Hodge v. McCall

197 P. 86, 185 Cal. 330, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 550
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1921
DocketL. A. No. 6199.
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 197 P. 86 (Hodge v. McCall) 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
Hodge v. McCall, 197 P. 86, 185 Cal. 330, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 550 (Cal. 1921).

Opinion

OLNEY, J.

The original survey of the public lands in the Imperial Valley was exceedingly inaccurate, and when the valley came to be settled up another survey became necessary. This was made, and in its making the government subdivisions for which entry had been made were located as actually claimed by the entrymen on the ground. When so located, what theoretically should have been adjoining subdivisions were in many instances separated by small strips of land which did not come in either subdivision. The situation may be made dearer by the accompanying diagram of it as it exists in the present case.

*332 The areas marked McCall and Hodge represent the governmental subdivisions upon which the plaintiff and the defendant, or their predecessors in interest, had respectively-entered, and to which they had acquired title from the government. The strip between them, portions of which are marked 4 and 17, is one of the strips of which we are speaking. The strips were divided into subdivisions called lots, designated by numbers, and the numbers 4 and 17 are the numbers of the lots involved in the present controversy.

The strips were too narrow to be suitable for separate homesteads or farms, and could best be improved and used in connection with the homesteads and farms which they adjoined. To meet this condition of affairs, Congress passed an act (35 Stats, at Large, 779), providing for the sale of the lots into which the strips were subdivided, at a price and under regulations prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior, but with a proviso that any land owner or entryman whose land adjoined any lot should have a preferred right to purchase the one-half of the lot which abutted on his land. The proviso reads:

“Provided that any entryman or owner of such entered or patented tract shall have a preferred right to buy one-half of all such lots as abut on lands held under his entry or owned by him within six months after the time when the said Secretary shall fix the price of such tracts and this preferred right shall not prevent such entryman or owner from buying all of such abutting lots as may remain unsold at the expiration of said six months.”

Pursuant to the act the Secretary of the Interior, through the commissioner of the land office, fixed the price at which the lots would be sold by the government and promulgated regulations for their sale. These regulations, however, instead of providing for a preferred right to each land owner to purchase one-half of any lot abutting upon his land, as the act prescribed, declared that literal compliance with the act in this particular was impossible and that preference would be given to those owners whose lands adjoined any particular lot who were best entitled to purchase under the special facts of each case.. The regulations also provided that any land owner might claim a preferred right to purchase not merely a half but all of any lot which adjoined *333 his land, and that “if more than one application be made for the same tract by parties separately claiming preference of purchase, such right will be awarded to the applicant most equitably entitled thereto under all the facts and circumstances of the particular case.”

Following the promulgation of these regulations, the plaintiff Jennie M. Hodge made application within the prescribed six months to purchase as a preferred purchaser the east half of lots 4 and 17 abutting on her land on the west, and the defendant Cora M. McCall made a similar application to purchase all of the same lots as abutting on her lands on the east. The Land Department decided that the defendant' was more equitably entitled to purchase the lots than the plaintiff, rejected the application of the latter, and approved the application of the former for the whole of the lots. Upon appeal to the Secretary of the Interior, this ruling was affirmed and patent issued to the defendant for the whole of the lots accordingly. Thereupon the plaintiff brought the present action against the defendant, alleging that upon the foregoing facts the plaintiff was legally entitled to purchase the east half of the lots in preference to the defendant, and that through mistake of law on the part of the officials of the Interior Department her right had been denied and a patent for the whole of the lots issued to the defendant. The complaint asked for judgment, declaring that the defendant held the east half of the lots in trust for the plaintiff and directing that the defendant convey it to her. Judgment went for the defendant in the court below, and the plaintiff appeals.

[1] The rule is well established that if, through a mistake of law on the part of the officials of the Department of the Interior, a patent to land to which one person is entitled under the public land laws erroneously issues to another, the latter will be held by the courts to hold the legal title received from the government in trust for him who should have received it. (Sanders v. Dutcher, 168 Cal. 353, [143 Pac. 599].) It is clear also that if there was any mistake on the part of "the department officials in rejecting the application of the plaintiff, such mistake was a mistake of law consisting in the belief of the officials that upon the facts, which are not in dispute, she did not have a preferred right to purchase. The question in the case therefore re *334 solves itself into one as to whether or not the plaintiff had such preferred right.

This question must be determined by the statute and not by the regulations of the department. [2] It is the rule that the function of department regulations is to carry out the purpose of the statute for whose administration they are adopted, and that they must be reasonable and appropriate for this purpose and cannot either enlarge or impair a right given by the statute. (United States v. United Verde Copper Co., 196 U. S. 207, [49 L. Ed. 449, 25 Sup. Ct. Rep. 222, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes]; United States v. George, 228 U. S. 14, [57 L. Ed. 712, 33 Sup. Ct. Rep. 412]; Anchor v. Howe, 50 Fed. 366.) If the plaintiff in this ease was given by the statute a preferred right to purchase, it is wholly immaterial that the regulations purport to deny her that right. The only bearing which the regulations can have on the question is in connection with the construction to be given the statute. [3] If its meaning be doubtful, then the construction put upon it in actual administration by the officers intrusted with that administration should be given great weight by the courts in determining its true meaning. But if its meaning be not doubtful, and the regulations are in conflict with that meaning, they are simply void. If this be not true, it is within the power of the department officials to override and annul an act of Congress.

[4] As to the meaning of the statute, we do not see how there can be any reasonable question.

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Bluebook (online)
197 P. 86, 185 Cal. 330, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 550, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hodge-v-mccall-cal-1921.