McAllister v. Okanogan County

100 P. 146, 51 Wash. 647, 1909 Wash. LEXIS 1248
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1909
DocketNo. 7548
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 100 P. 146 (McAllister v. Okanogan County) 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
McAllister v. Okanogan County, 100 P. 146, 51 Wash. 647, 1909 Wash. LEXIS 1248 (Wash. 1909).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

— In the early part of the year 1901, the respondent, Dougald McAllister, who was then a qualified ehtryman under the homestead laws of the United States, settled upon certain unsurveyed- and unappropriated public lands, in Okanogan county, equal in quantity to about one hundred and sixty acres, with the intent of entering the lands as a homestead when the government surveys should be extended over them. Shortly after making his settlement, the respondent enclosed the lands with a substantial fence, and since then has resided on the lands continuously, cultivating the same and raising crops thereon.

In the spring of 1907, the county commissioners of Okanogan county directed the county engineer to lay out and survey a route for a county road between certain designated points in that county. The county engineer surveyed the road as directed, and in doing so extended his surveys across the. land enclosed by the respondent. On the return of the field notes of the survey to the commissioners, that body by resolution, passed pursuant to the statute of March 11, 1903 (Laws 1903, p. 155), declared the lands for thirty feet on each side of the line marked by the survey to be a public highway and county road, to be known as the Riverside and Tunk Creek county road. The resolution further recited that the respondent had erected and was maintaining illegal fences on the public lands of the United States.which materially interfered with the establishment of the proposed public way, and ordered that one Á. F. Leach, a special agent of the United States, be requested to cause the immediate removal of such illegal fences. Later on the county proceeded to open the road, and expended in construction work approximately $1,200, opening the same from its eastern terminus westerly to a point near respondent’s enclosure. On its attempting to proceed through the enclosure, the respondent brought • the present action to enjoin it from so doing.

At the hearing it was shown that the road as constructed had destroyed an irrigation ditch which the respondent had [649]*649constructed some seven years before; also, that its further construction would pass through a place the respondent had reserved for a reservoir site for irrigating purposes, and render it unfit for such purposes, and would require much additional fencing; but no estimate was made by any of the witnesses as to the amount the respondent would be damaged in dollars and cents by the construction of the road across his enclosure. At the commencement of his action, the respondent obtained a temporary restraining order, coupled Avith an order to shoAv cause why a temporary injunction should not be issued pending the final determination of the action. On the hearing had in pursuance of the order, the foregoing facts appeared, Avhereupon the court issued a temporary injunction enjoining the county from opening the road across the respondent’s enclosure, and the county has appealed.

The county asserts the right to establish a public road across the enclosure of the respondent by virtue of § 2477 of the reA'ised statutes of the United States, which grants a right of Avay over the unreserved public lands of the United States for the construction of highways, and the act of the legislature of the state of Washington authorizing the boards of county commissioners of the several counties of the state to accept by resolution the grant therein contained. LaAvs 1903, p. 155. If we may be permitted to judge from the resolution of its board of county commissioners declaring the route surveyed to be a public highway, the first thought of the county Avas that the settlement of the respondent, being in advance of tbe gOA-ernment surveys, Avas Avithout right and his enclosure unlaAvful and subject to be removed by the government officers on complaint of any person whose rights were affected thereby. Its learned counsel, however, argues the case in this court upon another theory. He contends that the grant of Congress of a right of way over the public lands for the construction of a highway is a grant in praesenti, and imports immediate transfer of interest, so that when a highway is once definitely located the title attaches as from the date of the act, cutting [650]*650off all intermediate interests; and in the present case, since the-respondent settled upon the land in question after the passage of this act of Congress, his interests are subordinate thereto and subject to the right of the county to establish a highway across the land enclosed by him by resolution as provided for by statute.

But we cannot think either of these positions tenable. A settler upon the public land in advance of the surveys who-encloses no greater area than the land laws permit him to enter is not a trespasser, nor is his enclosure unlawful. On the contrary, from the very beginning of the government such settlements have been encouraged. In all of the great grants of' the public domain made by Congress, the rights of those on the lands in advance of the grants, whether on the surveyed or unsurveyed lands, have been protected; and even in the reservations of lands made for the benefit of so cherished an object as the common schools, it was provided that, when by the extension of the surveys it should be found that settlement had been made on the reserved sections, other lands should be selected in lieu thereof, and the settler permitted to enter the .lands as if the same were unappropriated public lands. The act of February 25, 1885 (23 Stat. at Large, 321), to prevent unlawful occupancy of the public domain, was not intended to prevent actual bona fide settlers from occupying and enclosing an entryman’s proportion of the public domain. In the language of the Supreme Court of the United States in Cameron v. United States, 148 U. S. 301, 13 Sup. Ct. 595, 37 L. Ed. 459:

“The act of Congress . . . was passed in view of a practice which had become common in the Western Territories of enclosing large areas of lands of the United States by associations of cattle raisers, who were mere trespassers, without shadow of title to such lands, and surrounding them by barbed wire fences, by. which persons desiring to become settlers upon such lands were driven or frightened away, in some cases by threats or violence. The law was, however, never intended to operate upon persons who had taken possession un[651]*651der a bona fide claim or color of title; nor was it intended that, in a proceeding to abate a fence erected in good faith, the legal validity of the defendant’s title to the land should be put in issue. It is a sufficient defence to such a proceeding to show that the lands enclosed were not public lands of the United States, or that defendant had claim or color of title, made or acquired in good faith, or an asserted right thereto, by or under claim made in good faith, with a view to entry thereof at the proper land office under the general laws of the United States.”

To the same effect is Buxton v. Trover, 130 U. S. 232, 9 Sup. Ct. 509, 32 L. Ed. 920, wherein the court said:

“A settlement upon the public lands in advance of the public surveys is allowed to parties who in good faith intend, when the surveys are made and returned to the local land office, to apply for their purchase.

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Bluebook (online)
100 P. 146, 51 Wash. 647, 1909 Wash. LEXIS 1248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcallister-v-okanogan-county-wash-1909.