Germania Iron Co. v. Craig

98 F. 23, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3367
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 21, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 98 F. 23 (Germania Iron Co. v. Craig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Germania Iron Co. v. Craig, 98 F. 23, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3367 (circtdmn 1899).

Opinion

LOCIIREN, District Judge

(orally). This is an interesting case, and if I had time I should be glad to review the evidence, and the law that has been cited, carefully, before announcing a decision. But, with the work which I have before me, it is clear that I shall not have time to do so, and, if I postpone the matter, it may be long before I can review the evidence, so as to have it as clear in my mind as now. So I think it better for all parties to determine the case at once.

It appears from the evidence that on the 18th day of February, 1889, the land in question was segregated from the public domain, and appropriated to private use, by the location of half-breed scrip upon it, and a contest was then pending before the secretary of the interior upon appeals taken from the local land office to the commissioner of the general land office, and thence to the secretary of the interior, between the person who had located the scrip and an alleged pre-emptor, with resi>eet to this land. That contest was decided by the secretary on that day, by which, he held that the location of the scrip was void, also that the pre-emption was fraudulent, and he decided against both parties to the contest. It is shown that, on the next day, Mr. Houghton James attempted to enter the land as a homestead, and his offer to enter "was refused by the local land officers, for [24]*24the reason, as it was claimed, that the land was not then open for entry on account of this contest. It further appears that afterwards, on the 23d day of the same month, after the decision of the secretary had been certified to the local land office, there was a rush of several parties at the opening of the local land office in the morning, each seeking to enter this land. The decision filed by the secretary on the 21st day of December, 1894, upon the various contests which arose from the efforts that had been made to enter this piece of land, decided, as a matter of fact, that Mr. Hartman’s application to enter it was the first on that 23d day of February, 1889; but he held that the prior attempt to enter it by Mr. James, on the 19th of February, was valid, and therefore his decision was against Mr. Hartman, and in favor of Mr. James. The bill of complaint in this case alleges that the secretary was in error in making that decision; that he committed an error in law, and, but for that error, the decision would have been in favor of Mr. Hartman, and he would have been entitled to a patent for the land, and that the subsequent entry of the land by Mr. Craig, under the Porterfield scrip, could not have taken place. It appears from the testimony that, after this.decision of the secretary in favor of Mr. James, the latter made* an entry upon this 40 acres as a homestead, and. that subsequently, on the 23d of September, 1895, by reason of a bargain between himself and Mr. Craig, and for a consideration paid to him by Mr. Craig, he relinquished his homestead right upon the premises, and filed a written relinquishment of that right to the United States, and that upon that filing Mr. Oraig immediately entered this land with Porterfield scrip. The title of the defendants arises upon' that entry, and through conveyances from Mr. Craig as the owner of the land under this entry.

• In order to succeed in this case, it is necessary that the complainants show not only that the secretary committed an error of law in allowing the entry of James, but that Hartman was at that time legally entitled to enter the land, and that he had a good equitable title. It has been decided by the circuit court of appeals in this very case (Iron Co. v. James, 32 C. C. A. 348, 89 Fed. 811) that if there was a rule in existence at that time which forbade the register and receiver of the local land office from receiving any applications to enter land while there was a contest in respect to it pending in the general land office, -or before the secretary, prior to the time when the decision of the contest was communicated to the local land office, and entered upon its records and plats, then, in that case, the decision of the secretary that this land was open for entry on the 19th day of February, 1889, was error in law. All the evidence in the case, taken together, I think, fully shows- that such a rule was in existence at and prior to that time, — a rule known as “Rule No. 53,” — under which, whatever was the effect of the judgment as between the parties to the contest, the land in question was not in condition to be entered as unappropriated land of the public domain until notice of that decision was given to the register and receiver of the local land office.

When the matter was before me on demurrer, it seemed to me [25]*25that, being a rule of the secretary, it might perhaps be varied by the secretary himself. At any rate, there were cases submitted from which it appeared that the rule had not always been followed in the land department, particularly the Anderson Case, 7 Land Dec. Dep. Int. 168. But I think the evidence is now satisfactory that there was such a rule in existence, which bad not been abro gated, and had been by circulars made known to the local land officers, and was a rule which they were expected to follow.. The circuit court of appeals held that, under such circumstances, it was error in law for the secretary himself to disregard a general rule which was in force; and the evidence shows that it was so in force; and therefore it must be held that the secretary’s decision that ■lames was entitled to make this entry on the 19th day of February, 1889, was an error in law.

As to the suggestion that the decision of the secretary went to the extent of holding that there was no such rule, I do not think that it does so hold; that is, it does not go to the extent of holding that there never had been such a rule, or that no such rule had been promulgated, or that it had been abrogated. The holding of the secretary, in effect, was that there was no such rule which would bind him, not that there was not such a rule in existence; and the circuit court of appeals, in this case, has adjudged that such holding by the secretary was error in law.

The other question which arises is whether the evidence shows t hat, if this error had not occurred, Hartman would have been entitled to enter the land. The secretary found, as a matter of fact, that Hartman was the first applicant; but it is objected to his application that the Porterfield scrip which he used in attempting to make that entry was void, as having already been used, and therefore exhausted, in an entry of land made by Mr. Gilman at a prior time. The evidence in relation to that is that Mr. Gilman was desirous of entering land which at the time was not subject to cash entry, but was subject to be entered with Porterfield scrip, and that he made his ápplication and filed this scrip for that purpose; that, by some misapprehension or misconception on the part of the local land officers, the certificate, or receipt, or whatever it was, was given to Mr. Gilman as for a cash entry, and was so entered upon the books of the local land office, and so noted in the returns to Washington, and this Porterfield scrip was sent, instead of cash, to the United States treasury. It seems the treasury officials made inquiry about it, and it was returned to the general land office, as not being cash or anything that the treasury could accept as cash; and as the result of further inquiry, upon being notified of the facts by the local land officers, the scrip was returned to the local land office to be sent back to Gilman as its owner, and the land went to patent, as having been entered for cash. The scrip was returned to Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
98 F. 23, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/germania-iron-co-v-craig-circtdmn-1899.