Lands listed to California as indemnity school lands, and
patented by the state, are not open to preemption settlement while
in possession of the patentee.
The Act of March 1, 1877, 19 Stat. 267, "relating to indemnity
school lands in the California," was a full and complete
ratification by Congress, according to its terms, of the lists of
indemnity school selections which had been before that time
certified to the State of California by the United States as
indemnity school selections, no matter how defective or
insufficient such certificates might originally have been, if the
lands included in the lists were not any of those mentioned in § 4,
and if they had not been taken up in good faith by a homestead or
preemption settler prior to the date of the certificate.
This was an action to recover the possession of land in
California, brought and prosecuted to final judgment in the courts
of that state. The facts which make the federal case for this court
are stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 120 U. S. 367
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a suit brought by Samuel B. Martin, the defendant in
error, on the 20th of March, 1878, in the District Court of Contra
Costa County, California, against Martin Durand and Anthony
Thompson, the plaintiffs in error, to recover the possession of the
E. 1/2 sec. 13, T, 2 S., R. 1 E., Mount Diablo meridian. The facts
found at the trial were, in brief, these:
The land in dispute was agricultural land, and it was located by
the locating agent of California on the 20th of October, 1862 at
the request and in the name of Martin, in lieu of the E. 1/2 sec.
16, T. 22 S., R. 6 E. of the same meridian. In making this
selection, which was for indemnity school lands, the agent acted
under color of the authority of § 7 of the Act of March 3, 1853, c.
145, 10 Stat. 247. This township twenty-two has never been surveyed
by the United States, and the east half of section 16 is within the
boundaries of a Mexican grant known as "San Miguelito," confirmed
to one Gonzales, the final survey of which was approved in 1859,
and the lands afterwards patented to Gonzales or his assigns.
On the 2d of March, 1863, the State of California issued a
certificate of purchase to Martin for the land in dispute. On the
8th of September, 1870, it was listed to the state by the United
States government, and, on the 3d of February, 1871, it was
patented by the state to Martin under his certificate of purchase.
The plat of the United States survey of township two, embracing the
land, was filed in the United States land office in San Francisco
on the 10th of June, 1865.
On the 10th of April, 1839, the Mexican government granted to
Jose Noriega and Robert Livermore a tract of land known as "Las
Pocitas." The claim under this grant was confirmed on the 14th of
February, 1854, by the land commissioners appointed under the Act
of March 3, 1851, c. 41, 9 Stat. 631,
Page 120 U. S. 368
and afterwards, on appeal, by this Court at December term, 1860.
After the decision of the land commissioners, a deputy surveyor,
under instructions from the Surveyor General of the United States
for California, made a survey which purported to show the
boundaries of the claim confirmed, and this survey was approved by
the Surveyor General, May 7, 1854, but nothing further appears to
have been done under it. In March, 1869, after the decree of
confirmation by this Court, the Surveyor General caused the claim
so confirmed to be again surveyed and designated, and this survey
was approved by him May 11, 1870, by the Commissioner of the United
States General Land Office, March 1, 1871, and by the Secretary of
the Interior, June 6, 1871. On the 20th of August, 1872, the United
States issued a patent to Noriega and Livermore, their heirs and
assigns, for the land so surveyed and designated in March, 1869.
The land now in dispute was embraced within the exterior boundaries
of the grant adjudged to be valid by the decree of the board of
land commissioners affirmed by this Court, but was not embraced
within the surveys of 1854 or 1869, or in the patent issued to
Noriega and Livermore.
On the 16th of May, 1876, Thompson entered into the possession
of the south half and Durand into the possession of the north half
of the half section in dispute. When these entries were made,
Martin was in possession of the land, though it was not then, nor
had it ever been, fully enclosed or fenced. Within a few days
afterwards, Martin notified Thompson that he claimed to own the
land under a patent from the State of California, which he
exhibited; but notwithstanding this, both Thompson and Durand
maintained actual and exclusive possession, and kept Martin out,
until this suit was brought. Each of the parties entered for the
purpose of availing himself of the preemption laws of the United
States, having the necessary personal qualifications therefor. They
each made application at the proper land office to perfect their
respective claims, but the officers refused to permit them to do
so. Upon this state of facts, the Supreme Court of California
affirmed a judgment of the district court in favor of Martin, and
to reverse that decision this writ of error was brought.
