1. Where, in a suit involving the right to lands, the equities
of the respective parties are equal, the legal title must
prevail.
2. Against the United States, the presumption of a party's claim
of right to a tract of public land growing out of his mere
possession of it is but very slight, and so long as the United
States retains the legal title, the statute of limitations does not
run against it, nor does any equity in his favor arise from such
possession and the nonassertion of that title.
3. A. recovered in ejectment possession of lands conveyed to him
by the United States. The judgment defendant thereupon flied his
bill setting up that B., under whom he claimed, had long previously
to the inception of A.'s title duly entered them at the proper
office, and praying that A. be compelled to convey the legal title
to the complainant. Neither the receipt of the receiver to B. for
the purchase money nor the register's certificate of purchase
entitling B. to a patent was produced or accounted for, and the
defendant's evidence strongly conduced to show that the papers
never existed and that the sale was never made. Upon the facts,
held that the bill should be dismissed.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Simmons recovered, on the seventeenth day of January, 1878, a
judgment in ejectment against Ogle for the possession of the south
half of the northeast quarter of section three, township one north,
of range nine west, in St. Clair County, Illinois, and under the
proper writ was placed in possession of it. The title on which he
recovered was a patent to himself from the United States dated June
12, 1874. Ogle thereupon instituted the present suit in chancery to
compel a conveyance of the legal title thus established by Simmons
to himself on the ground that he had a superior equity by reason of
which the title in Simmons should be decreed to be held by him in
trust for the benefit of Ogle. After answer, replication, and a
full hearing on the evidence, the court granted the prayer of the
bill, and from that decree Simmons brings the present appeal.
Page 105 U. S. 272
There is much conflict in the testimony. Some parts of it are
irreconcilable, and the result of it in producing any very clear
conviction of the true state of the case is unsatisfactory,
especially in regard to the foundation of the right of complainant
to be the true equitable owner of the land. The fact which he takes
upon himself to establish is that on Dec. 30, 1835, one John
Winstanley bought the land of the United States at the land office
in Edwardsville and paid for it. The subsequent conveyances and
transfers from Winstanley to Ogle are not controverted, and if the
purchase and payment now stated and alleged in the bill were
satisfactorily established by the evidence, the decree should be
affirmed.
The evidence by which this proposition is supported is of two
classes.
1. The records of the Edwardsville land office, now found in the
General Land Office at Washington, where they were removed by
law.
2. The conveyances and other proceedings by which, if Winstanley
ever had any right, it became vested in Ogle, and the actual
possession of the land by Ogle.
As regards the first of these, the records of the Edwardsville
land office show a written application by Winstanley at that
office, on the thirtieth day of December, 1835, for the purchase of
the land. It is numbered 13,164, and shows the quantity of the land
to be 84.46 acres, and the price to be paid $1.25 per acre.
There is also an entry on the books of the office, of which the
following is a copy and which is photographed in the record:
"No. 13,164"
"Dec. 30, 1835, to John Winstanley, of St. Clair County, State
of Illinois, for S. 1/2 NE. 1/4 section No. 3, township No. 1
north, range No. 9 west of the third principal meridian, containing
84 46/100 acres, at $1.25 per acre. $105.57."
"S. H. THOMPSON, Register"
These, it is said, being the original entries made in the
records of the local land office, are sufficient evidence of the
purchase and payment for that land by Winstanley, and that no
Page 105 U. S. 273
successful contradiction of them is found anywhere. When to this
is added the conveyance by Winstanley to William C. Anderson of the
same land in 1837, and that Anderson's title came to Ogle, who, in
1851, took possession of the land and held it until his removal
under the action of ejectment brought by Simmons against him, the
case of complainant is substantially stated.
As regards the weight to be given to the possession of Ogle, it
is to be considered that whether he had the equitable right or not,
neither the statute of limitations nor the equitable doctrine of
lapse of time could begin to have effect against anyone until
Simmons purchased of the United States and obtained his patent in
1874, for up to that time the legal title was undeniably in the
United States. If this had not been so, Ogle would have
successfully pleaded the statute of limitations against Simmons in
the action at law. No laches could be imputed to Simmons, who
brought suit very soon after he received his patent. Nor can laches
be imputed to the United States, either as a matter of law or on
any moral or equitable principles. For so common is it for
squatters and trespassers to settle on the lands of the United
States, and so indulgent are the laws in encouraging such
settlements, and so numerous are these settlements without claim of
right, and such is the impossibility of resisting or ejecting the
settlers or of efficiently asserting the right of possession by the
government, that the weight of the inference in favor of any claim
of right, whether legal or equitable, against the United States,
growing out of mere possession, is very slight indeed.
