Delles v. Second National Bank of Brownsville

50 P. 190, 7 Wyo. 66, 1897 Wyo. LEXIS 12
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 50 P. 190 (Delles v. Second National Bank of Brownsville) 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
Delles v. Second National Bank of Brownsville, 50 P. 190, 7 Wyo. 66, 1897 Wyo. LEXIS 12 (Wyo. 1897).

Opinion

Potter, Justice.

Plaintiff in error complains of a judgment of the district court for Albany County in favor of the defendants in error for the recovery of the possession of the southwest quarter of section four (4), in township sixteen (16), north of range seventy-six (76), west of the sixth principal meridian, located in the county of Albany in this State. Said lands were public lands of the United States, the strict legal title to which remained in the government, no patent having issued to any one therefor.

The right of the defendants in error to the possession of the land was claimed by reason of final certificate from the United States upon a desert-land entry, including that tract with others, made by one Thomas J. Fisher and sundry mesne conveyances, which vested in them all the right, title, and interest of said Fisher under his said entry.

Plaintiff in error was in possession under a homestead entry, made February 15, 1894, for which he held receiver’s duplicate receipt; and it was claimed on his behalf that the entry of Fisher had been canceled, and that there were no existing rights thereunder. To sustain that claim there was introduced in evidence, upon the trial, a letter of the assistant commissioner of the General Land Office to the register and receiver of the local land office, dated November 20, 1888, wherein it is stated that in June, 1877, Thomas J. Fisher applied to enter certain lands, including the tract in controversy, under the desert-land act, which application being defective in form and unaccompanied by the payment required, [69]*69was rejected, and returned to the applicant. That in the meantime on September 5, 1877, one Henry Carver filed a declaratory statement, Ho. 444, covering the land in controversy, alleging settlement August 10, 1877. That Fisher initiated a contest against the claim of Carver upon which a hearing was had, both parties appearing with witnesses February 19, 1878. That on April 19, 1880, Fisher made desert-land entry Ho. 197 for the land, and on July 3, 1880, the declaratory statement of Carver was canceled upon relinquishment. That April 29, 1880, the commissioner decided that according to the testimony adduced in the trial of February 19, 1878, the tract of land then in controversy was clearly shown to be non-desert in character within the meaning of the desert-land act, so that irrespective of other considerations, Mr. Fisher’s entry is without foundation in fact or in law; and approved the action of the local office in rejecting the same in favor of Mr. Carver’s declaratory statement, and advising the local office to notify claimant of his right to appeal. That February 16, 1883, -the Register reported that Mr. Fisher had taken no appeal upon his D. L. E., Ho. 197. That April 9, 1883, final certificate was issued upon the same. The letter then proceeds as follows: “In view of the commissioner’s decision, as above noted, based upon the evidence given during the trial, that the land embraced in D. L. E., No. 197, was not properly subject to entry under the D. L. act, said entry is therefore held for cancellation, and sixty days allowed for appeal. Ton will advise the party in interest of the contents of this letter, in accordance with the instructions contained in circular of October 28, 1886, copy herewith inclosed, and at the proper time report the result to this office.”

There was introduced by the defendants in error a letter dated Jan. 11, 1889, from the receiver of the local land office to Mr. Fisher, referring to the above-mentioned letter of the commissioner, and notifying him of the effect thereof, and also a letter from the register to the same [70]*70party, dated March 11, 1890, referring to the former letter, and notifying him of the effect of the same letter of the commissioner, and that he had sixty days from the receipt of such letter of March 11, 1890, to file his appeal from the decision of the commissioner of November, 1888. Subsequently by letter of the register to the commissioner the registry return letter to Fisher uncalled for, and registry return receipt unsigned, was inclosed and transmitted to show service of notice, and the letter stated that no action had been taken in the matter. From the other correspondence between the commissioner’s office and the local office which we find in the evidence, it appears that June 17, 1890, the commissioner wrote the register and receiver stating that they had on May 28, 1890, reported for cancellation for expiration of statutory period the desert-land entry of Thomas J. Fisher, No. 197, F. C. No. 48, and that the entry “has therefore been this day canceled.”

Upon these facts it is insisted that the entry of Fisher was duly canceled, and that neither he nor his grantees had thereafter any interest in the premises. The additional fact ought to be mentioned that, on the trial, it was sought to prove the death of Fisher some four or five years prior thereto, but the witnesses could only testify that they understood he had died ‘ ‘ between four and six years ago.”

As the decision of the commissioner of November 20, 1888, is entirely based upon the decision of April 29, 1880, which was rendered in course of the contest of Fisher against Carver, it would seem that the decision of the last-named date ought to have been produced, if, indeed, it is not a necessary part of the proceedings resulting in the final cancellation of Fisher’s entry. As we read the proceedings, there appears to have been a misconception of the facts in the minds of counsel in some important particulars. In the first place, it is very evident that the contest initiated by Fisher against the claim of Carver was closed by the decision of the commissioner, April 29, [71]*711880, approving decision of register and receiver ; and that the letter of November, 1888, formed no part of the proceedings in that contest. It is also evident that in that contest no entry of Fisher was involved, for the reason that the trial was held in February, 1878, and his entry was not made until April 19, 1880. He may have, and probably did, at the time of initiating the contest, make an application to enter, but the entry was not received and made of record. Therefore it is entirely clear that the decision of the commissioner, rendered April 29, 1880, -had no reference whatever, and it would have been improper that it should have, to the entry of Fisher, No. 197, made April 19, 1880.

In addition to the fact that such entry could not, in the very nature of things, have been involved in the contest which was tried long before it was made, is the almost absolute probability, arising from the slight difference in time, that the fact that Fisher had made an entry which had been accepted, but ten days before his letter of April 29, 1880, was not within the knowledge of the commissioner. The apparent assumption of the assistant commissioner, in 1888, that the letter of April, 1880, had some application and reference to Fisher’s entry No. 197, seems to have been without any possible foundation. The assistant commissioner states in his letter of November 20, 1888, that the declaratory statement of Carver was canceled by relinquishment July 3, 1880, but the date of that relinquishment is not disclosed either in the letter. or by other evidence. We apprehend that it is probable it was _ executed before that date, and at such time that when Fisher made his entry in April, the fact of such relinquishment was known to the register and receiver, but whether or not that is so is doubtless unimportant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 P. 190, 7 Wyo. 66, 1897 Wyo. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delles-v-second-national-bank-of-brownsville-wyo-1897.