Scully v. Squier

215 U.S. 144, 30 S. Ct. 51, 54 L. Ed. 131, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1741
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 29, 1909
Docket21
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 215 U.S. 144 (Scully v. Squier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scully v. Squier, 215 U.S. 144, 30 S. Ct. 51, 54 L. Ed. 131, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1741 (1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKenna

delivered the opinion of the court.

The relation of the parties ,to the cause of action is the same in this court as in the state courts, and we will refer to plaintiff *149 in error as plaintiff and to the defendants in error as defendants.

The pleadings in the case are exceedingly voluminous and equally so are the findings of fact. It is enough for our purpose to say that the city of Lewiston, State of Idaho, was entered as a townsite under § 2387 of the Revised Statutes, hereinafter, quoted, and a patent was issued by the United States to the mayor of the city in trust for the occupants of the lands conveyed. In pursuance of the trust the mayor executed conveyances to the predecessors in title of plaintiff and defendants. The rights derived through these deeds, and the occuprtion of the land preceding and subsequent to them, and the effect of a survey made by one E. P. True, hereinafter referred to, and the plat thereof filed by him, constitute the questions in the case. Plaintiff seeks by this suit to enjoin defendants from encroaching on I) street, as laid down on said plat, by certain buildings which, it is alleged, they proposed to erect. It is prayed, besides, that the buildings, if erected before an injunction can be obtained, be declared a public nuisance, “damaging the public and this plaintiff’s private rights,” and be abated. The special damage alleged is that plaintiff, having erected' a building, on what he alleges to be the true boundary line of D street, will be, as it was said in the argument, “put into a hole” by the buildings of defendant projecting beyond it, and that light and air thereto, through the doors and windows of plaintiff’s building, will be prevented, and the view therefrom to all parts of D street obstructed, and that “the light and air and view from all parts of the said D street as the said building [plaintiff’s building] is constructed, necessarily ensue and benefit the said property materially, and are of great value to the plaintiff, and as is also the right of egress and ingress.”

It is further alleged that before erecting his building plaintiff applied-to the city engineer to be shown the original south line of D . street according to the original survey, and the engineer ran “the lines on the ground according to the said *150 original survey and plat,” and that plaintiff erected his building in accordance therewith, “ covering the entire lot.”

It is also alleged that the lots owned by defendants were conveyed by the mayor to the original owners according to the original survey, and “ deeds thereto accepted according to the said original survey .and plat, and said lots have since been conveyed to the defendants and their grantors according to the said original survey and plat.” A dedication of the street to the public is averred as hence resulting, and an .estoppel against .defendants to dispute the survey and plat. The answer of the defendants, in effect,' denies the correctness of the survey and plat made by True, and avers that there was an amendment of the latter which exhibited the streets and alleys according to the occupation of the respective claimants of the lots. It is admitted, however, that some of the deeds issued were in accordance with the plat, but it is denied that all the deeds were, and averred “that the same were in accordance with thé use and occupation of the lands prior to the survey, and with the said survey and plat, as the same were and had been amended.”

The findings of the trial court sustained these averments, and .found further that the True survey as originally made disregarded the lines of occupation of the lots, and “ran through buildings then in the actual use and occupancy of the claimants of land and cut off approximately four feet from the north end of buildings there standing and in actual use and occupation of bona fide claimants.”

A decree was passed dismissing the suit, which was affirmed by the Supreme Court. 13 Idaho, 417.

All of the parties, as we have said, derived their rights and titles under § 2387 of the Revised Statutes, providing for the reservation and sale of townsites on the public lands. That section is as follows:

“ (Entry of town authorities in trust for occupants.) Whenever any portion of- the public lands have been or may be settled upon and occupied as a townsite, not subject to entry *151 under the agricultural preemption laws, it is lawful, in case such town be incorporated, for the corporate authorities thereof, and, if not incorporated, for the judge of the county court for the county in which such town is situated, to enter at the proper land office, and at the minimum price, the land so settled and occupied in trust for the several use and benefit, of the occupants thereof, according to their respective interests; the execution of which trust, as to the disposal of the lots in such town, and the proceeds of the sales thereof, to be conducted under such regulations as may be prescribed by the legislative authority of the State or Territory in which the same may be situated.”
We have not recited, nor do we think that it is necessary to recite, all of the facts found by the lower courts. We may add to those which we have stated that the city of Lewiston was incorporated under the laws of the Territory of Washington, it then being within that Territory, and was reincorporated by an act of the legislature of Idaho in 1866, it then being within Idaho. The act defined the boundaries of the city. Levi Ankeny was mayor of the city in 1871, and on November 21 of that year he filed his declaratory statement No. 39 in the United States land office at Lewiston, proposing to enter the lands included within the borders of the city as incorporated, in trust for its inhabitants, claiming settlement in 1861. Cash entry was made for the lands June 6, 1874, by Henry W. Stainton, mayor, in trust for the inhabitants. “The legislature of the Territory, [we quote from the opinion of the Supreme Court of the State, 13 Idaho, p. 428] by an act approved January 8, 1873 (7th Sess. Laws, p. 16), provided for the survey, platting and disposal of the land in the city of Lewiston pursuant to the United States statutes in regard to such matters. Said act provides that the mayor-rrustee shall cause to be made and filed in his office by a competent person a plat of the land within said city, divided into blocks and lots, and ‘to make and deliver to the bona fide occupants of such portions of said lands describedfin said patent from the Government of *152 the United States who may be entitled thereto, good and sufficient deeds of conveyance in fee simple according to their respective rights.’
“Under the provisions of said laws one E. B. True was employed to survey and plat the lands in said town, and was commanded to adjust said plat so as to conform to the conditions of the improvements and the use and .occupation of such lands by the settler, and the mayor was required to make and deliver to the bona fide occupants of such lands good and sufficient deeds of conveyance in fee simple, according to their respective interests, under the provisions of said law.

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215 U.S. 144, 30 S. Ct. 51, 54 L. Ed. 131, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scully-v-squier-scotus-1909.