Court Opinion

ID: 5439943
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 18:00:22.369473+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:31:58.506863
License: Public Domain

Ross, J.:
In 1842, the Mexican Government granted to one Francisco Estrada a rancho known as the “ Pastoría de las Borregas Eancho,” to the extent of two square leagues, to be located within certain exterior boundaries of larger dimensions. These *259exterior boundaries included the premises in controversy here. Notwithstanding that fact, the plaintiff, in October, 1850, settled upon the tract in dispute, with the intention of pre-empting it under the laws of the United States, he having at the time, and ever since, the personal qualifications necessary to enable him to pre-empt public land of the Government.
In February, 1862, the parties holding the Mexican grant, but who are not named in the record before us, recovered judgment in ejectment against the plaintiff, and under it the latter was evicted from the said premises, and never afterward reentered. In 1863, the plaintiff moved upon what was after-wards ascertained by the public surveys of the United States to be the north-west quarter of the north-west quarter of section 1, township 7 south, range 2, west of the Mt. Diablo meridian, where he had a house and out-buildings. He also occupied about twenty acres of the north-east quarter of the said north-west quarter, making in all about sixty acres of what turned out to be, when the public surveys were made as herein after stated, the north half of the north half of section 1 aforesaid. Upon these sixty acres he has ever since resided. The other portion of the said north half, which included the premises in controversy, was then, to wit, in 1863, in the possession of one Daniel Lyons and others, to whom Estrada, the Mexican grantee, had sold it, with other land embraced within the boundaries of the grant. Lyons died on the 9th of July, 1866, leaving the defendants his heirs.
The grant was finally confirmed, and in 1865 the final survey of the tract confirmed was made and approved, which excluded from its boundaries the premises in question. The land was afterwards surveyed by the authorities of the United States, the. plat duly filed, and in July, 1866, the plaintiff filed a declaratory statement in the proper land office, claiming to pre-empt the whole of the north half of the north half of said section 1, alleging his settlement thereon in October, 1856; and in September following made proof of his claim before the register and receiver, and was by them allowed to enter the land. He then paid the purchase-money, and received a certificate. In the meantime, the Act of Congress of July 23rd, 1866, was passed, and under it the defendants, as heirs of Lyons, claimed the right to purchase the premises in question.
*260Thereupon the register and receiver were directed by the commissioner of the general land office to investigate the entry of plaintiff; and accordingly testimony was taken before them on behalf of the respective claimants, resulting in a decision by the register and receiver in favor of the plaintiff. On appeal to the commissioner, and subsequently to the Secretary of the Interior, the decision of the register and receiver was reversed, and the land in dispute awarded to the defendants, to whom a patent was afterwards issued. The plaintiff, claiming that he has the equitable title to the land by reason of his settlement thereon in 1856, and the subsequent proceedings already mentioned, instituted the present action, by which he seeks to charge the defendants as trustees of the title for his benefit, and to compel them to transfer it to him.
The question mainly argued at the bar, and also in the brief of counsel for the plaintiff, namely, whether the heir of a purchaser, in good faith and for value, from a Mexican grantee is entitled to purchase from the Government the lands mentioned in the seventh section of the Act of July 23rd, 1866, need not he considered, for the reason that it is incumbent on the plaintiff to show that he has the equitable title to the property before lie can maintain the action; and this the record fails to establish. This is very clearly shown by the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Hosmer v. Wallace, 7 Otto, 579, where the Court speaks of the same settlement and the same proceedings on the part of the plaintiff as are shown in the present case. The Court there say: “ The plaintiff had acquired by his settlement in 1856 no such interest in the premises as could control the disposition of them by the United States, should it he ultimately determined that they were not covered by the grant. The land within the boundaries of the grant was not open to settlement under the pre-emption laws, and his occupation from 1856 to his eviction in 1862 was that of a trespasser, and did not originate any rights which the Government was bound to respect. The land was not then ‘ public land,’ in the sense of those laws; and even if it had been public land, to which no private claim was made, it would not have been subject to settlement under them until it had been surveyed. The Act of Congress of March 3rd, 1853, allowing a settlement on *261unsurvcyed lands in California, was limited in its operation to one year. (10 Stat. 246, proviso to § 6.) By the Act of March 1st, 1854, this privilege was extended for two years from that date, when it expired. (Id. 268.) No other statute was passed opening unSurveyed lands in California to pre-emption settlement until May 80th, 1862. (12 id. 409.) The occupation, therefore, of the plaintiff in October, 1856, was a mere intrusion upon the claim of another, without any license of the Government; and after he was evicted by legal process in February, 1862, the premises were in the possession of the defendant, and therefore not open to settlement by him. Whatever right of pre-emption the plaintiff acquired by his settlement to land outside of the boundaries of the Mexican grant originated after May 80th, 1862 j but as to land within those boundaries, no right could be initiated until the land was excluded from the tract confirmed by the approved survey in June, 1865. In neither case could the right of pre-emption extend to land in the occupation of the defendant at those dates. To create a right of pre-emption there must be settlement, habitation, and improvement by the pre-emptor, conditions which cannot be met when the land is in the occupation of another. Settlement, habitation, and improvement of one piece of land can confer no rights to another adjacent to it, which at the commencement of the settlement is in the possession and use of others, though upon a subsequent survey by the Government it prove to be a part of the same sectional subdivision. Under the pre-emption laws, as held in Atherton v. Fowler, 96 U. S. 513, the right to make a settlement is to be exercised on unsettled land, the right to make improvements is to be exercised on unimproved land, and the right to erect a dwelling-house is to be exercised on vacant land. None of these things can be done on land when it is occupied and used by others.
“ There was, therefore, no valid adverse right or title, except that of the United States, to the premises in controversy when they were excluded by the approved survey from the tract confirmed ; nor had the plaintiff the right of a pre-emption claimant to them.”
Judgment affirmed.
MgKxnstby, J., and McKee, J., concurred.