No portion of the public domain, unless it be in special cases
not affecting the general rule, is open to sale until it has been
surveyed and an approved plat of the township embracing the land
has been returned to the local land office.
Page 130 U. S. 233
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a suit to charge the defendant Hattie L. Traver as
trustee for the plaintiffs of an undivided half interest in certain
lands in San Bernardino county, California, and was commenced in
one of the superior courts of the state. To the complaint the
defendants demurred. The demurrer was sustained, and judgment
entered that the suit be dismissed. On appeal to the supreme court
of the state, the judgment was affirmed, 7 P. 450, and the case is
brought to this Court on writ of error.
The complaint alleges that on the second of February, 1870, one
Oscar Traver settled upon a quarter section of land in township 2
in San Bernardino County, California, and that until his death he
lived upon, improved, and cultivated the land; that at the time of
his settlement and continuously until the 1st day of July, 1879, it
was public property of the United States, and was unoccupied and
unsurveyed and subject to the right of preemption; that no approved
plat of the township was received at the United States District
Land Office at Los Angeles, which embraced the land in controversy,
until July 1, 1879; that at the time of his settlement and
thereafter until his death, which occurred January 2, 1877, he was
a citizen of the United States and entitled to the benefit of the
preemption and homestead laws; that he settled upon, improved the
land, and erected a building thereon, intending to acquire a title
thereto from the United States as soon as he possibly could; that
at the time of his settlement, he was a single person, and remained
so until the 13th of December, 1870, when he intermarried with the
defendant, Hattie L. Traver; that on his death, he left surviving
him his widow and two daughters, Lizzie and Annie, and the three
were his only
Page 130 U. S. 234
heirs at law; that the daughters have since married and are the
plaintiffs in this suit; that the deceased died intestate, and that
no administrator of his estate has been appointed. The complaint
further alleges that on the 16th of July, 1878, the defendant
Hattie L. Traver filed in the United States District Land Office at
Los Angeles a preemption declaratory statement describing the land,
alleging settlement on the second of February, 1870, and stating
her intention to claim the same under the preemption laws of the
United States; that soon after the death of Oscar Traver, she wrote
to the plaintiffs at San Francisco, informing them of the death of
their father and representing that he had not left any property;
that this representation was made with intent to deceive them and
prevent them from filing the necessary papers to complete his
preemption and homestead rights; that in December, 1882, they
discovered for the first time that she had completed those rights
and obtained the patent; that she had lived upon the land and
received to her own use its rents and profits since his death,
which are stated upon information and belief to be $2,500; that the
land is of the value of $1,000 per acre; that the other defendants
named claim to have some interest in the land by purchase from her;
that such purchase was made with notice of the plaintiffs' rights,
and that she denies that they have any rights in the lands or in
the rents, issues, and profits thereof. The prayer of the complaint
is that the defendant Hattie L. Traver may be charged as trustee
for plaintiffs of an undivided half interest in the lands, and in
the rents, issues, and profits thereof, and account for and pay
over to them such interest in the rents, issues, and profits; that
the other defendants be adjudged to have no interest in the land or
in any part thereof, and that the plaintiffs may have such other
and further relief as to the court may appear to be just.
The entire claim and contention of the plaintiffs rest upon two
grounds: (1) that the deceased acquired by his occupation of
unsurveyed lands of the United States a right of preemption to them
under the laws of the United States, and (2) that the plaintiffs,
as heirs at law of the deceased, were equally
Page 130 U. S. 235
entitled, with his widow, under § 2269 of the Revised
Statutes, to the benefit of the patent obtained by her. That
section is as follows:
"Where a party entitled to claim the benefits of the preemption
laws dies before consummating his claim, by filing in due time all
the papers essential to the establishment of the same, it shall be
competent for the executor or administrator of the estate of such
party, or one of the heirs, to file the necessary papers to
complete the same; but the entry in such cases shall be made in
favor of the heirs of the deceased preemptor, and a patent thereon
shall cause the title to inure to such heirs, as if their names had
been specially mentioned."