Nor do the sale and conveyance by Winstanley to Anderson afford
any legal evidence of his right to do so, and very little that he
believed himself to have such right. He could never be made
responsible for more than the purchase money, and, knowing what
entries were on the books of the local land office, he might well
be willing to take the money and the chances. The evidence,
therefore, in support of the entries on the books of the land
office does not add greatly to its force, and the complainant's
case must rest on the intrinsic probability arising from those two
pieces of evidence that Winstanley bought and paid for the
land.
Page 105 U. S. 274
If either of these entries had stated the purchase and payment
in words, they are open to the weakness which arises from the fact
that in all such completed sales, two other documents of superior
probative force usually attend the sale, one of them invariably,
neither of which is here produced or shown ever to have existed.
The most conclusive of these is the patent. There is no pretence
here that any patent ever issued to any one on Winstanley's
purchase. It is proved that he was a careful businessman much
accustomed to dealing in lands, and as he had sold this land and
made himself liable by a warranty deed, he would naturally have
made that title secure by procuring the issue of the patent.
It is, however, well known that early purchasers of the public
lands were careless about their patents. But as a reason for this,
they attached primary importance to the paper issued when a sale
was made and delivered to the purchaser by the register and
receiver of the land office, called a certificate of entry.
This is a paper in two parts, the first of which is signed by
the register, giving a description of the land, the amount paid for
it, the name of the purchaser, and a statement that on its
presentation at the General Land Office a patent would be issued to
the purchaser. The second, signed by the receiver, is a simple
receipt for the payment of the price and a description of the land
for which it was paid.
The statutes of almost every state and territory in which the
public lands have been sold provide for the registration of this
instrument, and in all actions concerning title or possession
declare it to be
prima facie evidence of title.
See Hurd's Rev.Stat. of Illinois, sec. 31, c. 30, p. 271,
and sec. 20, c. 51, p. 508. In the estimation of the people
generally and in the practice of the courts, it became the
efficient substitute or equivalent of the patent, and in regard to
millions of acres of land the patent either was never issued, or if
issued never delivered, but remains in the local or the general
land office, subject to the call of the owner.
In the case before us, there in no evidence whatever, except
presumption, that this certificate of entry ever had an existence.
In the absence of the patent, it is the instrument of all
others
Page 105 U. S. 275
which it is important to produce, or if it cannot be produced,
to account for its loss.
The only effort to do this is an affidavit of Ogle that he went
down to John Winstanley's and examined through all his papers and
did not find it. He wrote to the son of Anderson, to whom
Winstanley sold it, who replied that he could find no paper of the
kind. He went to the Commercial Bank of Cincinnati, which at one
time had a mortgage on the land. They said a majority of the papers
of the bank had been burned. So he failed to get the certificate or
any information about it. "I do not know where it is, nor have I
ever seen it," he says.
This would have been sufficient to authorize the introduction of
a copy in evidence if any copy existed. But no copy is produced,
for the reason that no human being has been found who can say that
any such paper ever existed or was ever seen by anyone. When we
consider the number of persons interested in the property through
Winstanley, there being several mortgages and intervening
conveyances between him and Ogle, and that the certificate of
entry, if ever made, could only have been forty years old when this
suit was brought, that many persons must have been alive who had
been interested in the title, this total absence of all evidence of
its existence, no one ever having seen it nor any copy of it nor
any record of it under the Recording Acts of Illinois, the
inference that such a paper was made and delivered to Winstanley is
very much shaken.
When we turn to the evidence of defendant, there is much
positive testimony to convince us that no such paper was ever
delivered and no such sale ever made.
There are in pencil mark on the page where the application of
Winstanley for this land, numbered 13,164, is found, the following
words: "13,164. Changed to NE. 1/4 of NW. 1/4, 9, 2, N. 9, W.
