Rice v. Harrell

24 Ark. 402
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 Ark. 402 (Rice v. Harrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rice v. Harrell, 24 Ark. 402 (Ark. 1866).

Opinion

Opinion prepared by

E. H. English, Esq.

—See note page vm.

John Q. Eice sought, by bill in the Pulaski chancery court, to establish an equitable title to a tract of swamp land, described in the public surveys as the northreast quarter of the south-west quarter of section thvrty-two in township two south, range ten west, containing foi'ty acres: and to cancel ^certificate of entry obtained by John M. Harrell from the land agent of -the Little Kock district, for the same tract of land, or to obtain, by decree, the benefit of Harrell’s entry.

The cause was heard upon the pleadings, and evidence, and the chancellor dismissed the bill for want of equity, and Eice appealed.

It must first be determined whether Eice has established his right to the land, for, as well remarked by the chancellor, if he has no title, he stands in no attitude to impeach the legality of Harrell’s entry, or to obtain the benéfit of it.

On and after the 28th of March, 1859, Eice, intending to secure a pre-emption, made an improvement upon, and put in cultivation a part of the land in controversy. On the 6th of April following, he made a declaration in writing, sworn to before a justice of the peace, setting forth the facts upon which he claimed a pre-emption ; and, on the same day, he procured two witnesses to make affidavits before the same justice in proof of his claim.

On the 25th of April, 1859, he filed in the office of the land agent this declaration, and these affidavits, and offered to enter the land, but Harrell had been permitted to enter it, on a claim of pre-emption, two days before.

The chancellor supposing Eice’s claim of pre-emption to rest upon section 10, article VI, chapter 101, Goulds Digest,page 721, held it to be invalid because his improvement upon the land was made after, and not before, the land agent had advertised the swamp lands of his district for public sale, etc. '

The answer of Harrell did not attack the title of Hice on that ground. The date of the advertisement is not alleged in the bill or answer, and is not proven with accuracy by any of the depositions ; but it is to be inferred, and may be assumed to be true, from the allegations oí the bill, that Nice made his improvement upon the land after the publication of the advertisement.

The opinion of the chancellor was based upon a literal and narrow construction of the language of the single section of the pre-emption statutes above referred to. It provides that: “Any head of a family, or other free white citizen of the state of Arkansas, over the age of twenty-one years, who has an improvement on any of the swamp and overflowed lands, who shall, within sixty days after such lands are advertised by the land agent of the proper district/ under the provisions of sections two and three, after such lands shall have been reported by the local agents, or if the same is now subject to entry, within sixty days from and after the passage of this act, file his or her declaration in writing, setting forth the fact that he or she claims said tract of land to be described in such declaration, as a pre-emption right, under the provisions of this act, with the land agent of the district in which such lands are, shall be entitled to a pre-emption for the term of twelve months from and after the time of filing said declaration,” etc.

“Any head of a family etc., who has an improvement” etc. If the word “has,” as used in this sentence, is to be understood in a literal and restricted sense, being in the present tense, it applies to the time of the passage of the act, and not to the date oí the future advertisement to be made by the land agent, or to the time oí any other subsequent event. And this construction would cut off all persons from the benefit of the statute, except such as had made improvements upon the lands prior to its passage.

But such construction would not be in harmony with the general policy of our pre-emption statutes, or, we think, with the spirit of the act in question.

After tlie swamp and overflowed lands were granted to the state, the legislature pursuing the policy which had been adopted by congress, repeatedly offered inducements to the settlement and improvement of the public lands, by acts granting and protecting pre-emption rights.

Thus, by the 13th section of the act of 6th January, 1851, the first act passed by the legislature for the disposal of the swamp lands after they were granted to the state, pre-emption rights existing under acts of congress were preserved: and to persons “who shall reside on or who shall have improved ” such lands, the “exclusive right of purchase,” was given for the period of twelve months from and after the date of the patents to be issued to the state by the United States.

And by the act of 12th January, 1853, every head of a family who was then a settler upon, or who might thereafter settle upon, any of the undisposed swamp lands, was given a pre-emption right thereto up to the day of public sale.

So, the 14th section of the act of 15th January, 1857, declares that, “Any person who resides on, or who may hereafter reside on, reclaim, or cultivate any of the swamp or overflowed lands which may be confirmed to the state, should have a pre-emption ■ right to 160 acres, to be proved up according to existing laws,” etc.

Thus the policy of granting and protecting pre-emption rights, as rewards for, or inducements to settlement, improvement and cultivation of the wild public lands, appears to have been a permanent and continuing policy — each act limiting the time in which such rights were to be asserted; some of them fixing the day of public sale as the period of limitation, and others (like that which we are now considering) sixty days after publication of the notice of sale.

We can see no good reason why the legislature should have intended to depart from the general policy of the pre-emption system, in framing the act in question, by granting the right of pre-emption to persons who had made improvements prior to its passage, and denying to persons subsequently improving, within the periods limited by the act, the benefit of pre-emption.

We think the more reasonable construction- of the act is, that as to lands which were subject to entry at the date of the act, and which the state desired to put lipón the public market at an early period, persons were allowed to make improvements upon them, and file their declarations and supporting affidavits in the office of the land agent at any time within sixty days after the passage of the. act; and as to lands unconfirmed at the date of the act, persons were allowed to make improvements upon them, and file their declarations and affidavits at any time within sixty days after such lands were advertised for sale by the land agent. If persons could continue to make pre-emption improvements upon these lands after the passage of the act up to the date of the advertisement, as seems to have ’been conceded by the chancellor, we can perceive no good reason why they should not have been permitted to continue to make such improvements and file their declarations and proof up to the conclusion of the period of sixty days during which the public notice of the time fixed for the sale of the lands, by the land agent, was to continue.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Ark. 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rice-v-harrell-ark-1866.