Southern Pac. R. v. Dull

22 F. 489, 10 Sawy. 506, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2562
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 F. 489 (Southern Pac. R. v. Dull) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Pac. R. v. Dull, 22 F. 489, 10 Sawy. 506, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2562 (uscirct 1884).

Opinion

Sawyer, J.

This is a bill in equity to control the legal title vested in the defendants by virtue of a patent of the United States, and to decree that defendants hold the title in trust for complainant, or for any other relief in equity to which complainant may he entitled. The land is within the limits of the grant to complainant of the alternate odd sections of land to aid in the construction of a railroad from the intersection of the Texas Pacific Railroad, on the Colorado river, to connect with San Francisco, California, under the acts of congress of July 27, 1866, §§ 3, 18, (14 St. 294, 299,) and of March 3, 1871, § 23, (16 St. 573.) A topographical map of the country through which this part of the Southern Pacific Railroad was to pass, was duly made by the engineers and adopted by the company, upon which map was delineated the line and route of the road so that its location appeared thereon, with reference as well to the sections of the public lands as to the towns, cities, counties, and rivers in the said region. The map, with the line and route so delineated thereon, certified by the chief engineer, president, and secretary of complainant, and under the corporate seal of the corporation, was, on April 3, 1871, duly filed with the secretary of the interior, who duly accepted it, and on said day transmitted the same to the commissioner of the general land-office, to be filed in that office, and on that day it was filed by the commissioner, in his office, whereby the line of the road was definitely located, and the grant attached to all lands at that time subject to the grant under the said several acts. On April 21, 1871, the commissioner of the general land-office transmitted a copy of said map to the receiver of the land-office at Los Angeles, which map was duly filed in that office on April 29, 1871. The road was afterwards fully completed [491]*491by complainant, in accordance with the said acts of congress and subsequent acts amendatory thereof, and extending the time for completing said road, whereby the rights of said complainant become perfected to all the lands within the purview of the grant, as designated by these acts. The land in question is part of an odd section within the limits of the grant. After the completion and acceptance of the road, the complainant, in due form of law, repeatedly applied at the • proper land-office for the patent to which it claimed to be entitled, tendering all necessary charges and expenses, but a patent was refused.

On November 25, 1867, defendant Dull, having all the qualifications necessary for the purpose, in good faith entered as a pre-emptor upon the land in question, with the intention of acquiring the title of the United States. He built a house on the land, and resided there, continuously, from November 15, 1867, till about June 1, 1868, —a little over six months, — when ho left the land and located in another place, in consequence of the survey made in the mean time by Hansen, hereinafter mentioned, which included the land in question, within the boundaries of Taj anta rancho, as surveyed by him, believing, as lie did, that land so situated was not open to pre-emption. In the latter part of 1872 the survey of Hansen was rejected by the government at Washington, as having been made without jurisdiction, and as being void. Thereupon, after such rejection, and a year or more after the filing of the plat as aforesaid by complainant, by which the line of the road was definitely located, Dull returned and again settled on the land, and on April 9, 1874, filed his declaratory statement in the proper land-office. The patent in question was after-wards issued to him on December 80, 1880, upon a settlement, as stated by the secretary of the interior in his opinion, to have been made in the latter part of 1872, being the settlement made on his second entry before referred to.

The survey of Hansen was made under the following circumstances: The Tajanta rancho grant, being a Mexican grant of a league of land within larger exterior Limits, having been finally confirmed under the act of 1851, a survey of the rancho, as confirmed, was made by Deputy Surveyor Hancock, in December, 1858. This survey was approved by the surveyor general, September 17, 1860, after the passage of the act of Juno 14, 1860, relating to the subject, and it is governed by that act. 12 St. 83. The notice of the survey and filing of the approved plat was published, in all respects, as required by the provisions of that act. The plat and survey wore retained in the office of the surveyor general for the time required by the act, and no application for ordering it into court, and no such order having been made, the survey became final, under the provisions of said act, in tho latter part of September, 1860, and was afterwards duly transmitted by the surveyor general to the general land-office at Washington. Some time prior to February, 1868, the confirmee of [492]*492the grant applied to the surveyor general- to set aside the Hancock survey, already become final, and have a new one made, which application was referred to the commissioner of the general land-office for his instructions. The commissioner directed the surveyor general to examine the case, and if he found the matter to be still within the jurisdiction of the surveying department, to have a new survey made. 'The surveyor general afterwards ordered George Hansen to make a survey, and he thereupon made the survey hereinbefore mentioned, in the month of February, 1868, and forwarded it to the general land-office; but the commissioner and the secretary of the interior decided that it was not within the jurisdiction of the surveyor general to make the survey, on the ground that the Hancock survey of 1858 had become final in 1860 under section 5 of said act of 1860, which provides that “the said plat and survey, so finally determined by publication, order, or decree, as the case may be, shall have the same effect and validity in law as if a patent for the land so surveyed had been issued by the United States.” The said Hansen survey was rejected as void on 'that ground. The Hancock survey, which became final under the statute in September, 1860, did not include the land in controversy, but the land was situate within the exterior boundaries of the Tajanta rancho', as claimed in the petition for confirmation, and the confirmee continued to claim the land, as being within the grant, until the rejection of the Hansen survey by the secretary of the interior, on the ground stated, on February 21, 1872. In December, 1872, after the rejection of the Hansen survey, on the ground stated, defendant Dull returned to the land, and thenceforth occupied in good faith till the issue of his patent. He filed his declaratory statement in the proper office, April 9, 1874.

Prior to the commencement of this suit defendant Dull conveyed the land in question, and his title, whatever it is, has passed to and become vested in defendant Scheffelin, who, prior to his purchase, caused the county records of the county of Los Angeles, in which the land iji situated, to be searched, and the legal title thereto appeared upon said records to be vested in his grantor, free from incumbrances; and said purchase was made by him without any actual knowledge, in fact, of any right, title, interest, or claim of complainant, or any other person, of, in, or to said land, or any part thereof. He purchased the land in good faith, for his own use and benefit, and paid therefor $2,500, which was the full value of the land at that time. The congressional grant to the complainant, relied on, is found. in section 23 of ffhe act of March 3, 1871, (16 St.

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Related

Southern Pac. R. v. Tilley
41 F. 729 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern California, 1890)

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Bluebook (online)
22 F. 489, 10 Sawy. 506, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-pac-r-v-dull-uscirct-1884.