Wynn v. Garland

16 Ark. 440
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 Ark. 440 (Wynn v. Garland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wynn v. Garland, 16 Ark. 440 (Ark. 1855).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Scott

delivered the opinion of tlie Court.

The land in controversy between these parties, is the north-east quarter of section eighteen, township sixteen south, of range twenty-five west. It is on the south side of Red River, in Lafayette county.

The bill was filed in'the Circuit Court of that county, by Wynn against Garland, to enjoin him from proceeding at law to recover the possession of the premises, to quiet plaintiff in his possession, and for general relief. Upon the hearing, the injunction before granted, was dissolved; Wynn was denied all relief, his bill dismissed, and Garland decreed damages against him under the statute, to be ascertained by a jury. Wynn then brought the case here by appeal.

: The transcript is quite voluminous. Besides lengthy pleadings, swollen by many exhibits, there are numerous depositions. It does not seem necessary to set these out, or State their substance beyond this, to wit:

Wynn claims the land under the pre-emption law of 1838. He made proof and payment under the provisions of that law, and obtained the usual patent certificate, on the 30th of November, 1842. There is no question but that he was entitled to purchase the land from the government, under that law, if no one had a superior right to purchase it under one of the prior preemption laws.

Samuel Hemphill, under whom Garland claims, asserted his right to purchase the sameland under the pre-emptionlaw of 1830 ; and, on the 19th of February, 1843, having made his proof under the provisions of that act, and the supplement to the same, to the satisfaction of the Register and Receiver of the proper Land Office, was allowed that day to pay out the land, and received the usual patent certificate for the same. This was regularly assigned to Garland; and, on the 9th of Januarv, 1844, after having examined the testimony filed to sustain these two respective confiic-ting claims against the Government, the Oommissioner of the General Land Office approved tbe last mentioned entry, upon tbe ground tliat the pre-emption right, under which it was made, was fully proven, and being under the law of 1830, must take precedence of Wynn’s entry, which, although fully proven also under the provisions of the law of 1838, was subject to the senior right under the prior law; and, upon that ground, canceled the entry of Wynn, and approving that of Hemphill, on the next day, to wit: the 10th January, 1841, the patent was signed by the President, and issued to Garland as assignee of Hemphill, in the usual course.

Tims Garland has the legal title, perfected by patent, which he claims to be supported by an equity of Hemphill, as against the Government, under the law of 1830, while Wynn, upon tlie foundation of his claim under the law of 1838, denies, in toto, the alleged equity of Hemphill, and assails it in divers ways; mainly, however, for abandonment, fraud, and mistake — setting up his own claim under the law of 1838, as being both legal and equitable, and the only true pre-emption right to the land in controversy. There is a vast deal in the record, both in the pleadings and evidence, relating to the improvements upon the public lands, of each of these parties, and of those under whom they claim, as successors, their respective improvements, which seems to be mainly designed to show hardship, that can have no legitimate influence in the decision of the questions involved. And as to such matter, it may be sufficient to remark, that each party having had a pre-emption right under the law of 1830, as assig-nee of the respective possessors of that year, by virtue of the cultivation and possession of their respective assignors, under which each had the election to take either of two or more tracts of land, upon which the respective cultivation of their several assignors extended in the year 1829, neither could have any equity in any other tract, than that one elected to be taken, however valuable may have been their several improvements upon the tracts, not covered by their respective pre-emption purchases as located by themselves, for the reason that all such improvements had been purchased or made at their own risk, like ordinary improvements upon the public lands, made with no reference to the acquiring of a pre-emption right.

And as to all such improvements, neither the Government, nor any purchaser from the Government, whether purchasing by virtue of a pre-emption right, or at auction sales of the Government, or by private entry, is to be held bound to respond to any supposed equity in the owners thereof, as against the Government, and her vendees are but simply intruders and trespassers.

Hence, as to all that class of claimants of the possession of the public lands, who may have thus improved, or purchased improvements upon the public lands, although their claims, while they continue to exist in fact, may be recognized and protected by our own State laws, as chattel interests, until such time as the Government, or her vendee, may assert the paramount title and interest in the soil, (when they at once cease to exist) there is no place for the application of the law of notice, because they have no such interest in, or title to the land as can be affected by any want of notice, unless it could be supposed that a court of equity would recognize, and protect as an equity against the owner, the fruits of an outright trespass upon his lands.

And for a like reason, it can have no place, as between claimants to a pre-emption to the same tract of land, under successive pre-emption laws; as for instance, under the law of 1830, and under that of 1838. Because, if the former exists in fact to a given tract of land, the latter does not pxist at all as to that tract. A pre-emption right, under any circumstances, is essentially a claim against the Government; and, under such circumstances, is essentially a unit. To suppose two to exist in fact, under such circumstances, would be as absurdas to suppose that two bodies, each of which was sufficient to fill a given space, could occupy that space at the same time. If the first should not be forfeited by a failure to make the proof and payment within the time prescribed by law, and should be perfected by a compliance with all the requisites of the law, the latter, in contemplation of law, never had, for a moment, any germ of existence; and, consequently, tbe occupier of tbe land, wbo claimed under tbe act of 1838, bad no greater interest in it, to be affected by a want of notice, than tbe ordinary squatter, wbo pretended to no pre-emption'claim at all.

So far as be was concerned, tbe law of 1838 bad no more effect than if be bad lived on bis own land, instead of that of tbe public ; because, in fact, be lived upon land, that bad been, in effect, appropriated under tbe law of 1830 ; and, consequently, not upon land to wbicb a pre-emption right, under tbe law of 1838, would attach.

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16 Ark. 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wynn-v-garland-ark-1855.