United States v. Lee

106 U.S. 196, 1 S. Ct. 240, 27 L. Ed. 171, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1534
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 18, 1882
Docket25
StatusPublished
Cited by850 cases

This text of 106 U.S. 196 (United States v. Lee) 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
United States v. Lee, 106 U.S. 196, 1 S. Ct. 240, 27 L. Ed. 171, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1534 (1882).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Miller

delivered the opinion of the court.

■ These are two writs of error to the same judgment: one prosecuted by the United States, eo nomine ; and the other by the *197 Attorney-General of the United States, in the names of Frederick Kaufman and Richard P. Strong, the defendants against whom judgment was rendered in the Circuit Court.

The action was originally commenced in the Circuit Court for the county of Alexandria, .in the State of Virginia, by George W. P. C. Lee, against Kaufman and Strong and á great number of others, to recover possession of a parcel of land of about eleven hundred acres, known as the Arlington estate. It waS in the form prescribed by the statutes of Virginia, under- which the pleadings are in the names of the real parties, plaintiff and defendant.

As soon as the declaration was filed tlie ease was, by writ of certiorari, removed into the Circuit Court of the United States, where all the subsequent proceedings took place. It was tried by a jury, and during its progress an order was made at the request of the plaintiff dismissing the suit as to all of the defendants except Kaufman and Strong. Against each of these a judgment, was rendered for separate parcels of the land in controversy; namely, against Kaufman for about two hundred acres of it, constituting the National Cemetery and included within its walls, and against Strong for the remainder of the tract, except seventeen, acres in the possession of Maria Syphax. ' 1

As the United States was not a party to the suit below, and, while defending the action by its proper law officers, expressly declined to submit itself as a defendant to the jurisdiction of the court, there may exist some doubt whether it has a right to prosecute the writ of error in its own name; but as the judgment against Kaufman and Strong is here on their writ of error, under which all the questions are raised which could be raised under the other, their writ being prosecuted in the interest of the United States, and argued here by the Solicitor-General, the point is immaterial, and the question has not been mooted.

The first step taken'in the case.after it came into the Circuit Court of the United- States was the filing in the clerk’s office of that court of the following paper by the Attorney-General : —

*198 “George W. P. C. Lee
v.
Frederick. Kaufman, R. P. Strong,
. AND OTHERS.
In ejectment.
“And now comes the Attorney-General of the United States and suggests to the court and gives it to understand and be informed (appearing only for the purpose of this motion) that the property in controversy in this suit has been for more than ten years and now is held, occupied, and possessed by the United States, through its officers and agents, charged in behalf of the government of the United States with the control of the property, and who are in the actual possession thereof, as public property of the United States, for public, uses, in the exercise of their sovereign and constitutional powers, as a military station, and as a national cemetery established for the burial of deceased soldiers and sailors, and known and designated as the ‘ Arlington Cemetery,’ and for the uses and purposes set forth in the certificate of sale, a copy of which as stated and prepared by the plaintiff, and which is a true copy thereof, is annexed hereto and filed herewith, under claim of title as appears by the said certificate, of' sale, and which was executed, delivered, and recorded as therein appears.
“ Wherefore, without submitting the rights of the government of the United States to the jurisdiction of the court, but respectfully insisting that the court has no jurisdiction of the subject in controversy, he moves that the declaration in said suit be set aside, and all the proceedings be stayed and dismissed, and for such other order as may be proper in the premises.
“ Chas. Devens,
Atíy- Gen’l U. A.”

The plaintiff demurred to tbi.s suggestion, and on hearing the demurrer was sustained.

The case was thereupon tried before a jury on the general issue pleaded by Kaufman and Strong, in the course of which the question raised by this suggestion of the Attorney-Gen eral was again presented to the court by prayers for instruction, which were rejected, and exceptions taken.

The plaintiff offered evidence establishing title in himself by the will of his grandfather, George Washington Parke Custis, who devised the Arlington estate to his daughter, the wife of General Robert E. Lee, for life, and after her death to the *199 plaintiff. This, with the long possession under that title, made a prima facie right of recovery in the plaintiff.

The title relied on by the defendants is a tax-sale certificate made by the commissioners appointed under the act of Congress of June 7, 1862', c. 98, entitled “An Act for the collection of direct taxes in the insurrectionary districts within the United States,” as amended by the act of Feb. 6, 1863, c. 21. At .this sale the land was bid in for the United States by the commissioners, who gave a certificate of that fact, which was introduced on the trial as evidence by the defendants.

If this sale was valid and the certificate conveyed a valid title, then the title of the plaintiff was thereby divested, and he could not recover. If the proceedings evidenced by the tax sale did not transfer the title, then it remained in him, and, so far as the question of title was concerned, his recovery was rightful.

We have then two questions presented to the court and jury below, and the same questions arise in this court on the record : —

1. Could any action-be maintained against the defendants for the possession of the land in controversy under the circumstances of the relation of that possession to the United States, however clear the legal right to that possession might be in the plaintiff?

2. If such an action could be maintained, was the prim a facie title of the plaintiff divested by the tax sale and the certificate given by the commissioners ?

It is believed that no division of opinion exists among the members of this court on the proposition that the rulings of law under which the latter question was submitted by the court to the jury was sound, and that the jury were authorized to find, as they evidently did find, that the tax certificate and ■the sale which it recited did not divest the plaintiff of his title to the property.

For this reason we will consider first the assignment of errors on that subject.

No substantial objection is seen on the face of the certificate to its validity, and none has been seriously urged. It was admitted in evidence by the court, and, unless impeached by *200

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 U.S. 196, 1 S. Ct. 240, 27 L. Ed. 171, 1882 U.S. LEXIS 1534, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-lee-scotus-1882.