3d."
The transactions of the local land offices and forwarded
regularly to the General Land Office at Washington, and accurate
copies or duplicates are there found of all the transactions in the
local offices, and in the present case the original records of the
Edwardsville office, long since closed up, are in the General Land
Office.
Page 105 U. S. 276
Among these are found the following:
"No. 13,164 LAND OFFICE AT EDWARDSVILLE, ILL."
"December 30, 1835"
"It is hereby certified that in pursuance of law, John
Winstanley, of St. Clair County, Illinois, on this day purchased of
the register of this office the lot or west half of the northwest
quarter of section number nine, of township number two north, in
range number nine west of the third principal meridian, containing
eighty acres and ___ hundredths of an acre, at the rate of one
dollar and twenty five cents per acre, amounting to one hundred
dollars ___ cents, for which the said John Winstanley has made
payment in full as required by law."
"Now, therefore, be it known that on presentation of this
certificate to the Commissioner of the General Land Office, the
said John Winstanley shall be entitled to receive a patent for the
lot above described."
"S. H. THOMPSON,
Register"
"No. 13,164 RECEIVER'S OFFICE, EDWARDSVILLE, ILL."
"December 30, 1835"
"Received from John Winstanley, of St. Clair County, Ill., the
sum of one hundred dollars and ___ cents, being in full for the
west half of the northwest quarter of section number nine, township
number two north, range number nine west of the third principal
meridian, containing eighty acres and __/100, at the rate of $1.25
per acre."
"75 B.U. States"
"25 Specie"
"$100 ----"
"$100"
"B. F. EDWARDS,
Receiver"
"By WM. H. RIDER"
It will be observed that this certificate of entry bears date
the same day of Winstanley's application for the other piece of
land. That it bears the same serial number as that application
throughout, up to the issue of the patent, which is very important,
as though it is possible Winstanley might have entered two pieces
of land on the same day, they would necessarily have been separate
entries and would not have borne the same number.
Upon this certificate No. 13,164 there was issued on the second
day of December, 1839, to John Winstanley a patent
Page 105 U. S. 277
for the land there described, for the other land no patent was
ever issued to him.
Another circumstance confirming the truth of the pencil
memorandum is found in the cash book or register of receivers'
receipts at Edwardsville, now on file in the General Land Office.
In that book, which is kept in tabular form, it is shown that on
Dec. 30, 1835, on certificate No. 13,164, there was paid to the
receiver by John Winstanley $100 for the W. 1/2 NW. 1/4, S. 9, T.
2, R. 9, 80 acres; and as the transcript is complete for that day
no other receipt of money from Winstanley is shown. The quarterly
account of the receiver with the department shows precisely the
same thing.
So that we here have the evidence of these records that
Winstanley bought and paid for another piece of land on that day,
under cover of the same No. 13,164 as to application and entry;
that the price was $100, and not $105.46; that no certificate of
entry is known to have ever been made for the tract first applied
for, no evidence that any money was paid for it, no entry on the
cash book or quarterly account of the receiver of the amount for
which the land in controversy could only have been sold, but ample
evidence that on that same day and under the same entry number,
Winstanley bought and paid for another piece of land nearby, at the
same office, for which he received the usual certificate of entry
and for which the patent was issued.
We cannot resist the conclusion, in the presence of what is
positively shown by the records and what is wanting in the evidence
of complainant in regard to the existence of a certificate of entry
of this land, that the pencil memorandum, whenever it was made, is
true, that on the same day, and before the purchase was finally
completed, Winstanley changed his purpose and bought and paid for
the other piece of land, and that the officers omitted to make the
requisite change in the application while making the transfer and
preserving the original number.
If, however, this were not so clear, the appellant here has the
legal title and the possession, without fraud or any unfairness. He
found the land subject to entry by the records of the land office,
and he bought and paid for it and has the title. In
Page 105 U. S. 278
such case the maxim applies in all its force that better is the
condition of the defendant. The equities of the parties being
equal, the legal title must prevail.
Instead of the weak case made by appellee, the position of
affairs required him to make clear and satisfactory proof of his
superior equity. This he has signally failed to do.
Decree reversed, and cause remanded with directions to
dismiss the bill.