, if the enclosure shall be found to be unlawful, the court shall make the proper order, judgment or decree for the destruction of the .enclosure in a summary way, unless the enclosure shall be removed by the defendant within five days after the order of the'court.”

It is a sufficient'answer to this objection of the Government to say that this is not a common law action, but a summary proceeding more in the nature of a suit in equity, and that the decree provided by the .act for the abatement of the enclosure is unknown to an action at common law as administered in this country. Proceedings by assize of nuisance and by writ quod permittat prosternere have been abolished by statute in England, and are now obsolete, if ever used, in this country. *305 3 Bl. Com. 221. In cases like the present the only common law remedy available to the United States would be an action of ejectment or trespass to oust the intruders. The proceeding contemplated by this act is more nearly-analogous to the summary remedies provided for the enforcement of mechanics’ liens considered by this court in Idaho and Oregon Land Co. v. Bradbury, 132 U. S. 509, or the special proceedings under the territorial statutes of Utah discussed in Stringfellow v. Cain, 99 U. S. 610 ; Cannon v. Pratt, 99 U. S. 619; Neslin v. Wells, 104 U. S. 428; Gray v. Howe, 108 U. S. 12; and in Ely v. New Mexico &c. Railroad Co., 129 U. S. 291, appealed, from the Supreme Court of Arizona. In these cases the validity of special statutory proceedings of this description was sustained, and in Hecht v. Boughton, 105 U. S. 235, it was held that under the act of April 7,1874,18 Stat. 27, c. 80, an appeal was the only proceeding by which this court could review the judgment or decree of a territorial court in a case where there was not a trial by jury.

, The practice pursued in this case conformed to the territorial statutes of Arizona, which provide for a waiver by oral consent in open court of a trial by jury, in actions, arising upon ’ contract, and with the assent of the court, in other cases. The case is not governed by section 649 of the Bevised Statutes.-

2. The act of Congress which forms the basis of this proceeding was passed in view of a practice which had become common in the Western Territories of enclosing large areas .of lands of the United .States by associations of cattle raisers, wTho were mere trespassers, without shadow of title to such lands, and surrounding them. by barbed wire fences, by which persons desiring to become settlers upon such lands were driven or frightened away, in some cases by threats or violence. The law was, however, never intended to operate upon persons who had taken possession under a bona fide claim or color of title; nor was it intended that, in a proceeding to abate a fence erected in good faith, the legal validity of the defendant’s title to the land should be put in issue, it is a sufficient defence to such a proceeding to show that the lands enclosed were not public lands of the United States, or that defendant had claim *306 or color of .title, made or acquired in good faith, or an assarted right thereto, by.or under claim made in good faith, with a view to entry thereof at the proper land office under the general laws of the United States. As the question whether the lands' enclosed by the defendant in this case were public lands of the United States depends upon the question whether lie had claim or color of title to them, the two questions may be properly considered together.

Defendant justified under an expediente• of the Mexican Government which appears to have been obtained in the following manner: On July 19, 1821, Don Manuel Bus tillo applied to the governor intendente of Sonora and Sinaloa, to purchase at auction four square leagues of land for the raising of stock at the place named de la Zanja, “ three square leagues of land (tres sitios de tierra) in the same presidio in which I reside and outside of the boundaries thereof and on the side of the north, and one square.more (un sitio

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 U.S. 301, 13 S. Ct. 595, 37 L. Ed. 459, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cameron-v-united-states-scotus-1893.