Mecca Land & Exploration Co. v. Schlecht

4 F.2d 256, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 931
CourtDistrict Court, D. Arizona
DecidedJanuary 27, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 4 F.2d 256 (Mecca Land & Exploration Co. v. Schlecht) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mecca Land & Exploration Co. v. Schlecht, 4 F.2d 256, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 931 (D. Ariz. 1925).

Opinion

JACOBS, District Judge.

This ease was submitted to the court upon an agreed statement of facts and hied without a jury. The case was set down for hearing and orally argued before the court at Prescott, Ariz., on the 4th day of August, 1924, and thereafter submitted on briefs, and the court has carefully considered the briefs filed on both sides. The facts are as follows:

The plaintiff is the owner of lots 2 and 3, section 12, township 10 S., range 25 W. G. and S. R. B. and M., except the east 30 acres of said lots 2 and 3; lots 8 and 9 of section 30, township 9 S., range 24 W. G. and S. R. B. and M., except the south 40 acres of said lots 8 and 9; lots 3 and 4 in section 18, township 9 S., range 24 W. G. and S. R. B. and M., except the north 15 acres and the southeast 10 acres of said lot 4 (10 chains north and south by 10 chains east and west in the southeast corner of said lot 4); lots 1, 2, and 3 in section 12, township 9 S., range 24 W. G. and S. R. B. and M.; lot 5 in section 5, township 9 S., range 24 W. G. and S. R. B. and M.

Plaintiff deraigns its title (¡o said property through mesne conveyances from homestead patentees of said lands from the United States government, and said patents and the conveyances through which plaintiff claims title describe said lands as being bordered on the west by the meander line of the Colorado river. In 1874 an official survey and plat was made, approved, and filed in the United States Land Office of Arizona, which describes the meander line of the east bank of the Colorado river as the western boundary of said lands, and the survey and plat were correct in every detail, and the Colorado river did actually constitute the western boundary of the lands at that time.

Between the date of said survey and plat and the dates of the entries of said homesteads by plaintiff’s predecessors in interest, a large tract of land was formed west of the meander lino of the Colorado river as depicted on said plat, by recession of the waters of the river and by deposit of soil and other material by said waters during such' recession, and the wffiole thereof is rich in soil and irrigable under the Yuma reclamation project. In the year 1903, and since said accretion land was formed, the government constructed a levee to the west of said accretion land to protect it from the wash of the river, and this accretion land had never been officially surveyed prior to the issuance of patents to said homestead entiymen.

At the time of the entries of said homesteads, which were more than 25 years after the survey of 1874, the river at the nearest point to tho lands involved, except lot 8, section 30, was about one-eighth of a mile distant, and at far points was approximately 1% miles away from the lands that were shown and measured on the government plat. In July, 1918, the defendants, on behalf of the United States Reclamation Service, advertised for sealed proposals for leasing certain described tracts of land, including portions of said accretion lands. Plaintiff thereupon filed this suit, alleging it to be the owner of all this accretion land, and asked that an injunction be granted restraining defendants from leasing said lands and from asserting or pretending to assert any right to lease the same or to place any person whomsoever in possession thereof.

The plaintiff contends, that under this state of facts the meander line described in the government’s patents to the entrymen does not constitute the boundary of the lands conveyed, but that the Colorado river now constitutes the western boundary, and that the plaintiff, by virtue of mesne conveyances from the patentees, is tho owner of all the accretion land lying west of the meander line, amounting to about 900 acres.

The defendants contend that, inasmuch as this tract of accretion land was formed long before and existed at the time of the entries, *258 the entrymen, when they first went upon the land, had notice of that fact, and of the fact that the lands they were about to settle and purchase did not border on the river, and that therefore the meander line described in the plat constitutes the western boundary of their lands, and they did not acquire any riparian rights by reason of the purchase.

The claim of-the plaintiff is better understood from an examination of the three maps attached to the agreed statement of facts and made a part thereof. These maps show the number of acres of the basic lands entered and the number of acres of accretion land claimed, as follows:

Basie 'Accretion
Lands. Land.
Acres. Acres.
Lots 3 and 4, section 18...... 36.59 40.00
Lot 2, section 17............ 39.99 32.00
Lots 1 and 2, sections 20.... 52.62 270.38
Lot 1, section 19..............34 22.00
Lots 2 and 3, section 1,9..... 48.75 290.00
Lots- 2 and 3, section 12..... 62.43 230.00 .
Lot 5, section 5............. 5.29 11.00
Total ..................246.01 895.38

From the foregoing it will be seen that the total number of acres described in the patents to the entrymen, and for which they * paid the government, amount to 246.01, and that the accretion land claimed by plaintiff in addition thereto amounts to 895.38 acres. In other words, the entrymen purchased and paid for 246.01 acres, and the plaintiff, as grantee of the entrymen, now claims 1,141.-39 acres.

It does not appear that the entrymen ever asserted any claim, title, or right of possession to this accretion land from the time of the entries up to the time they conveyed. .The claim of title is made by the plaintiff more than 15 years after the entries, and after the government asserted its rights and constructed the levee in 1903 as a part of its reclamation system in the Yuma Valley. They stood silently by and watched construction of these vast improvements, the government’ in possession, and then, just as the officers of the government are about to lease this land, in consummation of its project, plaintiff comes into a court of equity and asserts its claim of title for the first time.

In this case there is no question of a mistake on the part of the surveyor, as in the case of Home v. Smith, 159 U. S. 40, 15 S. Ct. 988, 40 L. Ed. 68; nor of any fraud on his part, as in the ease of Security Land & Exploration Co. v Burns, 193 U. S. 167, 24 S. Ct. 425, 48 L. Ed. 662; nor that the field notes or plat refer to or show any marsh or other land lying beyond the meander line depicted on the plat, as in the ease of Niles v. Cedar Point Club, 175 U. S. 300, 20 S. Ct. 124, 44 L. Ed. 171; nor of two conflicting surveys, as was the ease in Gleason v. White, 199 U. S. 54, 25 S. Ct. 782, 50 L. Ed.

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4 F.2d 256, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 931, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mecca-land-exploration-co-v-schlecht-azd-1925.