Neither of these grounds is well taken. No portion of the public
domain, unless it be in special cases not affecting the general
rule, is open to sale until it has been surveyed and an approved
plat of the township embracing the land has been returned to the
local land office. A settlement upon the public lands in advance of
the public surveys is allowed to parties who in good faith intend,
when the surveys are made and returned to the local land office, to
apply for their purchase. If, within a specified time after the
surveys, and the return of the township plat, the settler takes
certain steps -- that is, files a declaratory statement, such as is
required when the surveys have preceded settlement, and performs
certain other acts prescribed by law -- he acquires for the first
time a right of preemption to the land; that is, a right to
purchase it in preference to others. Until then, he has no estate
in the land which he can devise by will or which, in case of his
death, will pass to his heirs at law. He has been permitted by the
government to occupy a certain portion of public lands, and
therefore is not a trespasser, on his statement that when the
property is open to sale he intends to take the steps prescribed by
law to purchase it, in which case he is to have the preference over
others in purchasing; that is, the right to preempt it. The United
States make no promise to sell him the land, nor do they enter into
any contract with him upon the subject. They simply say to him:
"If you wish to settle upon a portion of the public lands, and
purchase the title, you can occupy any
Page 130 U. S. 236
unsurveyed lands which are vacant and have not been reserved
from sale; and when the public surveys are made and returned, the
land not having been in the meantime withdrawn from sale, you can
acquire, by pursuing certain steps, the right to purchase
them."
If those steps are from any cause not taken, the proffer of the
government has not been accepted, and a title in the occupant is
not even initiated. The title to the land remains unaffected, and
subject to the control and disposition of the government, as before
his occupancy.
This doctrine has been long established in this Court. Thus, in
Frisbie v.
Whitney, 9 Wall. 187, 193, where the subject was
fully considered, it was held that occupation and improvement on
the public lands with a view to preemption did not confer a vested
right in the land so occupied. Speaking of the settlement in that
case, the Court, by MR. JUSTICE MILLER, said:
"So far as anything done by him is to be considered, his claim
rests solely upon his going upon the land and building and residing
on it. There is nothing in the essential nature of these acts to
confer a vested right, or indeed any kind of claim to land, and it
is necessary to resort to the preemption law to make out any shadow
of such right."
The same doctrine was affirmed in
The
Yosemite Valley Case, 15 Wall. 77, the Court
observing that until all the preliminary steps to the acquisition
of the title of the United States prescribed by law have been
complied with, the settler has not acquired any title against the
United States. Among these are the entry of the land at the
appropriate land office and the payment of its price. "Until such
payment and entry," the Court added,
"the acts of Congress give to the settler only a privilege of
preemption in case the lands are offered for sale in the usual
manner -- that is, the privilege to purchase them in that event in
preference to others. The United States by those acts enter into no
contract with the settler, and incur no obligation to anyone that
the land occupied by him shall ever be put up for sale. They simply
declare that in case any of their lands are thrown open for sale,
the privilege to purchase them in limited quantities at fixed
prices shall be first given to parties who have settled upon and
improved them."
Page 130 U. S. 237
done in this case by the deceased occupant beyond his occupancy,
and therefore nothing to initiate a title in him -- not even the
privilege of purchasing the land was acquired by him. His death
occurred two years before the surveys were made and returned.
Section 2269 of the Revised Statutes, upon which the plaintiffs
rely, has no application to the case presented by them. That
section was taken from § 2 of the Act of March 3, 1843, 5
Stat. 620, "to authorize the investigation of alleged frauds under
the preemption laws, and for other purposes." At that time, no
settlement on unsurveyed lands was permitted by the laws of the
United States, and the second section was intended to secure to the
heirs of the deceased preemptor a claim to the benefit of the
preemption laws, which he had initiated, but not completed before
his death "by filing in due time all the papers essential to the
establishment of the same." His executor or administrator, or one
of his heirs, was in that event allowed to file such papers. No
claim of the deceased in this case was lost by any failure to file
the necessary papers. The time for any papers to be filed did not
arrive during his life.
The contention of the plaintiffs in error is that the section,
upon a correct construction, extends to heirs of a deceased
occupant of unsurveyed public land of the United States, who during
his life did nothing beyond its occupation and improvement, the
same rights which are conferred upon heirs of a person entitled at
the time of his death to the benefits of the preemption laws. It is
upon the supposed denial of such rights to the plaintiffs by the
court below that the jurisdiction of this Court is invoked; it is
upon that denial alone that the jurisdiction can be maintained.
What we have said as to the legal effect of the deceased's
occupation and improvement shows that no title was initiated or
right of preemption created by them, and of course nothing was left
by the deceased to be completed by his heirs, and hence there was
no denial of any rights to them under the statute, as claimed.
Judgment affirmed.