Grogan v. Knight

27 Cal. 515
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 27 Cal. 515 (Grogan v. Knight) 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
Grogan v. Knight, 27 Cal. 515 (Cal. 1865).

Opinion

By the Court, Rhodes, J.

This is an action of ejectment to recover the possession of a portion of the lands formerly known as the Suscol Rancho. The premises are public lands of the United States, and have never been surveyed under the authority of Congress. The plaintiff relies for his title upon certificates of purchase issued October 17, 1862, by the Register of the State Land Office, upon the location and sale of school lands, selected in lieu of the sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections of the public lands of the United States. The United States Register of the proper land district refused to approve the selection, because the lands were unsurveyed. The defendants were in possession, they having entered upon the land in May, 1862, and each of them claimed a right of pre-emption under the Acts of Congress, to the respective quarter sections upon which he had entered.

It appears in the statement on the defendants’ motion for a new trial, that “ the plaintiff testified that one Dr. Page had caused the lands to be inclosed in 1861; that said Dr. Page was the real party in interest in this suit; that the plaintiff only held the lands in his name in trust for Dr. Page, and to secure him for the advances he had made; that said Dr. Page had replevied the crops raised on the land, and received the same for [518]*518the year 1863, and had pastured the pasture part of the land; also had received the profits of the land in 1862.” The Court found as facts: “ First—On the 28th day of October, A. D. 1862, the plaintiff held the certificates of the State of California, duly issued, for the land in controversy; Second—The inceptive steps for the obtaining such certificates were taken before any one of the defendants entered upon the land.” The prior possession of the plaintiff, or his grantor, is neither admitted by the pleadings nor found by the Court; and the only finding of fact respecting the plaintiff’s title, possession or right of possession, is as above mentioned. The Court from those facts found the. following conclusions of law : “ First—The plaintiff was at the time alleged in his complaint seized and possessed of the land in controversy, and had title thereto; Second—The title thus held, and the right of possession flowing therefrom, relate to the first steps taken for acquiring the same.” It thus clearly appears that the Court found for the plaintiff on the sole ground that the certificates of purchase were sufficient to convey, and did convey to the plaintiff, the right to the possession of the lands described in the certificates, and not on the ground of the prior possession of the plaintiff or Dr. Page. We are, therefore, not required to determine whether the evidence was sufficient to have enabled the Court to find for the plaintiff on the ground of the prior possession of Dr. Page, if it had clearly appeared that his right depending upon his possession had been transferred to the plaintiff. The first finding of fact, which is unnecessarily indefinite, and merely states a portion of the evidence tending to prove a fact, would seem to indicate that the certificates of purchase were issued to the plaintiff or had been assigned to him, rather than that Dr'. Page had conveyed the land to him.

The point upon which the appeal must turn has relation to the value and effect of the certificates of purchase issued by the State.

The defendants resist the claim of title set up by the plaintiff on the ground that the certificates of purchase, having [519]*519been issued before the lands selected had been surveyed according to the laws of the United Statess, were not evidence of title in the person to whom they were issued. It will not be contended that the title to the lands selected passed to the plaintiff, unless the title would have passed to the State upon the performance, in her behalf, of acts similar in their character to those under which the plaintiff claims, for although the certificates issued to the purchaser, the selection and location of the lands was made for the State. Could the State in October, 1863, by her own act, have acquired title to those lands as portions of the lands to be selected in lieu of the sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections, granted for the purposes of public schools, prior to the survey of the lands by the United States ?

The seventh section of the Act of March 3, 1853, provides that such land shall be selected by the authorities of the State agreeably to the provisions of the Act of Congress, approved the 20th of May, 1826 ; and that Act provides that the lands shall be selected in sections and subdivisions of sections.. It requires no argument to prove that the survey of public lands of the United States into sections and subdivisions of sections can be made only under the authority of Congress. The survey is a part of the system devised by Congress for the disposal of the public lands; and the survey is as completely beyond the control of the State authorities as any portion of the system. The selection of a particular tract, as a subdivision of public land, in anticipation of the survey by the United States, would be no less wanting in authority than would the selection of a designated subdivision in anticipation of the grant by Congress. In Bernard’s Heirs v. Ashley’s Heirs, 18 How. 43, a selection of land had been made by the Governor of the Territory of Arkansas, under the Acts of Congress, authorizing him to select lands equal to ten sections, in tracts not less than a quarter section each, and to sell the same for the purpose of raising a fund to erect public buildings in the territory; and it was held that the selection that he had made of a quarter section within a township, the sur[520]*520vey of which was incorrect and had not then been approved by the Surveyor-General, was invalid, and that the selection could take effect only from the time when the survey was sanctioned and became a record in the district land office.

A question quite similar in its character, in all its essential particulars, was before the Court in Terry v. Megerle, 24 Cal. 609, the plaintiff claiming title to the lands by virtue of the location upon unsurveyed lands, of “school land warrants,” issued by the State, under the Act to dispose of the five hundred thousand acres granted to the State, for the purposes of internal improvements. Mr. Chief Justice Sanderson, in commenting upon the provisions of the Act of Congress, says : “ There is no ambiguity in the' language used; on the contrary, the meaning is too plain and obvious to admit of doubt. The language is, located as aforesaid,’ that is to say, in parcels of not less than three hundred and twenty acres, conformably to sectional divisions and subdivisions and after the survey has been made. * * # The grant imposes conditions as to quantity, manner of selection and location, and time of location, and under it no title to any specific land can vest in the State until all of these conditions have been complied with.

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Bluebook (online)
27 Cal. 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grogan-v-knight-cal-1865.