McBee v. Stallworth

122 So. 821, 219 Ala. 494, 1929 Ala. LEXIS 298
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 6, 1929
Docket1 Div. 540.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 122 So. 821 (McBee v. Stallworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McBee v. Stallworth, 122 So. 821, 219 Ala. 494, 1929 Ala. LEXIS 298 (Ala. 1929).

Opinion

*495 SAYRE, J.

The land and the title involved in this cause are the same as in Stein v. England, 202 Ala. 297, 80 So. 362. The action here is brought to recover a fractional interest resting upon the same muniments of title as did the fractional interest England was allowed to recover in the ease just above referred to. However, the case here presents considerations of law which do not appear to have been brought to the attention of the court in that case, as well as some elaboration of the facts, and the court-is of opinion that it should be differently decided — this, for the reason that the title in question must in controlling part be determined according to the federal law, since it rests upon the federal statutes, and we must accept the law as it has been declared by the highest authority in that jurisdiction, the Supreme Court of the United States.

In this, as in the former case, the title in dispute turns upon the question whether or no the land was subject to taxation by the state prior to the issue of the patent in 1913, and so whether, prior to the patent, title could be acquired by adverse possession.

As appears from the statement of facts in Stein v. England, and from the record in this cause, this land was sold for nonpayment of taxes in 1870, and since that time has been held under adverse claim of title by appellees in this cause and- their, predecessors in interest — if, indeed, the law permitted such holding — “it being expressly agreed by the solicitors for said May Wilson McBee, for the purposes of this trial only, that if, at the time said Louis Stein [under whom appellees claim] received his deed to said land, the title to the land could be acquired by adverse possession, then the said Louis Stein did acquire such title by his adverse possession,” as the chancellor’s decree recites. Appellant traces her claim of title back to Anthony Espejo, who settled upon the land in 1803 under a permit from the Spanish commandant at Mobile. The record contains a transcript from the “register of certificates granted for claims of lands in the district of Jackson courthouse, Mississippi, contained in report No. 6 of the Commissioner William Crawford, and confirmed as donations by virtue of the third section of the Act of Congress passed third of March, 1819, entitled ‘An act for adjusting the claim to land, etc., in the districts east of the Island of New Orleans,’ ” which shows the claim of the heirs of Anthony Espejo under a “Spanish permit” to the land now in controversy. That report was dated January 1, 1823.

The record further shows that, at the end of proceedings, the evidence of which need not be reproduced, the register and receiver of the land office at St. Stephens, under date of August 8, 1836, and in pursuance of his official duty as defined by the statute laws of the United States, certified as follows:

“We héreby certify that by the third section of the Act of Congress passed on the third day of March, 1819, entitled ‘An act for adjusting the claims to land and establishing land offices in the district east of the Island of New Orleans,’ the claim of Gertrude Espejo, Anthony Espejo, and Catherine Espejo, in the right of Anthony Espejo entered as claim No. 6 in abstract No. 6 of- the Commissioner, was confirmed and that it appears by the accompanying plat of the survey thereof that the land claim has been surveyed and designated as section No. 38 in township No. 4, range No. 2 west of the basic meridian and south of the 31st degree of latitude, containing 640 and 8%oo of an acre.

“Now therefore be it known that on the presentation of this certificate to the Commissioner of the General Land Office, the said Gertrude Espejo, Anthony Espejo and Catherine Espejo, shall be entitled to the said tract of land.”

The foregoing certificate — to which we shall refer as patent certificate, because that is what it purports to be and the opinions of the Supreme Court of the United States so refer to similar certificates — is authenticated by Marie B. Owen, “Director Department of Archives and History of the State of Alabama,” under date of September 26, 1928. (The. records of the Land Office affecting land titles *496 in this state have been, under an act of Congress, transferred to the keeping of the Department of Archives and History.) One branch of the argument for appellant suggests that the record of the patent certificate, stated above, fails to show that such certificate was ever issued, but only that it was recorded in the office of the register and receiver. The register and receiver of the land office at St. Stephens, under date of October 10, 1838, certified to the Commissioner of the General Land Office at Washington, among others, a patent certificate as issued to the heirs of Anthony Espejo August 5, 1836. It seems to be a fair construction of the record that the patent certificate shown as of date August 8, 1836, is a record copy of that instrument, rather than the instrument itself, unissued, as appellant would infer. The' consequences to flow from either finding, so far as this case is concerned, would be the same, and so, we infer, the General Land Office considered the matter, when, 75 years later, it issued a patent to the Espejo heirs. Meantime, in 1870, as we have said, the state caused this land to be sold for nonpayment of taxes levied upon it, and appellees claim in succession to the title thus created.

It is true that under the laws of the United States a patent might, for good cause," be denied to the holder of a patent certificate ; that is, the patent might be denied because the claim to it was founded in fraud or mistake, and this would involve á judicial inquiry. But so a patent, once issued, might be revoked. The finality in one case is no less than the finality in the other. Hence our opinion that the patent certificate issued to the heirs of Anthony Espejo vested in them an equitable title. That title was subject to be divested, but in fact never was divested by any act of government. The patent of 1913 had not the effect in and of itself to destroy the right evidenced by the previously issued patent certificate. It operated merely as a renunciation of any proprietary claim by the government. Eslava v. Doe ex dem. Farmer’s Heirs, 7 Ala. 543; Doe ex dem. Farmer’s Heirs v. Eslava, 11 Ala. 1028, 1044.

In Witherspoon v. Duncan, 4 Wall. 210, 18 L. Ed. 339, the Supreme Court of the United States held that lands, originally public, cease to be public after they have been entered at the land office and a certificate of entry' obtained; that lands so entered are liable to taxation by the state; and if the. taxes remain-unpaid, they may be sold like other-lands, even though no patent may as yet have issued. Quoting the court in that case: “In ñó just sense, can lands be said to be public lands after they have been entered at the land office and a certificate of entry obtained. If public lands before the entry, after it they are privkte property. If subject to sale, the government has no power to revoke .the entry ánd withhold the patent. A second sale, if the first was authorized by law, confers no right on the buyer, and is a void act.” In conclusion the court adds: “It is true that the entry might be set aside at Washington; but this condition attaches to all entries of the public lands.” And it appears from that case, affirmatively, that the national authority has,, without question, suffered the universal exercise of the power to tax on the basis of the original entry.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Whaley v. Wotring
225 So. 2d 177 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1969)
Reichert v. Jerome H. Sheip, Inc.
131 So. 229 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1930)
Doe Ex Dem. Slaughter v. Roe Ex Dem. W. M. Carney Mill Co.
127 So. 671 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 So. 821, 219 Ala. 494, 1929 Ala. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcbee-v-stallworth-ala-1929.