Zimmerman v. McCurdy

106 N.W. 125, 15 N.D. 79, 1906 N.D. LEXIS 7
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 106 N.W. 125 (Zimmerman v. McCurdy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zimmerman v. McCurdy, 106 N.W. 125, 15 N.D. 79, 1906 N.D. LEXIS 7 (N.D. 1906).

Opinion

Engerud, J.

There is no dispute as to the material facts of this case. The plaintiff, Mary Zimmerman, is the widow of Frank Zimmerman, deceased. Frank Zimmerman in his lifetime, on April 22, 1898, filed a homestead entry on the quarter section of land in question at the Devils Lake land office. He took up his residence upon the land and occupied it, with his family, as his home until his death in June, 1900. After his death his widow and minor children continued in possession of the homestead. Shortly before Mr. Zimmerman’s death a contest was initiated by this defendant, Caroline MóCurdy, against Zimmerman’s entry, on the ground that said entryman had exhausted his homestead right before making the entry in contest. After his death his widow and children were substituted as defendants in the contest. That contest resulted in a final decision canceling the contested entry. The contestant, Caroline McCurdy, thereupon exercised the preference right of entry secured to her by the contest, and on November 24, 1902, her application to enter the land as a homestead was accepted, and the usual receipt evidencing such entry was made and delivered to her by the receiver of the Devils Lake land office. On December 3, 1902, the plaintiff, Mrs. Zimmerman, filed in the Devils Lake land office her application, in proper form, to be allowed to enter the land as her homestead; and at the same time she filed an affidavit of contest against the homestead entry of [82]*82Caroline McCurdy. Mrs. Zimmerman claims the right to hold the land as her homestead, and contests the validity of defendant’s entry on the ground that she (plaintiff) after the death of her husband became qualified to enter a homestead; and, her deceased husband’s entry being void, her possession and her continued cultivation and improvement of the land with intent to hold the land as a homestead gave her a right to file a homestead entry for the land superior to the right of Mrs. McCurdy, notwithstanding the result of the contest against Frank Zimmerman’s, entry. She also asserted that defendant’s entry should be canceled and her own application to enter should be allowed by reason of certain equitable considerations. The officers of the local land office held that the affidavit disclosed sufficient ground for contest, and ordered a hearing. The necessary notice was served on Mrs. McCurdy, a hearing was had, and the contest was still pending and undetermined when this action was tried. It was admitted at the trial by the defendant that the plaintiff and her family had' been continuously occupying the land as their home and farming thereon since 1898, and had improved the same in a substantial manner with farm buildings of the value of at least $3,000 and had no other home; and that defendant had never been in possession of any part of said premises until after this action had been commenced. At that time the defendant took possession of ten acres, as she was permitted to do by the in junctional order hereafter referred to. In March, 1903, after the last contest had been commenced, but before the hearing had been had, the defendant attempted to oust plaintiff and take possession of the land and improvements. Plaintiff thereupon commenced this action, setting forth in the complaint her possession, and alleged right to the possession of said premises by reason of the facts above stated, the pendency of the contest against Mrs. McCurdy’s entry, and the latter’s repeated threats and attempts to oust plaintiff by force, etc., and prayed that the plaintiff’s alleged lawful possession be protected by enjoining Mrs. McCurdy from interfering with plaintiff’s occupation and cultivation of the premises. In her answer Mrs. McCurdy pleads a counterclaim, alleging her right to possession by virtue of her as yet uncanceled homestead entry, the refusal of the plaintiff to vacate, and her forcible resistance of defendant’s attempts to obtain possession. She prays that the plaintiff be dispossessed by a mandatory injunction and be restrained from resisting or interfering [83]*83with defendant’s right to possession. On the hearing of plaintiff’s application for a temporary injunction, the court made an order permitting Mrs. McCurdy to hold and occupy a certain portion of the land, about ten acres in area, and ordering her to refrain from interfering with Mrs. Zimmerman’s possession of the remainder of the land until the final determination of the action. The action was subsequent^ tried, and judgment ordered and entered in effect awarding possession of the entire premises to defendant, but giving the plaintiff the right to remove within ninetj^ days the buildings and other improvements erected by her on the land. The plaintiff has appealed from this judgment, and demands a new trial of all the issues.

The judgment is clearly erroneous. From the. foregoing recital of the undisputed facts, it will be seen that the decison of the trial court is necessarily predicated upon the assumption that Mrs. Mc-Curdy’s entry is valid and Mrs. Zimmerman’s claim is invalid. That is the precise question in litigation before the land department in the pending contest. Mrs. Zimmerman is in actual possession under a claim of right. If her claim is well founded, she has the right to retain possession and hold the land as a homestead, notwithstanding Mrs. McCurdy’s entry. Manifestly her possession cannot be disturbed unless her alleged right is held to be unfounded. That question is one which, under the circumstances of this case, the courts have no jurisdiction to decide. That is a question which is within the exclusive jurisdiction of the land department to decide so long as the disposition of the land is under control of the federal land department. Grandin v. LeBar, 3 N. D. 446, 57 N. W. 241; Martinson v. Marzolf (N. D.) 103 N. W. 937; Cosmos Exploration Co. v. Oil Co., 190 U. S. 301, 23 Sup. Ct. 692, 24 Sup. Ct. 860, 47 L. Ed. 1064. This presents the question as to whether the plaintiff is entitled to relief on the facts disclosed. We think she is. She is in possession as a claimant under color of right. The defendant also is a claimant under color of right, but is seeking to obtain possession which she never had. She must recover, if at all, by -showing a superior right to that of the party in possession. Not so with the plaintiff. She being in possession as a claimant under color of right, and the court having no jurisdiction to declare her claim invalid, the case is the proverbial one wherein possession is nine points. The right to the possession of public lands is a valuable right, and is one which the courts must [84]*84enforce and protect, even though the legal title is in the government. It would be unthinkable to leave the claimants without any means to protect and enforce their conflicting claims except by force. Plence the courts, although the title is in the government, have jurisdiction to grant appropriate remedies in behalf of an occupant or claimant of public land. The rightful claimant’s possession or right to possession will always be protected or enforced against a trespasser by the appropriate action in court when that can be done without deciding a controversy of which the land department has exclusive jurisdiction. Section 5919, Rev. Codes 1899; Fulmele v. Camp, 20 Col. 495, 39 Pac. 407; Matthews v. O’Brien, 84 Minn. 505, 88 N. W. 12; Woodsides v. Rickey, 1 Or. 108; Wood v. Murray, 85 Iowa, 505, 52 N. W. 356.

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

Related

Heffle v. State
633 P.2d 264 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1981)
Cardinal Petroleum Co. v. Northern Pacific Railway Co.
193 N.W.2d 131 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1971)
Park District of City of Bismarck v. Bertsch
152 N.W.2d 401 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1967)
Perry v. Erling
132 N.W.2d 889 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1965)
Gunsch v. Gunsch
69 N.W.2d 739 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1954)
Steele v. Allison
73 S.W.2d 842 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 N.W. 125, 15 N.D. 79, 1906 N.D. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zimmerman-v-mccurdy-nd-1906.