Page 120 U. S. 369
Upon the facts as found, we have no hesitation in deciding that
the title of Martin, under his patent from the State of California,
was perfect when his suit was brought, and that the judgment in his
favor was right. The land in dispute had not only been selected by
the state as indemnity school lands, and certified or listed as
such by the proper officer of the United States, when Durand and
Thompson made their respective entries as preemption settlers, but
it had been patented to Martin, and he was in actual possession
under color of that title. These are facts specially found by the
court below, and the evidence on which this finding was made cannot
be considered here. Such being the case, the land was not open to
preemption settlement as against Martin when Durand and Thompson
entered on his possession.
Atherton v. Fowler,
96 U. S. 513;
Trenouth v. San Francisco, 100 U.
S. 251,
100 U. S. 256;
Mower v. Fletcher, 116 U. S.
381.
If the title of Martin was ever at all defective, it was because
at the time of the selection, the land was within the boundaries of
a claim under a Mexican grant, and therefore not then, in a strict
legal sense, public land; but the United States have never objected
to the title of the state because of this. On the contrary, after a
survey had been made and approved by the Surveyor General of the
United States for California which excluded the land from the
grant, the proper officer of the United States listed it to the
state under the Act of August 3, 1854, c. 201, 10 Stat. 346, now §
2449 of the Revised Statutes, as indemnity school lands which had
been properly selected, and from that day to this, so far as the
record shows, the United States have never disputed the title of
the state or its grantee. This survey was made in 1869; the claim
having been finally confirmed in 1860. As the survey was not made
until more than ten months after the Act of July 23, 1866, c. 219,
14 Stat. 218, "to quiet land titles in California," had become
operative, its approval by the Surveyor General had the effect,
under the ruling of this Court in
Frasher v. O'Connor,
115 U. S. 102, of
opening all lands within the exterior boundaries of the grant, but
outside of those fixed by the survey, to selection or preemption
entry as public lands, subject only to a
Page 120 U. S. 370
defeat of title if in the end the survey as made should be set
aside, and the boundaries of the grant finally extended so as to
include the selection or the entry. In the present case, however,
the survey was accepted by the owners of the grant, and a patent
taken for the land within its boundaries, in full satisfaction of
their original claim as confirmed by the commissioners and by this
Court. This was in 1872, and from that time certainly there has
been no one, according to this record, who could dispute the title
of the state or its grantee except the United States. The owners of
the Mexican grant abandoned their claim to the excluded land when
they accepted their patent, and no one could enter upon the land by
the laws of the United States as a preemption settler, because
Martin was in the actual possession under his claim of title. It is
not contended that this title of Martin is even technically
defective, unless it be for the reason that the selection was
actually made when the land was not in law public land. But when
the Commissioner of the General Land Office, in 1870, certified
this with other land to the state as land which had been selected
as indemnity lands, it was an existing selection at that date, and
there were no intervening rights to prevent its operation as such.
By accepting the certificate the state treated the selection as a
valid selection existing at the time of the certificate, and the
list thus certified operated, under the act of 1854, as a transfer
of the title from the United States to the state, which immediately
inured to the benefit of Martin under his patent. It is true that
the certificate of the commissioner to a list of lands which were
not open to selection at the time they were selected, nor at the
time they were certified, would not pass title out of the United
States, be cause he had no authority in law to make such a
certificate. But the case is quite different when the state
presents for certification as an existing selection one that was
bad when made, but good when presented. Under such circumstances,
if the rights of no third parties have intervened, there is nothing
to prevent the commissioner from treating the selection as if made
on the date of its presentation, and certifying accordingly. His
certificate is of selections claimed by the state at the time of
its
Page 120 U. S. 371
date; and if the state had a right to the title under the
circumstances existing then, it was within his official authority
to make the transfer. It is a matter of no moment that the
selection was bad at the time it was made, if at the time of its
presentation for title it was good, and there were no intervening
rights to be injured by reason of its acceptance and ratification
by the United States.
