Sanders v. Dutcher

143 P. 599, 168 Cal. 353, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 337
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1914
DocketL.A. No. 3220.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 143 P. 599 (Sanders v. Dutcher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanders v. Dutcher, 143 P. 599, 168 Cal. 353, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 337 (Cal. 1914).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

The complaint avers that the plaintiff is the owner of a tract of land in Imperial County, that he was unlawfully ejected therefrom by the defendant, that defendant has no right, title, interest, or estate in the land, but that he asserts some title or interest therein which is without foundation and that since he took possession he has remained in possession to the damage of plaintiff. He prays for possession of the property, that the defendant’s claim be declared invalid and for the recovery of damages. To this complaint the defendant answered setting out the nature of his claim and praying for the affirmative relief that he be declared to be the equitable owner of the land and to'have conveyed to him the legal title thereto acquired by plaintiff from the United States. In effect, the defense was a cross-complaint for the affirmative relief. Thereupon the plaintiff moved for a judgment upon the pleadings. This motion was granted by the court and judgment entered accordingly that the plaintiff recover possession, that the defendant had no right, title, or interest in the property and for three hundred dollars damages. From this judgment the defendant appeals.

Prior to the inception of. the claims of either of the parties the land in question was public land of the United States. It appears from the pleadings that one Orpha C. Johnson made a desert land entry upon said land for the purpose of acquiring the same from the United States under the Desert Land Law of 1891, that thereafter the defendant was in possession thereof by assignment from Orpha C. Johnson, that thereupon, upon the application of the plaintiff, the land-office canceled the entry of the defendant as assignee of Orpha C. Johnson, and accepted the application of Sanders as a claimant under the homestead law; that thereafter he commuted his homestead entry to a desert land entry, made his final proof thereunder *355 and made the necessary payments and received his final certificate. These proceedings were the subject of an appeal to the commissioner of the general land-office who affirmed the decision of the register and receiver of the land-office at Los Angeles and the plaintiff became thereupon entitled under the land laws to receive a patent from the United States. The question presented by the record is whether or not the facts alleged in the answer would entitle the defendant to have the plaintiff declared trustee of the land for the benefit of the defendant so that whatever title the plaintiff should receive would in equity belong to the defendant and should be conveyed to him.

These facts are stated as follows: On February 9, 1903, the lands were unoccupied public lands of the United States open to desert land entry. On that day Orpha C. Johnson made such entry of this land. Thereafter, prior to July 13, 1905, she complied with all the laws of the United States with reference to said entry, made the reclamation thereof required by law and made final proof of such reclamation and final payment therefor and received from the register and receiver of the land-office a receipt showing such final payment. Thereafter, and prior to December 17, 1907, she sold, assigned, and transferred all her right, title, and interest in the land to defendant Gordon L. Butcher, who entered into possession under the conveyance and has since expended large sums of money upon the land in the reclamation and improvement thereof. On January 7, 1908, Louis N. Sanders began a contest against the Johnson entry alleging that Johnson had not reclaimed nor irrigated or improved the land, or any part thereof, at the time she made final proof, and that before she made such final proof she had entered into a contract with one M. F. Butcher to sell the land to Butcher or his assigns, receiving from said Butcher the sum of seventy-five dollars therefor and that the final proof of Orpha C. Johnson was, for these reasons, fraudulent. This contest came on for hearing at the land-office, both parties being present in person and by counsel. Evidence was submitted by both parties and the register found that the final proof of Johnson was fraudulently made by virtue of the fact that she had not personally made the reclamation of the land, and because the final proof was made after and under the contract with M. V. Butcher above referred to. The register therefore canceled the entry of Orpha *356 C. Johnson, whereupon the appeal was taken, the contest confirmed and the plaintiff was declared to be entitled to the land as a homestead. Thereafter Sanders made his homestead entry; the same was accepted by the land-office in pursuance of the aforesaid decision and afterwards, on November 13, 1911, Sanders having commuted his homestead and made his proofs, received his final certificate as a desert land entry and secured an apparent title to the land; that these proceedings were taken by Sanders in pursuance of a conspiracy with one F. E. Jordan by which Sanders agreed to do as above stated and Jordan agreed to pay the expenses he would be put to and was thereafter to receive a deed from Sanders for the land and in consideration of which he agreed to pay Sanders two thousand five hundred dollars.

In explanation and avoidance of this decision of the land department and the certificate issued to Sanders the following facts were stated. At the hearing before the register no evidence was offered tending to prove that Orpha 0. Johnson had not reclaimed or irrigated the land, but on the contrary it was admitted that she had done so. The proof on this point was that she had not done so personally, but had procured these things to be done by others at her own charge and expense. The only evidence offered to show that the final proof was fraudulently made under the contract above referred to between Johnson and M. V. Butcher consisted of declarations made by Butcher to third persons tending to prove the allegations of the contest to the effect that prior to final proof under the Johnson entry Orpha C. Johnson had agreed to sell the land to Butcher as before stated. The register and receiver believed the law to be that a reclamation not made by the claimant personally, although made at her instance, was invalid, and that therefore Orpha 0. Johnson had not reclaimed or irrigated the land within the meaning of the Desert Land Law. The said register and receiver also concluded as matter of law that the final proof made after and under the contract by Orpha C. Johnson to sell her right to M. V. Butcher was invalid, because said contract was contrary to the policy of the law, and that for these reasons the claim and entry of Orpha C. Johnson and her assignee were invalid and should be canceled, and upon that ground the same was canceled by them. The commissioner of the land-office, in affirming the decision of the register and receiver, acted under the same *357 misapprehension as to the law governing the case. It is alleged that these proceedings were carried on by Sanders and Jordan for the fraudulent purpose of depriving Orpha C. Johnson and her assignees of the land and of acquiring the same for Jordan.

Upon these allegations it is claimed that in equity Sanders stands as the trustee for the defendant of the land and that a court of equity will compel him to make the proper conveyances of the land to the defendant.

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267 Cal. App. 2d 461 (California Court of Appeal, 1968)
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Sanders v. Dutcher
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169 P. 1037 (California Supreme Court, 1917)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 P. 599, 168 Cal. 353, 1914 Cal. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-dutcher-cal-1914.