Court Opinion

ID: 6473291
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-26 22:32:42.422261+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:53:53.100754
License: Public Domain

STREET, C. J.
Whatever may have been the condition of the legal title before Dickey received a patent, after the United States patent was issued to Dickey the legal title was in Dickey and his assigns, and at the time this action was brought the legal title was in appellees. This condition of the title was. well recognized by the respective parties; and plaintiff sues in equity to recover his lost legal title to the undivided one-half interest, which was absorbed by Dickey in the issuance of the patent. It is well settled that, where a patentee has taken unto himself a title from the government, which, before patent issued, rested in himself and others, as tenants in common, by virtue of location interests, the patentee holds the title intrust for the true owners, and that a bill in equity will lie to enforce such a trust. Johnson v. Towsley, 13 Wall. 72; Moore v. Robbins, 96 U. S. 530; Marquez v. Frisbie, 101 U. S. 473; *307Rector v. Gibbon, 111 U. S. 276, 4 Sup. Ct. 605; Turner v. Sawyer, 150 U. S. 578, 14 Sup. Ct. 192; Cattle Co. v. Becker, 147 U. S. 47, 13 Sup. Ct. 217. Where, from the relation of the parties, it can be inferred that the patentee was acting, not alone for himself, but for his cotenant as well, a court of equity will decree that in acquiring his patent he acted for the benefit of the cotenants. If there had been a previous recognition by the patentee of the rights of his cotenant, or if he took undue advantage of his cotenant, or where relations of trust and confidence between the patentee and his cotenant existed, the patent would inure to the benefit of all of the owners of the property. If no such trust relation existed; if the claim of the patentee has ever been adverse to his co-tenant, and if at the time of his application, and prior thereto, he had constantly asserted his right to the whole of the property ; if the cotenant was aware of the application for patent by the adverse holder in his own name alone, and was aware of the assertion of adverse rights, and the patentee had not done or said anything to cause his cotenant to believe that he was acting in his behalf as well as in his own, and had quietly permitted patentee to obtain the legal title,—it is doubtful if a court of equity would interfere. The Revised Statutes of Arizona on limitations of actions for land relied upon by appellees is as follows, to wit: “Par. 2297. Every suit to be instituted to recover real property as against any person in peaceable and adverse possession thereof, under title or color' of title, shall be instituted within three years next after the cause of action shall have accrued, and not afterwards. Par. 2298. By the term ‘title’ is meant a regular chain of transfer from or under the sovereignty of the soil, and by ‘color of title’ is meant a consecutive chain of transfer down to such person in possession without being regular, as if one or more of the memorials or muniments be not registered, or not duly registered, or be only in writing. . . . Par. 2299. Every suit to be instituted to recover real property as against any person having peaceable and adverse possession thereof, cultivating, using, or enjoying the same, and paying taxes thereon, if any, and claiming under a deed or deeds duly registered, shall be instituted within five years next after the cause of action shall have accrued, and not afterwards. ’ ’ It was not pretended by appellant that he or his predecessors had been operating the *308mines, or either of them, or doing ány work thereon, by way of annual expenditure or otherwise, which makes the physical index of possession, but he relied wholly upon his legal rights as tenant in common with appellees and their predecessors in interest. He treats the sheriff’s deed, the administrator’s deed, and the relocation notice, as well as the patent, as instruments in harmony with his rights, and not adverse to them. Freeman, in his work on Cotenancy, says: “A conveyance by one eotenant, purporting to convey an estate in severalty, cannot operate to the prejudice of the other. This is true only so far as the immediate effect of such conveyance as a transfer of title is concerned. It does not follow that no rights can grow out of it; nor that it is, even as against the other co-tenants, mere waste paper for all purposes. Such a conveyance constitutes color of title. The entry of the grantee, made under the deed, and claiming an interest coextensive with that with which the deed purports to deal, is an entry under color of title. The eotenants are therefore bound to take notice of the deed, and of the entry made under it, and to take such steps as may be required to enforce a recognition of their legal rights. Should they fail to do so within the time prescribed by the statute of limitations, their rights will be no longer susceptible of enforcement; and their interests, by operation of that statute, will vest in the party in possession under the deed.” In the syllabus of the case of Unger v. Mooney, 63 Cal. 586, 49 Am. Rep. 100, there is a correct summary of the matter, as follows, to wit: "The possession of one tenant in common is the possession of his eotenant. There is no element of hostility in such a possession. An actual adverse holding will not operate as an ouster, and set the statute of limitations in motion, until the tenant out of possession has notice of such holding. But, if the hostile character of the possession is so openly manifested that his observation, as a man reasonably careful of his interests, would be sufficient to discover it, he will be deemed to have notice. Thus, where one of the two tenants in common conveys to a third person by deed purporting to convey the whole land, and the deed is recorded by the grantee, who enters under it,- such entry is hostile in its nature; and the mere fact of possession by a stranger is enough to put him on inquiry and charge him with notice. So the making of valuable improvements, paying the taxes upon the *309land, and receiving the rents and profits, without accounting or offering to account, are circumstances indicating an adverse holding; and their effect upon the cotenant is the same as if notice were directly communicated to him. The means of knowledge being furnished by the open and notorious character of the possession, he is chargeable with the actual notice.”