This would be sufficient to sustain the title of Martin if there
were nothing more. But there is more. All must agree that, even if
the title was defective because of the invalidity of the original
selection, it was within the power of the United States to cure
such a defect by a release to the state or its grantee of all their
interest in the land remaining after the lists were certified by
the Commissioner of the Land Office, provided no other person had
in the meantime acquired rights superior to those of Martin. This,
we think, was done by the Act of March 1, 1877, c. 81, 19 Stat.
267, "relating to indemnity school e lections in the State of
California." That act is as follows:
"
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
the United States of America in Congress assembled, that the
title to the lands certified to the State of California known as
indemnity school selections, which lands were selected in lieu of
sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections lying within Mexican grants, of
which grants the final survey had not been made at the date of such
selections by said state, is hereby confirmed to said state in lieu
of the sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections, for which the
selections were made."
"SEC. 2. That where indemnity school selections have been made
and certified to said state, and said selections shall fail, by
reason of the land in lieu of which they were taken not being
included within such final survey of a Mexican grant, or are
otherwise defective or invalid, the same are hereby confirmed, and
the sixteenth or thirty-sixth section, in lieu of which the
selection was made, shall, upon being excluded from such final
survey, be disposed of as other public lands of the United States,
provided that if there be no such sixteenth or
thirty-sixth section and the land certified therefor shall be
Page 120 U. S. 372
held by an innocent purchaser for a valuable consideration, such
purchaser shall be allowed to prove such facts before the proper
land office, and shall be allowed to purchase the same at one
dollar and twenty-five cents per acre, not to exceed three hundred
ant twenty acres for anyone person,
provided that if such
person shall neglect or refuse, after knowledge of such facts, to
furnish such proof and make payment for such land, it shall be
subject to the general land laws of the United States."
"SEC. 3. That the foregoing confirmation shall not extend to the
lands settled upon by any actual settler claiming the right to
enter, not exceeding the prescribed legal quantity under the
homestead or preemption laws,
provided that such
settlement was made in good faith upon lands not occupied by the
settlement or improvement of any other person, and prior to the
date of certification of said lands, to the State of California by
the Department of the Interior,
and provided further that
the claim of such settler shall be presented to the register and
receiver of the district land office, together with the proper
proof of his settlement and residence, within twelve months after
the passage of this act, under such rules and regulations as may be
established by the Commissioner of the General Land Office."
"SEC. 4. That this act shall not apply to any mineral lands, nor
to any lands in the City and County of San Francisco, nor to any
incorporated city or town, nor to any tide, swamp, or overflowed
lands."
This statute was, in our opinion, a full and complete
ratification by Congress, according to its terms, of the lists of
indemnity school selections which had been before that time
certified to the State of California by the United States as
indemnity school selections, no matter how defective or
insufficient such certificates might originally have been, if the
lands included in the lists were not of the character of any of
those mentioned in § 4, and if they had not been taken up in good
faith by a homestead or preemption settler prior to the date of the
certificate. The history of the times, which is exemplified by the
facts of this case, shows that such must have been the
intention
Page 120 U. S. 373
of Congress. Almost from the beginning, many of the titles under
these indemnity selections had been in doubt because of the delay
which attended the settlement of Mexican claims, and the records of
this Court contain a large number of cases in which claimants under
the preemption and homestead laws of the United States have sought
to establish their titles, as against purchasers from the state
under indemnity selections who had been many years in possession,
because of some real or supposed defect in the title of the state.
This statute was passed twenty-three years after the original grant
to the state of the right to select indemnity lands for lost school
sections, and more than fourteen years after the lands now in
dispute had been selected by the state under this grant and sold to
Martin. Eight years before the statute, the proper officer of the
United States had made a certificate which, if authorized by law,
transferred an absolute estate in fee simple to the state that
inured at once to the benefit of Martin. This certificate had never
been disputed by the United States, and no attempt had ever been
made by anyone in authority to set it aside. This, as we know from
our own records, is but one of many cases of a similar character,
and, read in the light of these facts, the statute has to us no
uncertain meaning.
