Flannigan v. Arkansas

427 F. Supp. 2d 861, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17154, 2006 WL 758289
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Arkansas
DecidedMarch 24, 2006
Docket3:02CV00404-WRW
StatusPublished

This text of 427 F. Supp. 2d 861 (Flannigan v. Arkansas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flannigan v. Arkansas, 427 F. Supp. 2d 861, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17154, 2006 WL 758289 (E.D. Ark. 2006).

Opinion

*863 ORDER

WILSON, District Judge.

Plaintiffs and the United States seek quiet title to approximately 72 acres of ■wild, unimproved land near the St. Francis River.

I. Background

A Petition to Quiet Title was filed by Plaintiffs Robert Flannigan, Jr., Cindy Flannigan, Mike Hook, and Karen Hook alleging that they acquired title to property from Robert Tacker, Donna Tacker, and Clyde Eason through a Warranty Deed recorded in Craighead County. 1 Plaintiffs claim superior title because their predecessors paid taxes on the disputed property from 1941 until it was conveyed’ to Plaintiffs, who have continued paying property taxes.

The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission (“AGFC”) filed its Answer claiming title to the property under a patent issued by the Bureau of Land Management (“BLM”) in 1965. 2 The BLM filed an Answer and Counter-Claim, denying that Plaintiffs or their predecessors had title against the United States. According to BLM, it owned the land until it was patented to the State of Arkansas. 3

Plaintiffs and separate Defendants, BLM and AGFC filed Motions for Summary Judgement, each claiming good title. 4 In their motion, Plaintiffs argued that because Arkansas collected taxes on the property for over 60 years, and failed to contest the issuance of two tax deeds in 1952 and in 1992, it lost claim to the land.

Defendants, BLM and AGFC asserted in their motion that the original tax sale in 1952 was void, and no valid interest could be conveyed from that point forward. In short, BLM asserted that the United States owned the land from 1803 (under the Louisiana Purchase) until it conveyed it to Arkansas for fish and wildlife purposes in 1965. The BLM also asserted that, under the terms of the patent, the United States has reversionary rights — i.e. the government automatically regains ownership of the jproperty if it is not used for the purpose set out in the patent.

Because the State failed to challenge the tax deeds within the two year period prescribed under Ark.Code Ann. § 18-60-212, partial Summary Judgment was granted against AGFC. 5 When AGFC lost its claim to the land, BLM filed a Motion for Judgment reverting the land back to the United States under the terms of the patent and 43 U.S.C. 869-2. 6

The Motion was denied and a bench trial was held on February 7, 2006.

II. Discussion

The primary issue is whether the United States held title to the property in 1965 when it gave a patent to Arkansas. Plaintiffs and Defendant Eason argue that the United States did not hold title because it had already conveyed the land to Arkansas under the Swamp Land Act of 1850.

Plaintiffs also make an equitable argument that the United States should lose title because (1) it failed to check the records before including' the subject prop *864 erty in the patent; (2) represented that any tracts included in the patent, but no longer available, would be eliminated; and (3) failed to list the land as exempt from taxes.

If Plaintiffs are correct that the United States did not hold title in 1965, then no reversion to the United States is possible under the 1965 patent or its authorizing statute, and Plaintiffs are entitled to have title quieted in them. If, however, the United States did hold title to the land in 1965, then the question becorhes whether reversion took place under the statute authorizing the patent. If reversion took place, the United States is entitled to have its title quieted, and if there was no reversion, Plaintiffs are entitled to quiet title.

A. The Swamp Land Act

At trial, the surveys conducted of the disputed land in 1845 and 1915, and the land patents of 1856 and 1965 were put in evidence. 7 Nathan Felton of BLM testified that, the United States surveyed only a fraction of the area in 1845, where the disputed land lies. 8 According to Mr. Felton, only thirteen acres of Section 23 were surveyed. 9 The rest of Section 23, including the subject property, was not surveyed until 1915. 10

In 1856, the United States issued a patent conveying “the whole of fractional Section Twenty Three” to the State of Arkansas. 11 Plaintiffs argue that this patent not only conveyed the thirteen-acre portion of Section 23 surveyed in 1845, but also conveyed the portion surveyed in 1915, which included the subject land. 12 Plaintiffs bolster their argument by pointing out that, after 1915, the United States didn’t tell the State of Arkansas that the only land included in the Swamp Act conveyance was only thirteen acres surveyed in 1845. 13 Plaintiffs’ arguments fail.

The greater weight of the evidence shows that the 1856 patent conveyed the thirteen acres surveyed in 1845' — nothing more. As Mr. Felton testified, the federal government considered the land nonexistent until it was surveyed. 14 Because the land did not legally “exist” until 1915, the 1856 patent could not convey the land to the State. 15

“Unsurveyed lands are not ‘public lands,’ within the meaning of the law, so as to be subject to sale, entry, or disposal under the laws of the United States.” 16 Official and recognized boundaries of public lands are only established by a government survey. 17 A sale of public lands before it is surveyed is void. 18 However, “[i]f the public survey is regularly made, returned, and approved, a sale will be valid, although the survey is defective, if the *865 error does not render the identity, locality, and quantity of the tract uncertain.” 19

In view of clear precedent, the 1856 patent did not convey unsurveyed portions of Section 23. The 1856 patent language cited by Plaintiffs — “the whole of fractional Section Twenty Three” — supports the United States’ argument when read in conjunction with other land descriptions. 20 For example, the 1856 patent conveys “the whole of Section Seventeen.” 21

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427 F. Supp. 2d 861, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17154, 2006 WL 758289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flannigan-v-arkansas-ared-2006.