Dowell v. Applegate

152 U.S. 327, 14 S. Ct. 611, 38 L. Ed. 463, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2122
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 5, 1894
Docket209
StatusPublished
Cited by127 cases

This text of 152 U.S. 327 (Dowell v. Applegate) 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
Dowell v. Applegate, 152 U.S. 327, 14 S. Ct. 611, 38 L. Ed. 463, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2122 (1894).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Harlan

delivered the opinion of the court.

This, case involves the title to a tract of land in Douglas County, Oregon, containing forty acres, part of what is known *328 as the donation land claim of Jesse Applegate, number thirty-eight, in township twenty-two south, of range five west of the Willamette meridian.

The defendant in error, Daniel W. Applegate, holds under a deed executed to him by William H. H. Applegate- and wife, dated October 8, 1874, and recorded October 31, 1874. He brought this suit in the Circuit Court of Douglas County, Oregon, to obtain a decree removing the cloud upon his alleged title created by a deed made to the defendant Dowell by a master in chancery, pursuant to an order of the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Oregon, in a suit determined by that court in which Dowell was plaintiff and Daniel W. Applegate was one of the defendants. At a sale held in conformity with the final decree in that suit, Dowell became the purchaser of the land in question. That sale was duly confirmed, and a deed executed to him. From that decree of sale no appeal was taken.

Dowell bases his claim to the land upon the decree and orders in the above suit in the Circuit Court of the United ' States; and the controlling question before this court is as to the effect of that suit.

The state court did not give to the decree and orders in the Federal court the effect claimed for them; and it is necessary to a clear understanding of the grounds upon which it refused to do so, that we ascertain the precise nature of the proceedings in the latter court.

From the recitals in a supplemental bill filed by Dowell in the suit in the Federal court, it appears that that suit was commenced on the 11th day of October, 1879, in the Circuit Court of Douglas County, Oregon, and was subsequently removed into the Circuit Court of 'the United States for the District of Oregon. Upon whose application, or upon what grounds, it was so removed, the record before us does not clearly show. But it. does appear that Dowell, on the 6th day of April, 1881, in. order to conform his pleadings to the practice in the courts of the United States, sitting in equity, filed a bill in the Federal court disclosing the grounds of his suit, The defendants were Jesse Applegate, and his wife. *329 Cynthia Ann Applegate, William H. H. Applegate, Daniel W. Applegate, Peter Applegate, Sallie Long, John C. Drain, Jonas Ellensberg, and Charles Putnam.

The bill filed by Dowell made the following case: In a suit brought on the official bond of one May, Secretary of State of Oregon, executed September 6, 1862, — his sureties being Jesse Applegate, O.-Jacobs, and James Kilgore,—judgment was entered, June 24, 1874, in favor of .the State for the sum of $1622.50, and the costs, expenses, and disbursements of the action. That judgment was unsatisfied in whole or in part when Dowell brought his suit.

On the 4th day of August,‘1874, in a suit instituted in the Circuit Court of Marion County, Oregon, against Dowell and Jesse Applegate, who were sureties on the official bond of May, dated August 4, 1866, for another term of the office of Secretary of State, the State recovered judgment for the sum of $8929.85, together with the costs, expenses, and disbursements of the action. That' judgment was duly entered August 11, 1877, on the judgment-lien docket of Douglas County. Prior to June 27, 1878, Dowell paid on it the sum of $10,837.75; and, on that day, he recovered a judgment in the Circuit Court of Douglas County against Jesse Applegate, as his co-surety, for the sum of $4882.19,' with costs, expenses, and disbursements. That judgment was also, and on the day of its rendition, entered on the judgment-lien docket of Douglas County.

A balance of $1385.61 due- the State on its judgment was paid by Dowell, November 16, 1878. He gave notice, November 28, 1878, in conformity with the statutes of Oregon, that he claimed the benefit of the judgment of the State against Jesse Applegate for contribution for said sum, with costs and expenses, and that notice, was duly entered of record. An execution was issued April 4, 1879, on the State’s judgment, with costs, etc., and under it the lands levied oh were sold, May 31,1879, to Jesse Applegate for upwards of $1200. This left due to Dowell on that execution $284.61, with interest from May 31, 1879.

The amount due Dowell, January 1,1881, from Jesse Apple- *330 gate, on both of the-above judgments, with interest and-costs, was $6584.09. Execution was issued, September 17, 1879, in his favor for $4882.31, and was duly returned “ no property found.” A second execution issued October 7, 1879, with a like result.

Jesse Applegate was, at one time, the owner in fee of the. north half of a donation land claim, with a life estate in the south half that had been set apart to his wife—-such claim having been-taken up in 1849 under the laws of the provisional government of Oregon, and afterwards under the act of Congress, approved September 27,1850, entitled “Anact to create the office of surveyor-general of the public lands in Oregon and to provide for the survey, and to make donations to settlers, of the said public lands.” The tract of land so taken up contained 642 acres, and was known on the surveys and maps of the United States as Jesse Applegate’s donation land claim No. 38, in township 22. He was, also, the owner of other lands in Douglas County, Oregon.

Dow,ell’s bill referred to deeds purporting to have been executed in 1867 and 1869 by Jesse Applegate and Avife to W. H. H. Applegate, Daniel "W. Applegate, Peter Applegate, Sallie Applegate, and Charles-Putnam—children and grandchildren of the grantors — for lands aggregating more than a thousand acres, a large part of which was Avithin the above donation claim.. It also referred to a deed executed June 24, 1871, by "W7H. H. Applegate, conveying to Charles and John C. Drain, for $2000 in cash paid, 200 acres in the south half of that claim.

In respect of all of the above deeds the charge, was that they were fraudulent and void as against the State of Oregon and Dowell; that the respective -deeds to "William H.' H. Applegate and Daniel W. Applegate, dated in 1867, Averé antedated for the purpose of deceiving, cheating, delaying, and defrauding the State and Dowell, and-Avere, in fact, not made and delivered until 1869. In respect to the' deed of June 24, 1871, the charge was that the price paid by the grantee was $2000, “yet the deed, to conceal the value of the land and to cheat and defraud the creditors of Jesse Applegate *331 and to make the price correspond with the said deed, of Jesse Applegate and his wife to the said William H. H. Applegate, on its face only expresses the consideration of $500, and it, in.

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Bluebook (online)
152 U.S. 327, 14 S. Ct. 611, 38 L. Ed. 463, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dowell-v-applegate-scotus-1894.