Donohue v. Vosper

243 U.S. 59, 37 S. Ct. 350, 61 L. Ed. 592, 1917 U.S. LEXIS 2094
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 6, 1917
Docket445
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 243 U.S. 59 (Donohue v. Vosper) 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
Donohue v. Vosper, 243 U.S. 59, 37 S. Ct. 350, 61 L. Ed. 592, 1917 U.S. LEXIS 2094 (1917).

Opinion

Mr, Justice McKenna

delivered the opinion of the court.

. Suit to declare certain deeds to lands in Michigan to be void, and-that plaintiff in error (as he was plaintiff in the .court below we-shall so refer to him) be declared to bfe 'the owner, of the lands and of the minerals therein, that defendants have no title thereto, for an accounting of certain royalties collected by certain of the defendants from the Buffalo Iron Mining Company and that the latter be restrained from paying any further royalties. The lands are described as follows: W. K of N. "W. and N. W. M of S. W. M, section 23, T. 43 N., R. 35 W., County of Iron, Michigan.

An answer, which was also claimed to be a cross bill, was filed, and upon the issues thus formed, and after hearing, the court by a decree dismissed the bill, ad judged title to the land to be in the defendants Yosper, Abbott and Tonkin in certain proportions and all the ores and minerals therein, that title to the lands in the proportions mentioned be quieted against plaintiff and all persons claiming under him, that he execute a deed to Vosper, Abbott and Tonkin of the interests, decreed and in default thereof the decree to operate as such release and conveyance.

The decree was affirmed by the Supreme Court of the State.

*61 The facts of the case were found by the Supreme Court substantially as follows:

The land was conveyed to the State of Michigan to aid in the construction of two railroads, one to Marquette and the other to Ontonagon. The land applicable to the Marquette road' was released by the State to the United States and later, in 1866, under an act of Congress granting lands to the State for canal purposes, this land inured to the benefit of the Lake Superior Ship Canal, Railway & Iron Company by a grant from the State.

The land to be used for the benefit of the Ontonagon road was not released and' it was subsequently decided that the title to an undivided one-half of the “common lands” — that is, lands at the intersection of the proposed railroads — still remained in the State for the purposes of that road, except as affected by an act of Congress of 1889 by which Congress declared a forfeiture of grants in the State of Michigan for all unconstructed railroads and confirmed title in all persons who had made cash entries within the limits of the grants and all persons claiming state selections, such as the Canal Company. By an exception, in the act the title was not confirmed to those lands on which there were bona fide preemption or homestead claims asserted by actual occupation on May 1, 1888. .

Michael Donohue, plaintiff’s grantor, together with various other persons, had entered upon these “common lands” as preémptors and homesteaders, and asserted rights thereto under the Act of 1889 referred to above.

Prior to the Act of 1889 the Canal Company, brought ejectment suits against those settlers. In 1894, in the ejectment suits, it was decided that the title of the Canal Company to the lands selected by the State was confirmed by the Act of 1889, subject to the exceptions provided in the act, and that it should be determined in an equity suit in the United States court what lands came *62 within the excepting clause. It was also decided that the title of the State to the lands granted for the Ontonagon road, including an undivided one-half of the “common lands,” was forfeited to the United States.

Defendant Vosper had rendered service in this litigation to Donohue and the other claimants and took from Donohue a warranty deed on December 29, 1894, to an undivided one-quarter interest in the land.

At the instigation of persons claiming under the Act of 1889, the United States filed a bill agaiiist the Canal Company. In that suit the Canal Company filed a cross bill against the claimants under the, homestead and preemption laws, including Donohue. Vosper was also made a party. The issue in the litigation, therefore, was whether Donohue and the other claimants were bona fide homesteaders or preemptors on May 1, 1888.

Pending the suit the Canal Company conveyed to the Keweenaw Association, Limited.

A decree was entered, Donohue and the other claimants and Vosper consenting; quieting the title to the lands in the Keweenaw Association, Limited, as successor of the Canal Company. The decree was entered in 1896 and adjudged that thé Canal Company, at the commencement of the suit was fully and completely vested with the title to the lands and since the commencement of the suit it became fully and completely vested in said Keweenaw Association, Limited, as successor of the Canal Company, and that neither the United States of America nor any of the'defendants consenting to the, decree had “any right, title, or interest therein.” And it was adjudged that title to the lands be quieted against the United States and the consenting defendants and further that the decree should operate as a release and conveyance from the United- States and each and every of the other of said-defendants of all right and title to said lands and might be recorded as such in the records of the proper county.

*63 'November 19,1896, the Keweenaw Association, Limited, conveyed the lands by quit-claim deed to Donohue.

It is the contention of Vosper that he and Donohue agreed to this arrangement, by which a sum of money was to be paid for the timber cut and the lands were to be conveyed by the Keweenaw Association to Donohue.

December 3, .1896, Michael Donohue delivered to plaintiff a quit-claim deed to the premises and on April 3,1908, Vosper quit-claimed an undivided one-eighth interest to deféndant Abbott, and on December 18th following plaintiff joined with Vosper and Abbott in the execution and delivery of an option for a mining lease of the premises.

February 3, 1909, Abbott quit-claimed an undivided one-thirty-second interest in the minerals to Tonkin, and on March 7, 1910, plaintiff joined Vosper, Abbott and Tonkin in the execution and delivery of a mining lease in pursuance of the option given before.

The mining lease, which was for a term of 30 years, was issued to the Niagara Iron Mining Company as lessee and was by that company assigned to the Buffalo Mining Company. The Niagara Company was and the Buffalo Company has been and is now in possession of the premises for mining purposes.

The trial and supreme courts found that Donohue executed the deed to Vosper. About this there is no controversy. Here the contentions of. the parties turn upon the effect of the decree which was rendered by consent in the suit of the United States against the Canal Company, and this makes, it is contended, a federal question.

Defendants, however, assert that the decree does not present a federal question and that, besides, it was not claimed or urged as such by plaintiff in the state courts but appears for the first time in the petition for writ of error, and defendants refer to the bill of complaint to sustain their assertion.

*64

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Bluebook (online)
243 U.S. 59, 37 S. Ct. 350, 61 L. Ed. 592, 1917 U.S. LEXIS 2094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donohue-v-vosper-scotus-1917.