Carr v. Fife

44 F. 713, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1172
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Washington
DecidedJanuary 7, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 44 F. 713 (Carr v. Fife) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carr v. Fife, 44 F. 713, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1172 (circtdwa 1891).

Opinion

Hakeord, J.

In this suit the plaintiff claims to be the equitable owner of a tract of land to which the .defendants have the legal title, derived through one Robert E. Sproule, who obtained a patent for it from the United States. The plaintiff alleges that he settled upon it in the year 1871, and thereafter acquired a vested right to it by full compliance on his part with the provisions of the act of congress commonly known as the “Homestead Law,” and the several acts amendatory thereof and supplemental thereto; and he especially claims the benefits of the laws affecting the homestead rights of persons w’ho were in the military service of the United States during the late civil war. The prayer of the complaint is for a decree adjudging that the plaintiff is the owner of the land; that the defendants hold the title thereto under the patent in trust for him; and for a conveyance of said title to him. The grounds alleged for this demand are error in law on the part of the officers of the land department in issuing the patent to Sproule, and fraud on the part of said Sproule and the defendants in procuring the cancellation of plaintiff’s homestead entry.

The case was commenced in 1887 in the district court for the second judicial district of the territory of Washington, holding terms at Tacoma, and proceeded to a final hearing in that court, but was not decided. After the admission of the state, a stipulation was signed, whereby the parties submitted the case for decision to the superior court of the state of Washington for Pierce county, but said court never acted upon said stipulation, and, after it had been filed, granted a motion made by the defendants to remove the case to this court, and signed an order to so transfer it. The plaintiff thereupon filed amotion to remand the case to said superior court, for the reason that this court has no jurisdiction iq the premises. I think, however, that this court has jurisdiction, and cannot law'fully remand the case. The decision of the case involves the construction and application of the acts of congress affecting the rights of settlers on the public lands of the United States who seek to acquire title to such lands from the government. The ease, therefore, is one arising under the constitution and laws of the United States, and one of which this court, if it had been in existence when the case was commenced, might have had jurisdiction. It was pending at the time the territory of Washington was transformed into a state, and, by request of the parties defendant, it has been transferred into this court. From the facts here stated it follows that, by the provisions of section 23 of the enabling, act, (25 U. S. St. 683,) the jurisdiction of this court has attached and is perfect.

It is objected that the request to have the case transferred to this court was not made to the proper' court, and not made in time. Section 23 of the enabling act referred to prescribes no limitation as to the time within which the request should be preferred, and leaves the parties to ascertain for themselves the “proper court” to receive and act upon the [715]*715request. In ibis instance the request was made to the state court which, had come into possession of the papers and record of the proceedings in the case, and was made prior to any act of the court in relation to the case amounting to an assumption of jurisdiction. The record shows that the first and only act of the state court has been to order the removal of the case to this court.

When the case came on for hearing, the plaintiff filed a motion to defer the trial, on the ground that the district judge who was presiding, and the only judge of the court in attendance, had been employed by some of the defendants as an attorney on matters not connected with the case since the suit was commenced, though prior to his appointment. It is not asserted that the judge is legally disqualified, and it is only insinuated that, because of transactions in the past, be is liable to be partial, and incapable of rendering a just decision. It would result in dogging the operations of the courts, and intolerable delays in most cases, to adopt the principle that no case can proceed before a judge who at any time may have had any business relationship with any party to it; and it would be mere weakness on the part of a judge to refuse to perform the functions of his office merely because of insinuations against his ability to act impartially. For these reasons, the motion to postpone was denied, and the case proceeded to a hearing upon the merits.

The record show's that in 1873 Sproule was allowed to contest the plaintiff’s right to this land, and, as the result of said contest, after successive hearings before the register and receiver of the district land-office, the commissioner of the general land-office, and the secretary of the interior, the plaintiff’s homestead entry was canceled on the records of the general land-olfico at Washington, and thereafter said Sproule was allowed to (¡ntor the land under the provisions of the pre-emption law, and on the 13th of December, 1875, a patent was issued conveying the title to him. Any further or more detailed statement of the facts in the case is unnecessary. In their argument counsel for the plaintiff have taken the position most favorable for him which they could take, by assuming that the pleadings and facts shown by the record arc such as to present fairly the questions, — whether the officers of fhe land department had any power to cancel the plaintiff’s homestead entry, — ’and whether the defendants are precluded from claiming any rights for themselves under the patent by reason of fraudulent practices in obtaining the cancellation of plaintiff’s entry. I will, to abbreviate this decision, make the same assumption, and let the decision of those questions determine the case.

As to the first question, contradictory opinions have been given by the courts. On one hand, the supreme court of the state of Michigan, in an able opinion, has sustained fully the plaintiff’s argument and contention in this case. Johnson v. Lee, 47 Mich. 52, 10 N. W. Rep. 76. On the othep hand, the same case was taken upon a writ of error to the supreme court of the United States, and was by the court of last resort, after full argument and due consideration of the able opinion of the supreme court of Michigan, reversed. Lee v. Johnson, 116 U. S. 48, 6 Sup. [716]*716Ct. Rep. 249. This last decision meets and overrules every argument made touching this point, and it is conclusive upon this court, so that any discussion of the question here would be idle. I am constrained, therefore, to hold that the secretary of the interior had authority to inquire and decide as to the validity of the plaintiff’s claim to this land.

The questions which the secretary was called upon to decide were as to the good faith of the plaintiff, — whether he had actually, within the time limited by law, established his residence upon the land, with the intention of acquiring it for a home; whether he had continued to actually reside upon the land; whether he was really engaged in improving the land, or in good faith intending to do so; or whether he was only making a col-orable pretense of residing upon and improving the land for the purpose of stripping it of its valuable timber, and acquiring it for speculative purposes, without complying with the terms of the homestead law. These are all questions of fact, and the secretary’s decision thereon was final. No other questions appear to have been involved in the contest in the land department.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 F. 713, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carr-v-fife-circtdwa-1891.