Smelting Co. v. Kemp

104 U.S. 636, 26 L. Ed. 875, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2059, 2 Colo. L. Rep. 351
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1882
Docket458
StatusPublished
Cited by385 cases

This text of 104 U.S. 636 (Smelting Co. v. Kemp) 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
Smelting Co. v. Kemp, 104 U.S. 636, 26 L. Ed. 875, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2059, 2 Colo. L. Rep. 351 (1882).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Field,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court, as follows: —

As seen by the statement of the case, the plaintiff relies for a reversal of the judgment upon three grounds: 1st, Error in *640 admitting the. record of the proceedings of the land-office to impeach the validity of the patent to Starr issued upon them ; 2d, Error in instructing the jury that a patent for a placer claim, since the act .of 1870, could not embrace in any case more than one hundred and sixty acres; and, 8d, Error in ■ instructing the jury that the owner, by purchase of several claims, must take separate proceedings upon each one, in order to obtain a valid patent, and that it was not lawful for him to prosecute a single application upon a consolidation of several claims into one, or for the land-officers, to allow such application and to issue a patent thereon.

We are of opinion that these several grounds are well taken, and that in each particular mentioned the court below erred.

The patent of the United States is the conveyance by which the nation passes its title to portions of the public domain. Eor the transfer of that title the law has made numerous provisions, designating the persons who may acquire it and the terms of its acquisition. That the provisions may be properly carried out, a land department, as part of the administrative and executive branch of the government, has been created to supervise all the various proceedings taken to obtain the title, •from their commencement to their close. In the course of their duty the officers of that department are constantly called upon to hear testimony as to matters presented for their consideration, and to pass upon its competency, credibility, and weight; In that respect they exercise a judicial function, and, therefore, it has been held in various instances by this court that their judgment as to matters .of fact, properly determinable by them, is conclusive when brought to notice in a collateral proceeding. Their judgment in such cases is, like that of other special tribunals upon matters, within their exclusive jurisdiction, unassailable except by a direct proceeding for its correction or annulment. The execution and record of the patent are the final acts of the officers of the government for the transfer of its title, and, as they can be lawfully performed only after certain steps have been taken, that instrument, duly signed, countersigned, and sealed, not merely operates to pass the title, but is in the nature of an official declaration by that branch of the government to which the alienation of the public *641 lands, under the Jaw, is intrusted, that all the requirements preliminary to its issue have been complied with. The presumptions thus attending it are not open to rebuttal in an action at law. It is this unassailable character which gives to it its chief, indeed its only, value, as a means of quieting its possessor .in the enjoyment of the lands it embraces. If intruders upon them could compel him, in every suit for possession, to establish the validity of the action of the Land Department and the correctness of its. ruling upon matters submitted to it,' the patent, instead of being a means of peace and security, would subject his rights to constant and ruinous litigation. He would recover one portion of his land if the jury, were satisfied that the evidence produced justified the action of that department, and lose another portion, the title Avhereto rests upon the same facts, because another jury came to a different conclusion. So his. rights in different suits upon the same patent Avould' be determined, not by its efficacy as a conveyance of the government, but according to the fluctuating prejudices of different jurymen,-.or their varying capacities to Aveigh evidence. Moore v. Wilkinson, 13 Cal. 478; Beard v. Federy, 3 Wall. 478, 492;

Of course, when Ave speak of- the. conclusive presumptions attending a patent for lands, Ave assume that it \vas issued in a case Avbere the department had jurisdiction to act and execute it; that is to say, in a case Avhere the lands belonged to the United States, and provision had been made by Uav for their sale. If they never Avere public property, or had previously been disposed of, or if Congress had made no provision for their sale, or had reserved them, the department would have no jurisdiction to transfer them, and its attempted conveyance of them Avould be inoperative and void, no matter Avith Avhat seeming regularity the forms of law may have been observed. The action of the department would in that event be like that of any other special tribunal not having jurisdiction of a case which it had assumed to decide. Matters of this kind, disclosing a want of jurisdiction, may be considered by a court of law. In such cases the objection to the patent reaches beyond the action of the special tribunal, and goes to the existence of a subject upon vfhich it was competent to act.

*642 These views are not new in this court; they have been, either in express terras or in substance, affirmed in repeated' instances. One of the earliest cases on the subject was that of Polk's Lessee v. Wendell, reported in 9th Cranch, where the doctrine we have stated was declared, and the exceptions to it mentioned. There .the plaintiff brought an action upon a patent of North Carolina, issued in 1800, for five thousand acres. The defendants relied upon a prior patent of the State for twenty-five thousand acres, issued in 1795 to one Sevier, through whom they claimed. Each patent embraced the lands in controversy, and they were situated in that portion of Tennessee ceded to the United States by North Carolina. On the trial it was contended that the elder patent was void on its ■ face because it covered more than'five thousand acres,.the limit prescribed for a single entry by the laws of that State. Proof was also offered that the lands had not been entered in the .office of the entry-taker of the proper county before their cession to the United States, and it was contended that.the patent was therefore invalid. We shall hereafter refer to what the court said as to the alleged excess of quantity in the patent. At -present we shall only notice the general doctrine declared as to the unassailability of patents in a court of law, and its decision upon the admissibility of the proof offered. It seems that a statute of 1777 directed the appointment in each county of an officer called an entry-taker, who was required to receive entries óf all vacant lands in his county, and, if the lands, thus entered were not within three months claimed by some other party than the person entering them, to deliver to such person a oopy of the entry, with its proper number, and an order to the county surveyor to survey the land. This order was called a warrant. Upon it and the survey which followed a patent was issued. If there were no entry, there could be iio warrant, and of course no valid patent. The ninth section declared that every right claimed by any person to lands which were not acquired in this mode, or by purchase or inheritance from parties who did so acquire them, or which were obtained in fraud or evasion of the provisions of the act, should be declared void'. In 1779 North Carolina ceded to the United States the territory in which the lands lie for which the patent to Sevier *643

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 U.S. 636, 26 L. Ed. 875, 1881 U.S. LEXIS 2059, 2 Colo. L. Rep. 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smelting-co-v-kemp-scotus-1882.