McMillen v. Gerstle
This text of 19 Colo. 98 (McMillen v. Gerstle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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delivered the opinion of the court.
On the 20th day of October, 1890, J. E. Barber commenced an action upon overdue promissory notes against Charles H. Leonard in the county court of Garfield county; sued out a writ of attachment, which was levied on the 21st day of October, 1890, at one o’clock and twenty-five minutes P. M., by filing a copy of the writ in the clerk and recorder’s office of the county, with a description of the property sought to be attached. Pending the action Barber died, and McMillen, as his administrator, was substituted as plaintiff in the action. The appellee claims title to the land in controversy by deeds [100]*100from Leonard dated the 21st day of October, 1890, and the 10th day of December, 1890. Leonard filed his declaratory statement as a pre-emptor for the land in controversy on July 23, 1890, and made final entry on October 21, 1890. The controverted question of fact determined by the jury was as to whether this levy was made before the final entry of the land in the land office. Evidence was introduced tending to show that such entry was not completed and the land paid for until some twenty-five minutes after two P. M. on said day, an hour later than the levy. The jury having found this issue in favor of intervenor, upon conflicting evidence, it must be taken that the entry was made after the levy of the writ. The question of law presented is, whether a preemptor upon the public land, before final entry, has such an interest in the land sought to be pre-empted as is subject to attachment; and, second, if not, whether a levy attempted to be made before entry constitutes a lien upon the equitable estate acquired by the pre-emptor upon final entry made after the attempted levy and before judgment in the attachment suit. We think both questions must be answered in the negative.
By settling upon the public land of the United States and filing a declaratory statement a person acquires no interest in the land itself, but only an inchoate right, which, upon the compliance with the requirements of an act of congress, may ripen into a title. The right is personal to the pre-emptor and may be forfeited by a failure to perform any of the conditions imposed at any time before payment and final entry. It is not a subject- of sale or transfer, as expressly provided in section 2263 of the Revised Statutes of the United States:
“ All assignments and transfers of the right hereby secured, prior to the issuing of the patent, shall be null and void.”
It would seem manifest, therefore, that if a voluntary transfer or assignment by the pre-emptor would be void, a third party could not, in contravention of the policy and against the express letter of the statute, procure a transfer of the right by an adverse legal proceeding against him, and that [101]*101any step towards the accomplishment of such a result would he wholly ineffective. The levy of the writ for this reason was without any force and created no lien upon the interest of Leonard. It is well established that an attachment can only operate upon the right of a debtor that existed at the time of the levy. Drake on Attachment, §§ 234 and 243; Wade on Attachment, § 253; Crocker v. Pierce, 31 Me. 177.
It follows that the levy being a nullity, the equitable title acquired upon final entry was unaffected by it,.and passed by the conveyance of October 21, 1890, to the appellee, unincumbered. Counsel for appellant relies on sections 2676 and 2677 of the General Statutes of Colorado, 1883, as sustaining his contention that the interest of Leonard was transferable and subject to execution. The right of occupancy and possession that are therein mentioned are such as exist between occupants of the public domain whose rights are dependent upon occupancy alone and not upon any right derived from the general government. Such rights in no measure interfere with the paramount title of the United States or its disposal of the land to one who acquires the right to purchase it under the act of congress, and are terminated whenever its title passes to such purchaser.
The interest of Leonard sought to be attached in this case was one held under the provisions of the act of congress and not the occupancy contemplated in the state statute, and, as before stated, was not attachable.
This conclusion dispenses with the necessity of passing upon other errors that it is claimed intervened upon the trial. We cannot perceive wherein the rulings of the court complained of in any way prejudiced the rights of appellant. The judgment is accordingly affirmed.
Affirmed.
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19 Colo. 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmillen-v-gerstle-colo-1893.