Lawrence v. Potter

60 P. 147, 22 Wash. 32, 1900 Wash. LEXIS 209
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 2, 1900
DocketNo. 3350
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 60 P. 147 (Lawrence v. Potter) 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
Lawrence v. Potter, 60 P. 147, 22 Wash. 32, 1900 Wash. LEXIS 209 (Wash. 1900).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dunbar, J.

On October 3, 1883, John Gr. Potter filed a homestead application on the land in controversy. On December 24, 1885, the appellant Perry W. Lawrence filed a contest in the land office at Spokane, claiming’ that Potter had abandoned said land. The material part of the affidavit of contest was as follows:

“ That said John Gr. Potter has wholly abandoned said tract, and changed his residence therefrom for more than six months since making said entry and next prior to the date herein; that said tract is not settled upon and cultivated by said party as required by law, and affiant further says that said John Gr. Potter has removed his effects, except some bedding and a sheet iron stove, from said land and has been residing near Colfax, W. T.”

Hotice of contest was issued by the register on December 24, 1885, and duly served upon Potter. Testimony was taken in relation to the matters therein involved on Eebruary 3, 1886. On the 26th day of September, 1887, the register and receiver decided against Potter and ordered a cancellation of his homestead entry. An appeal was taken from this decision to the commissioner of the general land office, which officer reversed the decision of the local land office. An appeal was then taken from the commissioner’s decision to the secretary of the interior, who re[34]*34versed the decision of the commissioner, and affirmed that of the local land office. On July 29, 1891, Lawrence filed a homestead application on the land in controversy, and in due course of time a patent was issued, viz., July 18, 1895. After the issuing of the patent to Lawrence, this action was brought, which is an action of ejectment, Potter having retained possession of a small portion of the land embraced in the original homestead. The case was tried by the court on stipulation by counsel for respective parties, and the court found that the register and receiver had no jurisdiction to decree the cancellation of the homestead by Potter and that all subsequent proceedings in the land department, including the issuance of the patent to Lawrence, were void and of no effect; that the respondent Potter was entitled to the legal title to all the land embraced in the said homestead entry; that the alleged title of the appellant was a cloud upon the respondent’s title, and that the respondent was entitled to have said cloud removed, and adjudged that the appellant should convey to the respondent all the right, title, interest, and estate to the said land. Prom this judgment this appeal is taken. Upon the filing of the answer a demurrer was interposed, to the effect that it did not constitute a defense. The demurrer was overruled, and the plaintiffs replied. It is earnestly contended by the appellants that the demurrer should have been sustained in this case, but, with the view we take of the law, it is not necessary to discuss this proposition, but we will pass upon the questions involved, which will finally dispose of the case. There is a great deal of argument in the briefs in regard to whether or not fraud was properly alleged in the answer, but, as any attempt to allege fraud or to make fraud one of the issues in the case by the answer is especially disclaimed by the brief of the respondents, it is not necessary for this court to enter into an analysis of the answer with the deter-[35]*35ruination of that question in view. Stripped of all extraneous matter, as we understand it, there are two propositions in this case upon which the respondents rely, and upon which the court based its judgment. First, That the register of the land office had no lawful authority to forfeit tbe homestead entry of the respondent Potter, until he had found and decided affirmatively as a fact that Potter had changed his residence from, and abandoned, the lands embraced in his entry for more than six months since making his entry next prior to December 16, 1885; that the finding of such fact is a jurisdictional prerequisite required by statute, without which the register did not have or acquire any jurisdiction to forfeit or cancel said entry; and it is insisted that it logically follows that, if the register acted without jurisdiction, neither the commissioner of the general land office nor the secretary of the interior ever acquired any jurisdiction on the appeal in said case to forfeit said homestead entry, and that by reason thereof the homestead entry of Potter was never lawfully forfeited ■or canceled, and that the same is now in full force and virtue in law. Second, That there is no authority in law for the register and receiver to act jointly in a homestead contest proceeding. It is a general proposition, recognized by all authorities, that when a special tribunal is constituted by law for the purpose of determining certain matters arising in the course of its duties, its decisions within the scope of its authority are conclusive, and that the decision of the land department, to which are submitted the facts involved in the distribution of the public lands— which facts are the foundation of action on the part of the departmental officers, unaffected by fraud or mistake— is conclusive upon the courts; but it is just as well settled that there exists in the courts the power to inquire into and -correct mistakes, injustice, and wrong resulting from the .action or administration of the officers of the land depart[36]*36ment, when title to the land in question has passed out of the government into the hands of private individuals. But, in the absence of fraud or mistake, the decision of the departmental officers is final, except as such decision may be reversed on appeal in that department. This question was elaborately discussed in Wiseman v. Eastman, 21 Wash. 163 (57 Pac. 398), where the authorities were collated and reviewed. It does not appear that this principle of law is seriously contested in this case, but the main contention is that such mistakes of law were made by the department as give the courts of the land jurisdiction to review.

The first contention of the respondent is that the affirmative finding was not made that Potter had abandoned his-claim upon said land. The concluding announcement of the register and receiver is as follows:

“ Although Mr. Potter had not, at the date of this contest abandoned his claim upon this land, he had, in our judgment, forfeited his right to it as a homestead, when this question is to be considered in the presence of an adverse claim. We therefore decide that the homestead entry of John G-. Potter, for the land in question, should be canceled and cleared from the records.

J. M. Adams, Register.

M. G-. Barney, Receiver.”

It is contended that, not only is there no affirmative finding of abandonment, but that there is substituted an affirmative finding that there was no abandonment; hence the-decision was without effect, inasmuch as jurisdiction to-decide that the land in question should be canceled rested upon the affirmative finding that the land had been abandoned by the contestee. It will not do to take excerpts from the findings of the register and receiver, to determine the standing of the parties to the contest, but the whole report must be taken into consideration; and, taking the whole report thus into consideration, it is not difficult te [37]

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Related

State ex rel. Blakeslee v. Clausen
148 P. 28 (Washington Supreme Court, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 P. 147, 22 Wash. 32, 1900 Wash. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-v-potter-wash-1900.