Kendall v. Long

119 P. 9, 66 Wash. 62, 1911 Wash. LEXIS 1012
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1911
DocketNo. 9794
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 119 P. 9 (Kendall v. Long) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kendall v. Long, 119 P. 9, 66 Wash. 62, 1911 Wash. LEXIS 1012 (Wash. 1911).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

The appellant brought this action against the respondent, seeking to charge her as a trustee holding for his benefit the legal title to the northeast quarter of section 24, in township 15, north, of range 6, west of the Willamette meridian. The respondent holds the land by patent [63]*63from the government of the United States, having acquired the same by entry under the timber and stone act and the acts amendatory thereof. The appellant claims the same in virtue of an attempted entry made by him under the homestead acts. He conceives that the land was awarded to the respondent through a misconstruction of the law by the officers of the land department, whereas a proper construction would have awarded the land to him.

. The facts giving rise to the controversy are not seriously in dispute. It appears that the land first became subject to entry at 9 o’clock p. m. of July 2, 1903, at the land office situated at Olympia, in the state of Washington. At that time one Thomas J. Long, husband of the respondent, and Gustavus S. Kendall, the appellant, made simultaneous applications to homestead the land, each alleging a prior settlement thereon. It thereupon became necessary to. determine who had the better right, and a hearing was had for that purpose before the local land office, which determined the right in favor of Kendall. An appeal was taken from this ruling to the commissioner of the general land office, who reversed the holding of the local office, and on his ruling being affirmed on appeal to the secretary of the interior, Long was allowed to make a homestead entry on the land. This entry was made on September 8, 1905. On September 12, 1905, four days later, one Andrew J. Jackson filed an affidavit of contest against Long’s entry, alleging therein that Long was disqualified to enter the land at the time he offered his homestead application, because he then owned more than one hundred and sixty acres of land within the state of Washington, and had never established nor maintained a residence on the land. Notice of these charges was served upon Long and a trial thereof- had, which resulted in a decision in favor of Long by the officers of the local land office. An appeal was also prosecuted from this decision to the commissioner of the general land office, and afterwards to the secretary of the interior, who likewise determined the [64]*64case in favor of Long, the contest being finally closed and dismissed in the land office on August 24, 1907, notice thereof being communicated to Long on the next day.

On May 29, 1907, while the last mentioned contest proceedings were pending on appeal, the appellant sent an affidavit of contest to the local land office, averring that Long had never established a residence on the land in question; that he had done nothing more than erect a temporary shack thereon, wholly unsuitable for a residence; and that subsequent to making his entry he had ceased to live on the premises and had wholly abandoned the same; praying that he be accorded a hearing in regard thereto, according to the rules and practice of the land department. On receipt of the affidavit, the register of the local office. notified the appellant of the pendency of the contest proceedings instituted by Jackson, and stated that the affidavit would be filed as a junior contest to be held pending the final disposition of the Jackson contest proceedings. The affidavit of contest was not corroborated as required' by the rules of the land department, nor was any proceedings taken thereon at that time further than to file the same.

On August 26, 1907, the day after Long was informed that he had been successful in contest proceedings instituted against him by Jackson, he came to the local land office at Olympia and filed a relinquishment of his homestead right. Immediately prior to filing the relinquishment, he made an examination of the official records of the land office and learned for the first time of the filing of the appellant’s contest affidavit, no official notice or notice of any kind having ever been sent him of its pendency. Immediately on the relinquishment being filed, his wife, the respondent in this action, made application to enter the land under the timber and stone act. Her application was allowed and she was granted a certificate of entry. Three days later, on August 29, 1907, the register of the local land office rejected Kendall’s affidavit of contest against Long’s homestead entry, on [65]*65the grounds that his rights had already been adjudicated; that Long was absent from the land at the time the affidavit was filed, on leave of absence granted him by the land department, and his right was not, for that reason, then contestable on the ground of abandonment; that the affidavit failed to set forth sufficient facts to constitute grounds for a contest; and that all the facts set forth in the affidavit had been adjudicated. Notice of this rejection was forthwith sent to the appellant, with the further notice that he had thirty days in which to appeal therefrom to the commissioner of the general land office.

No appeal was taken from the order of rejection, but on September 16 the appellant filed a protest against the entry of the respondent, alleging residence upon the land prior to and at the time of the relinquishment filed by Long, the homestead claimant, and .that he had, by reason thereof, “a prior right of entry to said tract under the laws of the United States;” alleging further that the timber entry of the respondent was a fraudulent and collusive entry between herself and her husband, and the result of a conspiracy to defraud the appellant; that the leave of absence granted Long by the land department was granted on false and fraudulent affidavits to the effect that Long was in ill health and unable to live on the land because thereof, whereas in truth and in fact he at all times was in good health; that the sole purpose and object of Long in relinquishing his homestead right to the premises,. and his wife in entering the same under the timber and stone act, was to acquire fraudulently a precedence over the homestead application of the appellant, which he alleged was still pending before the land office. He also averred in another paragraph, somewhat in contradiction of his former averments, that the sole purpose of the relinquishment and subsequent entry of Mrs. Long was to avoid the necessity of making a residence on the land and the consequent hardships of pioneer life, and that the secretary [66]*66of the interior had held the land to be more valuable for agricultural purposes than for timber.

On September 17, 1907, the register of the local land office dismissed the protest, giving as reasons therefor that the same was not corroborated; that service thereof had not been made upon the timber applicant; that he had no homestead application on file as alleged in the affidavit of protest; and that a certain allegation therein as to the ruling of the secretary of the interior was not in accord with the actual ruling of that official. Later on the respondent offered proof under the timber culture entry, whereupon the appellant appeared and sought to cross-examine the witness and otherwise contest the entry. The right to cross-examine or contest the proofs offered was refused him by the register, and the proofs of entry allowed. The appellant thereupon appealed to the commissioner of the general land office from the several rulings of the local office, and such proceedings were had as to result in the return of the cause to the local office with the following instruction:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 P. 9, 66 Wash. 62, 1911 Wash. LEXIS 1012, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kendall-v-long-wash-1911.