The assignments of error relate principally to the finding of the court upon the statute of limitations, in which we think the district court was logically correct in its conclusions. How stands the case of the'plaintiff, under the equitable doctrine of laches 1 Let us review the facts: In 1884 and 1885 the then owners of the properties—Collins, Scofield, and Thompson— placed a mill on one of the mines, or on land adjacent thereto, and commenced development work for the purpose of immediate revenues. The proposition was a flat failure. Collins abandoned the idea of pursuing his interests in the claims further, and allowed foreclosure proceedings of his mortgage. He went away, and left Scofield and Thompson in the vicinity of the mines. Scofield moved the mill away, and nothing from that day until the present has been done or attempted to be done on the mines, by way of annual expenditures, development work, or work for revenue, by either Scofield or Thompson. They were aware of the mortgage-foreclosure proceedings by.Roberts, and neither of them paid any attention to the suit, or to the allegation in Roberts’s complaint against them that they claimed an interest in the mines, nor opposed his prayer that their interests be foreclosed. After the execution of the sheriff’s deed, Roberts alone performed the annual expenditure upon the mines, up until the time of his death; and neither Scofield nor Thompson made any efforts to do anything with the mines, or give any expressions of their interest in them. After Roberts’s death there were administration proceedings, and an administrator’s deed, which,—engaging in legal presumptions,-—-we must conclude was after legal notice given to all parties interested in the mines. Dickey obtained his deed, and went into manual possession of the mines, by doing work thereon sufficient to keep the locations alive. In 1891 he made a relocation of the mines. It is claimed by appellant that those relocations were made for the purpose of correcting descriptions; but they were made in Dickey’s name alone, without any word of protest from either *310Scofield or Thompson. In 1892 Dickey made application for patent in the United States land office; and, engaging in legal presumptions, we must conclude that, following the application, notices were posted as in such cases required. There is no showing in the record that Thompson and Scofield were not aware of any of these proceedings. A patent was issued in 1893 to Dickey, and following the issuing of the patent there were transfers as follows: One-half interest by Dickey to Arms, one-half interest by F. M. Murphy to appellees, one-half interest by Arms to 'Gage, and one-half interest by Gage to appellees; and during all of this time neither appellant nor Scofield made any protest or made any claim to any interest in the mines, and the record is still silent about their being unaware of the transfers. Under each of the transfers of title the grantees went into possession, and operated the mines. They have permitted the present owners of the title to expend thirty thousand dollars in improvements and development work; they permitted appellees and their assigns to do development work upon the mines to the extent of running over two thousand feet of tunnels; and still the record is silent as to Scofield and Thompson being unaware of the work going on, while it is asserted by appellees that Thompson and Scofield were aware of every step in the transfer of titles. It is asserted by appellees that they were fully cognizant of the development work done upon the mines, the running of the tunnels, and the expenditure of the vast sums of money to put the mines in working shape, yet from 1886 to 1896 they have not been heard to make a claim to any interest in the mines. Under the equitable doctrine of laches, Thompson is estopped from now asserting that he is a cotenant, and that appellees are trustees of the title for his use. The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Davis, J., and Doan, J., concur.