El Paso Brick Co. v. McKnight

233 U.S. 250, 34 S. Ct. 498, 58 L. Ed. 943, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1285
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 6, 1914
Docket185
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 233 U.S. 250 (El Paso Brick Co. v. McKnight) 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
El Paso Brick Co. v. McKnight, 233 U.S. 250, 34 S. Ct. 498, 58 L. Ed. 943, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1285 (1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Lamar,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

McKnight brought suit against, the El Paso Brick Company to try the right of possession to conflicting mining locations. In his complaint he asserted his own title and attacked that of the Defendant under locations older in date but which he claimed had been forfeited by failure to do the annual assessment work for 1903 and 1904, thereby leaving the land open to the locations made by McKnight in 1905 and 1906. The Brick Company, while insisting that the plaintiff’s own evidence proved that the assess- *256 merit work had in fact been fully performed, relied on the legal effect of the company’s application for a Patent to the land and the final receipt issued to it by the Receiver of the Local Land Office in October, 1905. To this the plaintiff replied that the. entry, on which the receipt issued, had been cancelled on the ground that the patent proceedings were absolutely void because the statutory affidavit of posting had not been filed.

1. Locators of mining claims have the exclusive right <?f possession of all the surface included within the exterior limits of their claims so long as they make the improvements or do the annual assessment work required by the Revised Statutes, § 2324. The law, however, provides (Rev. Stats., §§ 2325, 2333) a means by which the locator can pay the purchase price fixed by statute and convert the defeasible possessory title into a fee simple. Sixty days’ notice must be given in order that all persons having any adverse claim may be heard in opposition to the issue of a patent. That notice is threefold. It must be given by publication in the nearest newspaper, by posting in the Land Office, and by posting on the land itself, and it is provided in the statute that this latter fact may be proved by the affidavit of two persons before an officer residing within the land district (Rev. Stat., §2335). All persons haying adverse claims under the mining laws may be heard in objection to the issuance of a patent. But (§ 2325) “if no adverse claim shall have been filed . . . it shall be assumed that the applicant is entitled to a patent, upon the payment to the proper officer of five dollars per acre, and that no adverse claim exists; and thereafter no objection from third persons to the issuance of a patent shall be heard, except it be shown that the applicant has failed to comply with the terms of this chapter” [relating to mineral lands].

2. In the present case the Brick Company’s application for a patent was filed, each of the several forms of notice *257 required by statute was given, no adverse claim was filed, the purchase price was paid to the Government, and a final receipt was issued by the local land office. The entry by the local land officer issuing the final receipt was in the nature of a judgment in rem (Wight v. Dubois, 21 Fed. Rep. 693) and determined that the Brick Company’s original locations were valid and that everything necessary to keep them in force, including the annual assessment work, had been done. It also adjudicated that no adverse claim existed ánd that the Brick Company was entitled to a patent.

From that date, and until the entry was lawfully can-celled, the Brick Company was in possession under an equitable title, and to be treated as "though the patent had been delivered to” it. Dahl v. Raunheim, 132 U. S. 260, 262. And, when McKnight instituted possessory proceedings against the Brick Company, the latter was entitled to a judgment in its favor when it produced that final receipt as proof that it was entitled to a patent and to the corresponding right of an owner.

Nor should the result have been different when the record showed that the entry and final receipt, properly issued, had been improperly cancelled. It is true that the order of the Department was a denial of the patent, but it was not a conclusive adjudication that the Brick Company was not entitled to a patent, nor could such an order deprive the Brick Company of rights vested in it by law. For while the General Land Office had power of supervision over the acts of the local officers, and could annul entries obtained by fraud or made without authority of law, yét if the Department’s cancellation was based upon a mistake' of law, its ruling was subject to judicial review when properly drawn in.question in judicial proceedings, inasmuch as the power of the Land Office is not unlimited nor can it be arbitrarily exercised so as to deprive any person of land lawfully entered and paid for. Cornelius v. *258 Kessel, 128 U. S. 456, 461; Parsons v. Venzke, 164 U. S. 89.

3. So that the case involves a determination of the single question as to whether the patent was properly refused by the Land Department because of the objection that the Brick Company had failed to comply with the terms of the law relating to Mineral Land. Rev. Stat., § 2325. That can be determined by an inspection of the record,, in which the order appears. It shows that the cancellation of the entry was not based on the Brick Company’s failure to do the annual assessment work, or to give the proper notice, or to pay the statutory price, but solely for the reason that the affidavit of posting was executed before an officer who resided outside of the land district.

That decision (37 L. D. 155), though supported by some Departmental rulings of comparatively recent date, was in conflict with the established practice of the Land Department, and was expressly and by name overruled, on July 29, 1911, in Ex parte Stock Oil Company, 40 L. D. 198, which reaffirmed prior decisions to the effect that irregularities in proof, including the execution of affidavits before other than the designated officers, might be supplied, even on appeal.

These and similar rulings, previously followed in the Department, are manifestly correct. They accord with the policy of the land laws,-under which the United States does not act as an ordinary proprietor seeking to sell real estate at the highest possible price, but offers it on liberal terms to encourage the citizen and to develop the country. The Government does not deal at arm’s length with the settler or locator and whenever it appears that there has been a compliance with the substantial requirements of the law, irregularities are waived or permission is given, even on appeal, to cure them by supplemental proofs. United States v. Marshall Mining Co., 129 U. S. 579, 587. In *259 the present case such proof by supplemental affidavits, properly executed, showed that the land had been properly posted. But that fact was not allowed to have any effect because of the mistaken view that, as the original affidavit of posting had been signed before an officer residing outside of the land district, the patent proceedings were absolutely void.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
233 U.S. 250, 34 S. Ct. 498, 58 L. Ed. 943, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/el-paso-brick-co-v-mcknight-scotus-1914.