Greenameyer v. Coate

1907 OK 16, 88 P. 1054, 18 Okla. 160, 1907 Okla. LEXIS 101
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 13, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1907 OK 16 (Greenameyer v. Coate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greenameyer v. Coate, 1907 OK 16, 88 P. 1054, 18 Okla. 160, 1907 Okla. LEXIS 101 (Okla. 1907).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Gillette, J.:

This action was brought in the district court of Kay county, by the pliantiff in error against the defendant in error, to recover the legal title to lots 1 and 2 and the east half -of the northwest quarter of section 18, township 26 north, range 2 east of the Indian meridian being land in said county. Said land had been the subject of a contest between the plaintiff and defendant, had been tried and determined by the local and general land office, and upon appeal determined by the secretary of the interior in favor of thi defendant, who had thereafter acquired the patent title thereto from the government.

The prayer of the petition asks such legal title so vested in defendant to be declared a trust for the plaintiff’s use and benefit, and that he be declared the owner of said tract of land. A demurrer was filed to plaintiff’s petition, which *162 was, by the trial court sustained, and the cause comes to this court, asking a reversal of the order sustaining such demurrer.

The petition of plaitniff has attached to it the several determinations of the land department from the first determination in the local land office, to and including, the final judgment of Mr. Secretary Hitchcock awarding the land to the defendant; but the evidence taken upon the trial in,the land office is not brought forward or shown.

The record shows that on June 21, 1898, and October 5, 1898, the cause was' determined by the then secretary of the interior, C. N. Bliss, the decision of June 21 being a determination of the facts in favor of the plaintiff, and thai of October 5, 1898, was a denial of a review, but before the entry of judgment denying such review was had and entered the defendant filed a petition for a rehearing in said cause which was granted December 13, 1898. A rehearing was accordingly had, all the parties appearing in person and by attorneys, and on August 31, 1899, the local land office found the issue in favor of the defendant, from which an appeal was had to the general land office, where the decision of the local land office was affirmed, January 5, 1900, and from such decision the case was by appeal again brought before the secretary of the interior, who affirmed the decision of the general land office and revoked the decision of the secretary of June 21, 1898.

It thus appears that the local office, the general land office, and the secretary of the interior have each reached' the same conclusion from the testimony submitted upon rehearing, which testimony as stated, is not set out in plaintiffs *163 petition. We are therefore wholly unable to determine whether or not the conclusions reached by the secretary are supported by the testimony in the ease. There are certain facts recited in the judgment of the secretary, upon which he bases his conclusions in favor of the defendant, and under the authority^ of McCalla v. Akers, 15 Ok. 52, if the judgment of the secretary is consistent with his findings, the demurrer to the petition was propferly sustained.

The record before us shows that the defendant settled on the land in question September 16, 1893, and the-plaintiff, Greenameyer, filed on the tract his soldier declaratory statement on September 19, 1893. The right of the respective parties to the land in the contest which was terminated by the decision of the secretary of the interior complained of turned upon the question as to whether or not the initial acts of the defendant were sufficient to give him a valid-homestead right to the land. If so, he was plainly first in right in point óf time. The decision of the secretary sets out his going upon the land September 16, 1895, with his son, with the running gears of a wagon, and no tools, except a spade: the putting up of a stake thereon about five feet high with a red flannel cloth attached, and the commencement of a well on the land; his sleeping on the land that night, and the sending of his son back 'to the Kansas line for his mother; his subsequent sleeping on the land, and his return to his former Kansas home on the 20th of September, for the purpose of bringing to the claim his plow and other tools, with which to improve the place, one hundred and fifty miles distant. The findings show that the defendant was at this time in feeble health by reason of an injury sustained, by being *164 thrown from a buggy; that on his way to his former home and within a distance of forty miles thereof, while in camp for the night, he was overtaken by a flood, caused by a waterspout, and barely escaped by wading through the water to higher ground; from which exposure, he became sick and was sick when he reached his former home, September 25th, and in consequence of which sickness he was detained until October 17th, when he started back to his claim, arriving there October 22, 1893, bringing his team, wagon, plow and his family, except one boy who was left behind to attend to his cattle; that when he left the land September 20th to go to his former home for the purpose stated, he employed one of his neighbors to do some plowing on the claim, which was done during his absence. The opinion of the secretary then sets out the subsequent acts of the defendant with reference to the land up to the finishing of his improvements as the same were constructed in the winter of 1893, and spring of 1894, the bringing of the balance of his personal property to the land, the building of additions to his house, fencing a pasture, building a stable and other out buildings, and the completion of the well, which he commenced the day he went on the land; and from this concludes that his original settlement was in good faith, and so followed up with substantial evidences of his good faith as to entitled him to a title to the land.

What® are sufficient acts of good faith in a homesteader settling upon the public domain and what particular acts are sufficient evidence of a continuation in good faith of an original act of settlement which segregates the tract settled upon from the public domain, must necessarily vary with the *165 varying circumstances of each particular case. Acts that would indicate good faith in one person under his conditions and circumstances in life, might properly be held to show bad faith in another person who was differently situated and with different surroundings; and the determination of. such question must be left to the judgment of these tribunals which are established for the purpose of disposing of the public domain; and when they have before them such facts as that, they may determine in good faith, that the law has been complied with in a particular case, their determination is final. There was, therefore, no question of law' presented - by the petition of plaintiff, admitting the facts stated in the petition to be true, upon which a judgment might be entered holding that the title of the defendant was a trust for the plaintiff’s use and benefit, and the demurrer was for this reason properly sustained by the lower court.

A second proposition is presented by the petition of the. plaintiff, intended to show that, fraud and imposition .was practiced on the plaintiff and on the officers of the land department, whereby the plaintiff was prevented from exhibiting his ease fully to the officials of the land department on the hearing of such contest.

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Bluebook (online)
1907 OK 16, 88 P. 1054, 18 Okla. 160, 1907 Okla. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenameyer-v-coate-okla-1907.