In its first section, all such certificates are expressly
confirmed where the only objection to their validity is that a
selection was made before the Mexican grant within which the
original school section was actually situated had been surveyed,
and the survey finally approved. In this class of cases, the state
was entitled to its indemnity lands, and the United States in
effect formally waived any and all irregularities in making the
selections.
In the second section, cases were provided for in which the
selection failed 1, because the school section in lieu of which
indemnity was claimed and taken was not actually within the limits
of a Mexican grant, and 2. because it was "otherwise defective or
invalid." This language is certainly broad enough to include every
defective certificate; and in order that the United States might be
protected from loss, it was provided that if the sixteenth or
thirty-sixth section, in lieu
Page 120 U. S. 374
of which the selection was made, should be found outside the
Mexican grant, the United States would accept that in lieu of the
selected land, and confirm the selection. If, however, there was no
such sixteenth or thirty-sixth section, and the land certified was
held by an innocent purchaser from the state for a valuable
consideration, such purchaser would be allowed to purchase the same
from the United States at the rate of $1.25 per acre, not exceeding
three hundred and twenty acres for anyone person.
The statute relates only to such selections as had been
certified to the state, and, taken as a whole, it meets the
requirements of all the cases of defective selection which could be
so certified. These are: 1. cases where the state was entitled to
indemnity, but the selection was defective in form; 2. cases where
the original school sections were actually in place, and the state
was not entitled to indemnity on their account, and 3. cases where
the state was not entitled to indemnity because there never had
been such a section sixteen or section thirty-six as was
represented when the selection was made and the official
certificate given. As to the first of these classes, the
certificate was simply confirmed because the state was entitled to
its indemnity, and nothing was needed to perfect the title but a
waiver by the United States of all irregularities in the time and
manner of the selections. As to the second, the selection was
confirmed, and the United States took in lieu of the selected land
that which the state would have been entitled to but for the
indemnity it had claimed and got. In its effect this was an
exchange of lands between the United States and the state. And as
to the third, in lieu of confirmation,
bona fide
purchasers from the state were given the privilege of perfecting
their titles by paying the United States for the land at a
specified price. Under these circumstances, it was a matter of no
moment to the United States whether the original selection was
invalid for one cause or another. If the state was actually
entitled to indemnity, it was got, and the United States only gave
what it had agreed to give. If the state claimed and got indemnity
when it ought to have taken the
Page 120 U. S. 375
original school sections, the United States took the school
sections and relinquished their rights to the lands which had been
selected in lieu. And if the state had claimed and sold land to
which it had no right, and for which it could not give school land
in return, an equitable provision was made for the protection of
the purchaser by which he could keep the land, and the United
States would get its value in money. In this way all defective
titles, under the government certificates, would be made good
without loss to the United States.
It may be, as was claimed in argument, that, when the bill was
originally prepared, the framer had it in mind only to provide for
selections made in lieu of school sections within Mexican grants
before the final survey of the grants, and for selections made in
lieu of sections not finally included within the survey of a grant,
but to our minds it is clear that before the bill finally became a
law Congress saw that, as ample provision had been made for the
protection of the United States in all cases, it was best to
include all certificates which were defective, no matter for what
cause, and so the words "or are otherwise defective or invalid"
were added in what seemed to be the most appropriate place to carry
that purpose into effect. No selection was made good unless it had
been certified, and not then unless the United States got an
equivalent either in land or in money, or in carrying out their
original school land grant. In this way, the titles of all
bona
fide purchasers from the state were or could be perfected
without loss to the United States, and that, we have no doubt, was
the intention of Congress when the statute was enacted.
It is true that Durand and Thompson had entered on the land, and
had excluded Martin from the possession, before the statute was
passed, but that gave them no rights, either under this statute or
any other. As we have already shown, their entry was of no avail
under the general preemption laws, and this statute saves the
rights of no homestead or preemption settlers except such as had
entered on the lands in good faith prior to the date of their
certification to the state.
The judgment is affirmed.