Johnson v. Drew

34 Fla. 130
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 34 Fla. 130 (Johnson v. Drew) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Drew, 34 Fla. 130 (Fla. 1894).

Opinion

Mabry J.:

Appellee brought ejectment againt appellant to recover possession of lot eight (8) of section nineteen, township twenty-nine south, of range nineteen east,, and. lot seven (7) of section twenty-four in township-twenty-nine south, of range eighteen east, containing in all 40 19-100 acres, and obtained judgment.

The defendant below filed the plea of not guilty, and a plea on equitable grounds. A demurrer was sustained to the latter plea, and an amended plea on same ground was offered to be filed, but was refused by the court for the reason assigned, that it presented no equitable defense. A consideration of the merits of the amended plea will suffice to dispose of the errors assigned in the rulings of the court in reference to the equitable pleas.

The amended plea offered to be filed alleges in substance that the land sued for was situated within the Fort Brooke Military Reservation of the United States, at Tampa, Florida, and that the plaintiff claimed title to the same by virtue of a patent predicated upon a pretended location and entry on the land made in the-United States Land Office at Gainesville, Florida, by Louis J. Brush, plaintiff’s grantor, with Valentine scrip; that at. the time of the said location and entry of said land, and at the time of the issuance of the patent to Brush, the defendant was in actual occupancy and possession of said land, and was residing upon it with his family as a home; that defendant had. settled apon and was in the actual possession of- said land, it being a portion of said Fort Brooke Military [133]*133Reservation, prior to the location of said reservation in the year 1877, and prior to the location of said reservation upon said reservation in the year 1878, and had settled thereon prior to January first, 1884, in .good faith for the purpose of securing a home, and of entering the same under the general laws of the United States, and continued in such occupancy from a period prior to the first day of January, 1884, to .the time of the approval of the act of Congress of July 5th, 1884, and is by law entitled to make a homestead entry, and to enter said land, and in equity and good conscience is entitled to the exclusive right of possession thereof. That at the time of the said pretended location and entry of said land with Valentine scrip by plaintiff’s grantor and the issuance of said patent to him, said land was occupied by defendant as aforesaid, and was appropriated, and -was not then, and is not now unoccupied and unappropriated public land of the United States, as required, specified and limited by the act of Congress in such case made and provided in authorizing the location of said scrip: that at the time of the said pretended entry of said land and the issuance of said patent to plaintiff’s grantor, said land had not been surveyed under the direction and control of the General Land Office of the United States, and that said entry was made upon tracts less than the subdivisions provided for in the United States land laws and did not conform to the general system of the United States Land Survey; that at the time of the entry of said land with Valentine scrip and the issuance of the said patent to the plaintiff’s grantor, said land was within the jurisdiction of the War Department of the United States, and not within the Land Department. And defendant alleges that said patent [134]*134is in fraud and violation of the acts of the Congress of the United States and of the rights of the War Department; and that said patent is void and vests no. legal or equitable title, nor right of possession in and to said land in plaintiff; and that defendant by virtue of said acts of Congress, and in equity and good conscience, is entitled to the exclusive possession of the said land mentioned in plaintiff’s declaration.

It will be seen by reading the foregoing plea that while the issuance of a patent on a location and entry of the land with Valentine scrip is admitted, one purpose is to impeach the patent on the ground that the land was reserved, and not subject at the time to be entered by such scrip. Before examining the allegations of this plea, reference will be made to the acts of Congress on the subject, and" also to some decisions bearing on the character of the defense sought to be made by the plea.

In April, 1873, Congress passed an act authorizing the Ninth Circuit Court of the United States, for California, to hear and decide upon the merits of the claim of Thomas B. Valentine, under a Mexican grant to-Juan Miranda, to a place called the Rancho Arroyo de San Antonio, situated in Sonoma county, State of California, with’ right of appeal to the Supreme Court of' the United States. It was also provided in said act that any decree that might be obtained in favor of said claim should not affect any adverse right or title to the lands described in the decree, but in lieu thereof the claimant, or his legal representatives, might select and should be allowed patents for an equal quantity of the unoccupied and unappropriated public lands of the United States, not mineral, and in tracts not less than, the subdivisions provided for in the United States. [135]*135land laws, and, if nnsurveyed when taken, to conform,, when surveyed, to the general system of the United States land surveys; and the Commissioner of-the General Land Office, under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior, was authorized to issue scrip, in legal subdivisions, to Yalentine, or his legal representatives, in accordance with the provisions of the act, provided that no decree in favor of Yalentine should be executed, or be of any force or effect against any person or persons, nor should any land scrip or patents be issued as therein provided, unless Yalentine should first execute and deliver to the Commissioner of the-General Land Office a deed conveying to the United States all his right, title and interest to the land covered by the said Miranda grant. The scrip located upon the land in question, and for which the patent issued, was the Yalentine scrip authorized to be issued by the act above mentioned.

In August, 185G, provision was made by an act of Congress as follows: “That all public lands heretofore reserved for military purposes in the State of Florida, which said lands, in the opinion of the Secretary of AYar, are no longer useful or desired for such purposes, or so much thereof as said secretary may designate, shall be and are hereby placed under the control of the General Land Officer, to be disposed of and sold in the same manner and under the same regulations as other public lands of the United States;, provided, that said lands shall not be so placed under the control of said General Land Office until said opinion of the Secretary of AYar, giving his consent,, communicated to the Secretary of the Interior in writing shall be filed and recorded.” Chapter 129, act of August 18th, 1850. This act was repealed in 1884, and provision made by the repealing act that whenever, in [136]*136the opinion of the President of the United States, the lands, or any portion of them, included within the limits of any military reservation theretofore or thereafter declared, have become or shall become useless for military purposes, he shall cause the same, or so much thereof as he may designate, to be placed under the control of the Secretary of the Interior for disposition as provided in the act, and shall cause to be filed with the Secretary of the Interior notice thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Fla. 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-drew-fla-1894.