McKnight v. El Paso Brick Co.

120 P. 694, 16 N.M. 721
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1911
DocketNo. 1403
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 120 P. 694 (McKnight v. El Paso Brick Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKnight v. El Paso Brick Co., 120 P. 694, 16 N.M. 721 (N.M. 1911).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT.

MECHEM, J.

To meet and overcome appellees' proof of the relocation of the Lulu and Agnes claims and the original locations of the Aurora, Tip Top and Lynch claipis, made in May, 1906, the appellant introduced its final receipts for the land embraced in the above named claims, issued August 2, 1905, and outstanding in May, 1906. The court held that the said receipts were from their reception void, nullities and of no effect. This holding of the court was based on the action of the 'Secretary of the Interior affirming a decision of the Commissioner of the General Land Office cancelling the application of' appellant for patent upon which application the said receipts were issued by Receiver of the Land Office 'at Las Cruces. The proceeding in the Land Office is entitled Ex Parte El Paso Brick Company, 37 L. D. 155. The decision of the Secretary of the Interior was rendered September 9, 1908. After reviewing the objections to appellants’ application for patent and the authorities in point, the Secretary' said: “In' view of the foregoing it must be held that the affidavit of posting here in question is fatally defective. The defect is not a mere irregularity which may be cured by the subsequent filing of a properly verified affidavit. The statutory provisions involved are mandatory. Their observance is among .the essentials to the jurisdiction of the local officers to entertain the patent proceedings. The requisite statutory proof as to posting not having been heretofore filed, the Register was without authority to direct the publication of the notice or otherwise proceed and the notice, although in fact published and posted, being without the necessary legal basis, was a nullity and ineffectual for any purpose. The patent proceedings, therefore, fall and tire entry will be cancelled.” Thereafter, on'the 24th day of November, 1908, the appellant waived before the Secretary of the Interior its right to make a review of such decision and thereupon such decision and the cancellation of said entry became final and. said entry was cancelled on the records of the local land office. The appellants insist that the decision of the lower court was erroneous because as by the issuance of the final receipts, the land embraced in them became segregated from the public domain, it remained so segregated until the date of cancellation of the receipts.

1 2 Did the Land Department, by its judgment, holding appellants’ application for patent void because the officers of the local land office were without jurisdiction, serve to restore the land to the public domain when the entry was cancelled on the records of the local land office, or was it a decision'that the application and the proceedings thereunder were ineffectual for any purpose and therefore of necessity ineffectual to segregate the land applied for from public domain? There can be no question but that the decision of the Land Department is binding in this case. Smelting Co. v. Kemp, 104 U. S. 636; Knight v. U. S. Land Asosciation, 142 U. S. 211. If binding upon the courts of this territory, it is an adjudication that the final receipts offered by appellant were nullities and therefore properly held by the court below not to in any wise affect the land v embraced within them. Bui counsel for the appellant contend that the decision of the Land Department only went to restoring the land to the public domain when the application for patent was can-celled oil the records of the local land office. No case has been cited by counsel for either party exactly in point. No case has been, cited involving an application for patent held by the land department to be void because of a lack of jurisdiction in the local land officers to receive it. The appellant cites the following rule of the Land Department: “Before receiving and filing a mineral application for patent, local officers will be particular to see that it includes no land which is embraced in a prior or pending application or patent.” It is contended that as long as the application for patent remains uncancelled another may not be received for the same land. That the same rule applies to homestead and pre-emption entries and the decisions of the Land Department and the Federal Courts are all unanimous in holding as to such entries'two things: 1. That the entry segregates the land from the public domain. 2. That even if void as long as it remains uncancelled on the records of the local land office another entry cannot be received. Thel’e can lie no doubt but that a final receipt for mineral lands issued upon, a valid application for patent, vests the purchaser with an equitable title to the land and segregates it from the public domain.

3 There can be no doubt that even though a final receipt or the equitable title thereby attained may have been the result of fraud and therefore voidable, yet, until avoided, it would be valid and existing. Parsons v. Venske, 164 U. S. 91. Adams v. Polglase, 32 L. D. 477.

But in this case it was held that the application for patent was not merely voidable but void. Counsel for appellant rely upon, among other cases, those of Germania Iron Co. v. James, 89 Fed. 811, and James v. Germania Iron Co., 107 Fed. 605. They say that these decisions are authority for their contention, because holding under a similar rule, to the one above stated, but applying to agricultural entries, that no rights can be acquired to land embraced in an entry, until cancellation or its equivalent of the entry has occurred. The sole question before the court in those cases is stated to be: “The question it represents is whether strangers to a contest in which a decision of the Secretary of the Interior was hied in his office in Washington to the effect that a certain entry of the land in question was illegal, and should be cancelled, and that the lands should’be open to disposal under the public land laws of the United States, had the right to enter that land at Duluth, in the State of Minnesota, the moment that decision was filed in Washington, or had no. such right until the local land officers received the decision and had cancelled the former entry on their plats and records where it was made.” 89 Fed. 813, 811. The rule of the Land Department plead was “that after a decision of the Secretary had been rendered that a former entry was void and should be cancelled, no subsequent entry of the land could he made until that decision was officially communicated to the local land officers, and a notation of the cancellation was made on their plats and ' records.” Further, the court in its opinion sa3's: “The Secretary of the Interior is an appellate tribunal in these cases, whose court is held, and whose decisions are filed, more than one thousand miles from most of the inferior tribunals in which the parties appear and institute and try their contests. It is according to the almost universal practice of judicial tribunals for the inferior court to take no action, and allow none to he taken in it, until the decision and order of the appellate court has been officially received and recorded. The reasons for such rule 'in the Land Department are far stronger and more imperative than in ordinary courts of law or equity. It is in the local land office that the rights of the entrvmen must be initiated as well as contested. The policy of the government is to afford to the actual settlers, to the preemptors and homesteaders, to those who live on or near the public land to lie disposed of, every facility to acquire it without burdensome expense or unnecessarjr trouble.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 P. 694, 16 N.M. 721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcknight-v-el-paso-brick-co-nm-1911.