Gray v. Dixon

23 P. 60, 83 Cal. 33, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 634
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 1890
DocketNo. 13411
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 23 P. 60 (Gray v. Dixon) 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
Gray v. Dixon, 23 P. 60, 83 Cal. 33, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 634 (Cal. 1890).

Opinion

Sharpstein, J.

Ejectment. Judgment for defendant. Plaintiff’s motion for a new trial overruled. Appeal from the judgment and order overruling motion for a new trial. Prior to the fourth day of May, 1877, the demanded premises were a part of the public lands of the United States. At that date one Ward applied for and made entry, under the act to provide for the sale of desert-lands, of the section which embraces said premises. On the nineteenth day of December, 1881, defendant initated a contest against said entry for abandonment and failure to comply with the law, and at the same time filed his application for said land under the soldiers’ and sailors’ homestead act. The contest resulted in the cancellation of Ward’s entry; and he relinquished his claim to enter under the desert-land act, but applied to enter said land under the timber act. His application was rejected by the local land-office. He [34]*34applied to the general land-office, and the commissioner thereof decided that his application should have been allowed, subject to the'preference right of the defendant herein to enter said land under the soldiers’ and sailors’ homestead act. From that decision Ward appealed to the Secretary of the linterior, whose action thereon is not stated. December 4,1885, plaintiff settled upon and took possession of the- demanded premises for the purpose of making it his home by residence, occupation, and cultivation, and continued thereafter to reside on said'land, and built a house thereon, and procured the same to be surveyed, and filed an affidavit in compliance with the provisions of an act entitled “An act to provide the mode of maintaining and defending possessory actions on public lands in this state, approved April 20, 1852.” He made improvements of the value of two hundred dollars on the-land..

When plaintiff settled upon and took possession of said land, it was wholly unoccupied and unimproved public land of the United States,, except that there was a small, uninhabitable house, without doors or windows, thereon, which had been erected by defendant, and about one half of an acre of said, land had been plowed. Defendant never occupied or resided on said land prior to September 9, 1886. Plaintiff, though not a party to the controversy between defendant and Ward in the land department, made a motion therein on the twenty-fourth day of December, 1886, for a review of the decision therein, and offered to prove his (plaintiff’s) settlement, residence, and improvement on said land, ■which motion was denied by the commissioner of the general land-office; and from that ruling plaintiff appealed to the Secretary of the Interior, who granted plaintiff’s application to be heard, and on- such hearing said secretary decided,—1. That the defendant herein had the preference right to the entry of said lands under his application made on the' nineteenth day of December, [35]*351881; 2. That the application of plaintiff herein to enter said land under the homestead laws should be allowed, subject to defendant’s preference right to enter the same; 3. That if plaintiff’s claim of settlement should be found unfounded in fact, then the application of said Ward to enter said land under the timber-culture law should be allowed, subject to said defendant’s preference right to enter the said land under his said application of December 19, 1881.

Plaintiff, when he settled upon said land, possessed all the qualifications necessary to entitle him. to make his application for 160 acres of land under the homestead laws of the United States. On the ninth day of September, 1886, defendant entered on and took possession of the demanded premises, and began the erection of a dwelling-house thereon, which was soon finished; and in October, 1886, he moved his family into it, and continued to dwell therein, claiming all said demanded premises as his own, and has prevented plaintiff from making any more improvements thereon. Defendant plowed and sowed portions of the land previously plowed and sowed by plaintiff. On the 15th of August, 1888, defendant made his final proof at the Los Angeles land-office, under the homestead laws of the United States, and paid four hundred dollars, for which he received the following:—

“No. 3,226. (Duplicate.)
“ Receiver’s Office at Los Angeles, Cal., “August 15, 1888.
“Received from John 0. Dixon, of San Bernardino County, Cal., the sum of four hundred dollars and-cents, being in full for the £ of the S. W. £, N. £ of S. E. £, of section No. 8, in township No. 2 south, of range No. 4 west, S. B. M., containing one hundred and sixty acres and-hundreds, at $2.50 per acre. Commuted Home, No. 2,892. $400. See letter ' P ’ of Commissioner, May 12, 1886. J. H. Polk, Receiver.”
[36]*36Indorsed: “No. 13. Recorded at request of John C.
Dixon, August 18, 1888, at 40 minutes past 9, A. M., in Book E, Mis. Records, page 337, Records San Bernardino County. Legate Allen, County Recorder.
“ By T. I. Bolton, Deputy Recorder.
" Paid $1.”

After the decision of the Secretary of the Interior, May 7, 1888, plaintiff obtained from the officers of the Los Angeles land-office the following: —

“Township No. 2 S., range No. 4 W., district of-. Part of section-. Section-. N. £ of S. W. £» N. £ of S. E. £, 8 Appli. Home, Chas. R. Gray. June 9, 1888. Subject to right of John C. Dixon, authorized by Sec’ry letter‘of P. of May 12, 1888.
“ United States Land-office,
“Los Angeles, Cal., June 9, 1888.
“I, the undersigned, register of the United States land-office at Los Angeles, California, do hereby certify that the above and foregoing is a true and correct copy of abstract of entry of Charles R. Gray, made and entered on the books of said land-office, and as the same now appears thereon, on a comparison with said books.
“ H. W. Patton,
“Register U. S. Land-office, Los Angeles.”

The foregoing facts were found by the court below, and the principal contention of appellant here is, that they are insufficient to support the judgment. If, at the time appellant built his house, and went to reside on the land in controversy, it was subject to private entry, ■we think the findings show a sufficient compliance -with the law on his part to entitle him to recover in this action. He seems to have done all that the law requires a pre-emption claimant to do to perfect his preemption claim to the land. But when he offered to file his homestead application to enter said land under the homestead laws of the United States at the Los Angeles [37]

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Bluebook (online)
23 P. 60, 83 Cal. 33, 1890 Cal. LEXIS 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-dixon-cal-1890.