Gage v. Gunther

68 P. 710, 136 Cal. 338
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1902
DocketL.A. Nos. 1007, 1008, 1010.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 68 P. 710 (Gage v. Gunther) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gage v. Gunther, 68 P. 710, 136 Cal. 338 (Cal. 1902).

Opinion

HARRISON, J.

The plaintiff brought these actions to recover from the appellants the possession of section 30, township 2 south, range 4 west, S. B. M., in the county of Riverside, for which he had received a patent from the United States. The appellants denied his title to the demanded premises, and alleged as a defense, and also by way of cross-complaint, certain facts, by virtue of which they claimed that they were entitled to receive patents for the land, and that the plaintiff should be held to hold the same in trust for them, and be decreed to convey the land to them.

*341 At the trial of the causes the following facts were established: The plaintiff filed with the register and receiver of the land office on March 1, 1882, an application under the United States Desert Land Act of 1877, for entry of the section in controversy. He did not complete the reclamation of the land so as to bring water thereon within the period of three years required by that act, and on January 23, 1886, Gunther, Newman, and Atwater, the appellants herein, filed affidavits setting forth that fact, and asked that his entry of the land be declared canceled and forfeited to the United States. The register and receiver refused to entertain the contest, on the ground that there was at that time pending before the Secretary of the Interior an appeal involving the plaintiff’s right to enter the land. Gunther, Newman, and Atwater appealed from this decision to the commissioner of the general land office, and on March 9, 1886, that officer affirmed the action of the register and receiver. Prom this decision they appealed to the Secretary of the Interior. Before this appeal was heard the former appeal, involving the plaintiff’s right to enter the land, was decided in his favor, and thereafter, January 25, 1887, the commissioner made an order in which, after referring to said decision, he directed a hearing to be had before the register and receiver to determine whether the land embraced in the plaintiff’s entry had been irrigated within the time required by law. Upon the hearing had in pursuance of this order, the register and receiver rendered their decision, March 20, 1888", that the land had not been so irrigated, and recommended that on that account the entry should be canceled. Gage appealed to the commissioner of the general land office, and on March 27, 1890, that officer reversed the decision, holding that the contestants had no adverse claim to the land in dispute within the meaning of the law, and that, owing to the equities shown by Gage upon the hearing, the ease should be referred to the board of equitable adjudication, for the purpose of determining whether under the circumstances of the case his failure to reclaim the land within the time should defeat his right to a patent. Prom this decision Gunther, Newman, and Atwater appealed to the Secretary of the Interior, and on August 1, 1892, that officer reversed the decision of the commissioner. *342 Gage thereupon filed a motion with the Secretary of the Interior for a review of his decision, and on March 3, 1893, this motion was denied and a copy of the decision thereon sent to the register and receiver, March 15, 1893. Secretary Noble, by whom these decisions were made, was succeeded in the Department of the Interior, on March 4, 1893, by Secretary Smith.

At the time that Gunther, Newman, and Atwater filed their contest against the entry of Gage, July 23, 1886, they also presented to the register and receiver affidavits, and filed applications thereunder, for the purpose of making homestead and timber-culture entries for different portions of said section. The register and receiver refused to entertain said applications upon the ground of the afore-mentioned appeal before the Secretary of the Interior with reference to Gage’s right to enter the land. From this refusal they took an appeal to the commissioner of the general land office, and on March 9, 1886, that officer affirmed the action of the register and receiver. After the rendition of the Secretary’s decision, August 1, 1892, but before the decision had been transmitted to the register and receiver,—viz., August 3, 1892,—Gunther, Newman, and Atwater entered upon the land, claiming the right to its possession by virtue of the entries theretofore offered by them, and thereafter cultivated the same, and afterwards gave notice that they would make final commutation proof under their said homestead entries in accordance with the Homestead Act. At the hearing upon the taking of this proof Gage filed a protest against their claims, but the register and receiver held that they had complied with the law and were entitled to enter the land under the Homestead Act. From this decision Gage appealed to the commissioner of the general land office, and on August.4, 1894, that officer affirmed the decision and directed that they should be permitted to make their payment, and receive their final certificates for said land. From this decision Gage appealed to the Secretary of the Interior, and on April-13, 1895, while this appeal was pending, filed with the Secretary a petition for a reconsideration of the evidence upon the contest against his desert-land entry, and a review of the decision of August 1, 1892, and for a consolidation of the several cases. A protest against this application and a brief thereon were made by the *343 appellants herein and filed with the Secretary of the Interior, and on September 26, 1895, the Secretary rendered a decision by which he set aside the decision ol his predecessor, Secretary Smith, and reopened the case upon the appeal from the decision of the commissioner of the general land office in reference to Gage’s desert-land entry, and directed that he be allowed to carry his final proof before the board of equitable adjudication, to be passed on by them, and that in the mean time the entries of Gunther, Newman, and Atwater should stand suspended, to be disposed of as should be indicated by the finding of that board. In the opinion rendered by him (Gage v. Atwater, 21 Land Dec. Dep. Int. 211), will be found a fuller statement of the facts and history of the controversy between the respondent and appellants herein. Under this decision the commissioner of the general land office directed the register and receiver that the said homestead entries be suspended to await the action of the board of equitable adjudication upon Gage’s final proof, and that the timber entries being in conflict with Gage’s final proof, should also stand suspended. A motion- on behalf of the appellants herein for a review of this decision, was denied by the Secretary of the Interior, October 21, 1895. Upon the reference of Gage’s final proof to the board of equitable adjudication, the recommendation of the commissioner of the general land office that a patent be issued to him was approved' April 20, 1896, and on April 21, 1896, the patent therefor was issued to him.

Very extended and elaborate briefs have been filed on behalf of the respective parties, wherein numerous questions have been discussed, with citations of authority in their support. The greater number of these questions are, however, subordinate to a few ultimate propositions and the principles controlling their determination and need not be specifically considered.

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Bluebook (online)
68 P. 710, 136 Cal. 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gage-v-gunther-cal-1902.