Parsons v. Venzke

61 N.W. 1036, 4 N.D. 452, 1894 N.D. LEXIS 56
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 61 N.W. 1036 (Parsons v. Venzke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parsons v. Venzke, 61 N.W. 1036, 4 N.D. 452, 1894 N.D. LEXIS 56 (N.D. 1894).

Opinions

Corliss, J.

The plaintiff’s theory of action, as disclosed by his complaint, is not the one that was developed upon the trial. The complaint is framed under § 5449, Comp. Laws, to try an adverse claim to plaintiff’s alleged title. The pleading contains an allegation that the plaintiff is the owner in fee simple of the land in question. On the trial it appeared that the plaintiff was not the owner in fee simple; that he did not pretend to hold the legal title; but that, on the contrary, he was seeking by this action to have the defendant, who' held the legal title, adjudged to be a mere trustee for the plaintiff as to such title, and to procure a decree directing defendant to convey the same to the plaintiff. The pleadings and the proof are not in harmony; but, as no point has been made touching the failure of the plaintiff to establish the cause of action he had alleged, we will consider the pleadings as amended to conform to the evidence, and turn to the latter for our guidance in determining whether the theory on which the case was tried below and argued in this court can be sustained.

The defendant holds a patent for the land. The plaintiff claims under a pre-emptor whose certificate was canceled by the commissioner of the general land office before defendant made the entry on the land under which he obtained his patent. The question which confronts us at the very threshold relates to the power of the commissioner to cancel entries which have been allowed by the officers of the local land office. In this connection a more particular reference to the facts is advisable. The entry under which plaintiff claims was made by Willis B. Simpkins, January 11, 1883. In less than a month after he had received his patent certificate, he conveyed the land to Charles J. Wolfe, who sold the land to Jessie J. Russell, by whom it was mortgaged. The plaintiff claims as a purchaser under the sale on foreclosure of this mortgage. These transfers and this mortgage were all executed prior to the cancellation of Simpkins’ entry. After the cancellation of this entry, the defendant entered the land as a pre-emptor, and ultimately obtained a patent. It is the legal title under this patent which the plaintiff seeks to secure by this [457]*457action. If he is correct in his premise that the commissioner had no power to cancel the entry, or, assuming his power, that we can inquire whether it was properly exercised in this case, and from that inquiry conclude that it was not properly exercised, then it follows that the defendant must be deemed to hold the legal title in trust for him, and ordered to convey such title to him. Said the United States circuit court of appeals in a recent case: “No principle is more firmly established in American jurisprudence than that, after the title has passed from the United States to a private party, it is the province of the courts to correct the errors of the officers of the land department which have resulted from fraud, mistake, or erroneous views of the law; to declare the legal title to the lands involved to be held in trust for those who have the better right to them; and to compel their conveyance accordingly.” Bogan v. Mortgage Co., (May term 1894; 8th Circuit) 11 C. C. A. 128, 63 Fed. 192. To same effect, see Bernier v. Bernier, 147 U. S. 242, 13 Sup. Ct. 244; Silver v. Ladd, 7 Wall. 219; Johnson v. Towsley, 13 Wall. 72.

The first inquiry is whether this power of cancellation exists. The authorities are divided upon this question, but the great weight of the adjudications supports the power, and so does the better reason. Holmes v. State, (Ala.) 14 South 51; Judd v. Randall, (Minn.) 29 N. W. 589; Mortgage Co. v. Hopper, 56 Fed. 67; Lewis v. Shaw, 57 Fed. 516; Jones v. Meyers, (Idaho,) 26 Pac. 215; Swigart v. Walker, (Kan.) 30 Pac. 162; U. S. v. Steenerson, 1 C. C. A. 552, 50 Fed. 504; Stimson v. Clarke, 45 Fed. 760; Bogan v. Mortgage Co., supra; Freese v. Scouten, (Kan.) 36 Pac. 741; McLane v. Bovee, 35 Wis. 27; Vance v. Kohlberg, 50 Cal. 346; Hosmer v. Wallace, 47 Cal. 461; Figg v. Hensley, 52 Cal. 299; Fernald v. Winch, (Kan.) 31 Pac. 665; Bellows v. Todd, 34 Iowa, 31. See, also, Harkness v. Underhill, 1 Black, 316-325; Barnard v. Ashley, 18 How. 43; Cornelius v. Kessel, 128 U. S. 456-461, 9 Sup. Ct. 122. The argument employed to assail the existence of the power begs the whole question. It necessarily assumes that the power does not exist. The argument, in substance, urges the [458]*458sacredness of vested rights. But if the statute, when properly construed, vests the power of cancellation in the commissioner, it is idle to talk of vested rights which will interfere with the lawful exercise of this power. The government has not finally decided that the entryman is entitled to the land. The certificate merely evidences the fact that the local officers are satisfied that he has made out a good claim to the land. But if the commissioner has authority to investigate, and comes to a different conclusion, then the entryman has no vested rights which the commissioner takes away by canceling the entry. His claim is not vested, but contingent. Its validity depends upon its approval by the commissioner. If he disapproves it, it fails to become a vested right. The disapproval does not destroy; it merely prevents with respect to the claimant the existence of a vested interest in the land. Said the court in Mortgage Co. v. Hopper, 56 Fed. 67-74: “There is no such thing as a forfeiture of the land, since the title does not vest until the final action of the land department determines the existence of the conditions necessary to that result. There is no such thing as a forfeiture of an equitable estate or interest, since, as has been abundantly shown, it does not appear that the original entryman was ever invested with any such estate or interest. The alleged forfeiture is merely the exercise of an undoubted authority by the proper officers of the land office to cancel an entry made upon false testimony, — an authority so exclusive in such department that what is done under it in the decisions of questions of fact cannot be questioned anywhere else, unless such tribunal has been prevented by some fraud practiced from fairly trying the question.” The question is purely one of power, and it is illogical to argue against its existence by a line of reasoning which rests ultimately upon a denial of the power as the basis of such reasoning. The question of vested rights is foreign to the inquiry. If there is power, there can be no vested rights which can defeat its exercise. If there is no power, then the question of vested rights is of no possible moment, as the want of power will defeat its exercise without [459]*459the aid of further argument. We do not wish to be understood as ignoring the doctrine that the entryman secures such standing before the law that the commissioner cannot illegally or arbitrarily cancel the entry. Johnson v. Towsley, 13 Wall. 72-85.

The state of the record will not, however, permit us to rest here. It is contended that, even conceding the existence of this power, it was improperly exercised in this case.

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Parsons v. Venzke
61 N.W. 1036 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1894)

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Bluebook (online)
61 N.W. 1036, 4 N.D. 452, 1894 N.D. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parsons-v-venzke-nd-1894.