United States v. McGraw

12 F. 449
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJune 15, 1882
DocketNo. 664; No. 665; No. 666
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 F. 449 (United States v. McGraw) 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
United States v. McGraw, 12 F. 449 (uscirct 1882).

Opinion

Deady, D. J.

These three suits were commenced on September 13, 1880, and heard and submitted on demurrer with the case of the U. S. v. Tichenor, ante, 415, and the statement and opinion in that case is largely applicable to these. They are brought to set aside and cancel four patents issued to the defendants for lands situate in Curry county, Oregon, and being parts of sections 5, 6, 7, and 8, of township 33 south, of range 15 west of the Wallamet meridian, containing in the aggregate about 255.49 acres, as follows: To Jacob B. Tichenor, two patents, each dated October 20, 1864, the one for lot numbered 3 in said section 5, and the other for lots 3 and 4 of said section 6, lot 1 of said section 7, and lot 1 of said section 8, containing altogether 74.01 acres; to Elisha H. Meservey, one patent for the W. g- of the S. W. J, the N W. ¿ of the S. W. J, the fractional N W. ¿ of the S. E. ¿ west of the donation survey of William Tichenor, and the' water lots 4 and 5 of said section 5, containing 165.34 acres; and to Edward W. McGraw, one patent for lots 1 and 2 of said section 6, containing 18.64 acres, — upon the ground that said patents and the entries upon which they issued were allowed and issued contrary to law and in fraud of the rights of the plaintiff, because the lands included therein were a part of a “military reservation” lawfully established at Port Orford prior thereto, all of which was known to the defendants prior to such entries.

The bills each allege the establishment of “a military reservation” at Port Orford in 1851, as in the case of William Tichenor, No. 660, except the giving of the alleged quitclaims by him and his wife, and the erection and occupation of a military post there from 1851 to 1856, and its abandonment and temporary reoecupation in 1864, and the arrest and imprisonment of said Tichenor and his son, the defendant, Jacob B. Tichenor, as in that case; and, in addition, that on March 30, 1864, the secretary of war ordered that the “post at Port Orford be made permanent according to previous action.”

The allegation in regard to the reservation for light-house purposes is omitted. The description of the alleged reservation, of which only so much is given in the William Tichenor case as was necessary to locate the portion said to be within his donation, is- as follows:

“ Beginning at a point where the east line of Redwood street, in the town of Port Orford, in the county of Curry, Oregon, prolonged, strikes the south line of the donation land claim of William Tichenor and wife; thence along [451]*451said prolonged line and its continuation to east side of Redwood street in said town of Port Orford; thence along the south line of Third street and said line continued until it strikes the west line of said Tichenor’s said claim; thence in a north-westerly direction to the sea; thence southerly following the sea to the place of 'beginning.”

It also appears from the certified copies of said patents and the entries upon which they were issued, and also an extract from the proclamation of the president, No. 680, that on May 2, 1862, the lands in said sections 5, 6, 7, and 8, except those “appropriated by law for the use of schools, military and other purposes, or claimed under the donation laws”, were proclaimed for sale at the land-office at Rose-burg, Oregon, on October 13, 1862, for a period not exceeding two weeks, after which those remaining unsold were to be subject to private entry; that the lands patented to the defendants, as above stated, were purchased by them at the rate of $ 1.25 per acre at said land-office, as follows: By Meservey, on September 25, 1862, upon a declaratory statement filed under the pre-emption law of May 9, 1862, and proof of compliance with said law, and the payment of $206.67; by Jacob B. Tichenor, upon cash entries, lot 3, in section 5, on May 2, 1863, and the remainder on July 7, 1863, and the payment of $92.52; by Edwrard W. McGraw, on a cash entry on July 18, 1871, and the payment of $23.30; and that patents were issued upon these several entries, to the parties making then, as above stated.

Meservey and Tichenor answered the bills exhibited against them respectively, admitting the purchase of the lands by them as stated, and the issuing of the patents therefor, and averred that they had since sold and conveyed the same as follows: Meservey to George Dart on January 31, 1863, for the sum of $500; Tichenor to Sarah E. Tichenor, now Sarah E. McGraw, long prior to the commencement of the suit against him for the sum of five dollars, — which deeds were duly recorded, the first-mentioned one on February 2, 1863, and the second one prior to 1870; and deny that they ever had any knowledge that said lands were ever claimed as a reservation by the United States or were not subject to private entry, and disclaim all interest in the premises since said sales and conveyances.

Thereupon the plaintiff filed an amended bill in each of those two cases, making said Dart a party defendant in Meservey’s case, (No. 665,) and said Sarah E. McGraw and her husband, Edward W. Mc-Graw, parties defendant in Jacob B. Tichenor’s case, (No. 666.) To these amended bills and the original bill in Edward W. McGraw’s [452]*452case (No. 664) the defendants demurred, assigning substantially the same causes of demurrer in each case as in Tichenor’s case, (No. 660,) and in addition thereto that it appears from each bill:

(1) That the plaintiff! surveyed the lands in question and offered them for sale at auction, and, in default of bidders, offered them to the defendant at $1.25 an acre, who purchased them acccordingly. (2) It does not appear that the defendant was guilty of any false representation or fraudulent concealment in connection with such sale. (3) It does not appear that the plaintiff has tendered to the defendant, or now offers to repay him, the money received for said lands. (4) It does not appear that the plaintiff has demanded a reconveyance of the premises.

The allegation of fraud is insufficient, and, in the^ nature of things, it cannot be made better. It was not the duty of the defendants to inform the officers of the United States that these lands had been lawfully reserved from sale, even if such was the case. But it was the duty of the plaintiff, through its proper officers, to know the condition of its lands in this respect, and act accordingly. Neither is the question of fraud a material one; for the plaintiff is not bound by the acts of its officers in the disposition of these lands if they acted, as is claimed, without authority of law. As to whether these lands were open to entry, the defendants took the risk, — purchased at their peril, — and if, being lawfully reserved, they were not subject to sale, the disposition of them by the officers of the land-office, being a matter beyond their jurisdiction, was void, without reference to the knowledge or motives of the defendants in making the purchase. Wilcox v. Jackson, 13 Pet. 511.

The only ground, then, upon which these suits can be maintained is that the lands in question had been lawfully reserved from entry by authority of the president before their sale to the defendants. If such a reservation did not exist, the lands were subject to sale, and the purchase of the defendants was lawful and valid. Therefore, the rules invoked by counsel for the defendants as applicable to a suit for the rescission of a contract within the power of the parties to make, but procured by the fraud of one of them, — as that the court will no ^interfere unless the parties can be placed in statu quo ;

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Blackburn v. United States
48 P. 904 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1897)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 F. 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-mcgraw-uscirct-1882.