Carr v. Fife

156 U.S. 494, 15 S. Ct. 427, 39 L. Ed. 508, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2155
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 4, 1895
Docket215
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 156 U.S. 494 (Carr v. Fife) 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
Carr v. Fife, 156 U.S. 494, 15 S. Ct. 427, 39 L. Ed. 508, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2155 (1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shiras,

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

The ninth specification of error complains of the refusal of the court below to remand the cause to the Superior Court of Pierce County upon -the showing that, after the admission of the State-of Washington, it had been stipulated by the counsel of the respective parties that said cause might be-tried in said Superior Court. But the record shows that the reasons assigned in the court below for the motion to remand did not *497 mention such a stipulation, and it is out of time and place to’ urge it in this court.

The tenth assignment asserts want of jurisdiction in the Circuit Court, at the time of entering the final decree, because the record did not contain a specific allegation that the matter in dispute exceeded the sum of two thousand dollars. If the record were defective in the particular mentioned, we think that the amendment by affidavits, disclosing that the value of the matter ip dispute largely exceeded the jurisdictional amount, cured the defect. The procedure.would have been more formal if the decree had been set aside, and renewed after the amendment had been .made; but the term at which the decree was entered had not ended, so that the court still had power to permit an amendment of the record, and we do not feel compelled to reverse the decree because of the manner in which the court below exercised its power of amendment. Besides, it is not clear that the record was defective in the respect claimed. The suit was not one to recover a sum of money, but to decide a question of title to a considerable tract of land, and the plaintiff put in evidence in support of his claim, and of course before the decree was; entered, tending to show that the land was worth more than ten thousand dollars; and if it be competent, as has always been held, to show by ex parte affidavits the amount of the value of the matter in dispute, it would seem that evidence to the same effect, deliberately.put in by the very party now suggesting the defect, should be regarded as sufficient. It is also observable that the plaintiff, in his petition for an appeal, averred that the value of the property in dispute exceeded the sum of ten thousand dollars, and while, doubtless, that allegation, made for the purpose of showing that this, court has jurisdiction on appeal, would not, of itself,, supply the defect in the record of the Circuit Court, it is- convincing that, in point of fact, the land in dispute was worth more than two thousand dollars, and that the plaintiff was not injured by the action of the court in permitting the record to be amended by affidavits supplying the formal averments of valué.

Another error assigned is to the refusal of the court to *498 direct that the cause should be tried by the Honorable Lorenzo Sawyer, Circuit Judge, or in the event that it be found inconvenient for the Circuit Judge to try the cause, that the same be certified to the adjacent circuit of Oregon. The basis of this motion was an affidavit made by the plaintiff, alleging that th¿ District Judge of the District of -Washington, before whom the cause was about to come on for argument, had been, prior to his appointment as such judge, of counsel for some of the defendants.

The learned judge, in refusing the motion, stated that the motion was put upon the statement that he had been employed as an attorney by some of the defendants before his appointment to the office in matters not connected with the case, and that, as he was the only judge then present' and able to try the cause, he was of opinion that it was his duty to do so.

Understanding then, as we do, that the ground of objection was that the judge had been, prior to his appointment, attorney for some of the defendants on matters not connected with the present case, we do not perceive that he was disqualified from trying the cause. In such a state of facts, the judge must be permitted to decide for himself whether it was improper for him to sit in the trial of the suit.

This was a proceeding in equity whereby Anthony P. Carr sought to have the defendants, who derived their titles to certain lands from Robert E. Sproul, to whom had been granted in 1875 a patent for said lands, declared trustees for his benefit on the ground that the patent had been improperly issued, and the substantial question in the case is as to what effect ought to be given to the proceedings and decision of the land office.

Appellant’s first contention is that the tribunal that tried the case between Carr and Sproul was illegal in respect that instead of the register acting alone, the receiver took part in the hearing and decision. It is provided, in section 2297, Revised.Statutes, that proof of abandonment is to be made out to the satisfaction of the register of the land office, and the record discloses that the evidence in the present case, on the question of abandonment, was put in before the register and the.re *499 ceiver, and that the finding was signed by both officers. No objection, however, seems to have been made while the hearing was in progress before them, nor was the participation of the receiver made a ground of exception in the appeal to the Commissioner of the General Land Office, or in the further appeal to the Secretary of the Interior. Nor was such participation complained of by the plaintiff in his bill of complaint, or called to the attention of the court below. We do not consider it necessary to decide whether in such an inquiry in the land office the receiver may validly take part, because we think an objection on that ground is made too late in this court.

The next position taken by the appellant is that the register and receiver went outside of their jurisdiction, which it is claimed was restricted to the question of abandonment, and recommended the cancellation of Carr’s entry on other grounds than that of abandonment.

An examination of the proceedings in the land office does not sustain this position. They began with Sproul’s application for a contest, in which Carr’s abandonment of the tract is alleged. This was followed by the notice from the register and receiver to Carr that such a contest had been initiated, and fixing a time and place for him to attend and “ furnish testimony concerning said alleged abandonment,” and the record discloses that a large amount of evidence was put in on that issue.

It is true that the register and receiver, in their written decision, made August 18, 1873, wherein they decided in favor of the contestant, Sproul, used the following language: “ From these occasional visits to the cláim we can but draw the conclusion that said A. P. Carr did not wholly abandon his said claim, but we are more strongly of the opinion that the utter disregard of the spirit of this beneficent law, which gives to the poor man upon easy and reasonable terms what he could not otherwise obtain, would in equity be sufficient ground for cancellation of the homestead entry No. 1368, of A. P. Carr.” Standing .alone, this language would seem to give some color to the contention that the officers had failed to find the fact *500 of abandonment, and had placed their decision on merely, equitable grounds.

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Bluebook (online)
156 U.S. 494, 15 S. Ct. 427, 39 L. Ed. 508, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carr-v-fife-scotus-1895.