In the year 1866, the mere occupation of public land, with a
purpose at some subsequent time of entering it for a homestead,
gave the party so occupying no rights.
This case resembles the preceding insofar as the legal title is
concerned. The action was commenced in the District Court of Allen
County, Kansas, by a grantee from the railway company. In that
court, judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant, which
judgment was afterwards
Page 156 U. S. 545
reversed by the supreme court of the state and judgment ordered
in favor of the plaintiff for the possession of the land in
controversy.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The only thing distinguishing this case from the preceding, and
calling for any comment is the equitable claim which the defendant
presents. It appears from the testimony that the defendant moved
upon the land in October, 1866, but made no attempt to enter it as
a homestead until the succeeding spring and after the withdrawals
had been ordered by the Secretary of the Interior. In support of
his claim, the defendant called as a witness his father-in-law,
who, after stating that defendant and himself went upon the tracts,
on which they still resided, somewhere about the 20th of October,
1866, testified as follows:
"We drove onto the land on Saturday evening, and on Monday
morning I took a horse and went to Humboldt, to the land office, to
see if we could have permission for Maddox and me both -- I went
for both of us -- to get these pieces of lands and put up our
houses, and live in them till the next spring, and then we would
make our homestead, and he gave us the permission to do so. He said
that he had given others permission to do so. I told him that we
were scarce as to money then, but that we would have some money in
the spring, and then we wanted to make our homestead."
He further said that under this permission, they occupied the
lands and made improvements; that when they went in the succeeding
spring for the purpose of making their homestead entries, they were
told that the lands had been withdrawn. On cross-examination, he
was asked this question:
"Q. The first time that you went there, you did not offer to
Page 156 U. S. 546
file your homestead, but simply to inquire about it?"
and answered it in the affirmative. The defendant himself, on
cross-examination, gave this testimony:
"Q. Why did you not make the homestead entry when you first went
there in the fall?"
"A. Well, sir, the reason is this: we did not have money enough
to do it, and we were in a new country and a strange country, and
we did not know whether we would get anything to do."
"Q. Do you remember how much money you had at the time?"
"A. About thirteen dollars -- both of us -- between us."
Upon these facts, he insists that his equitable rights antedated
the withdrawals, and are superior to the legal title.
This claim of the defendant cannot be sustained. At the time of
these transactions, the mere occupation of land with a purpose at
some subsequent time of entering it for a homestead gave to the
party so entering no rights. The law in force (12 Stat. 392, c. 75)
made the entry at the land office the initial fact. Sec. 1
authorized anyone possessed of the prescribed qualifications "to
enter one quarter section, or a less quantity, of unappropriated
public lands." Sec. 2 provided that the person applying should,
upon his application, make affidavit, among other things,
"that such application is made for his or her exclusive use and
benefit, and that said entry is made for the purpose of actual
settlement and cultivation, . . . and upon filing the said
affidavit with the register or receiver, and on payment of ten
dollars, he or she shall thereupon be permitted to enter the
quantity of lands specified."
So the law stood until May 14, 1880, 21 Stat. 141, c. 89, when
an act was passed the third section of which is as follows:
"SEC 3. That any settler who has settled, or who shall hereafter
settle, on any of the public lands of the United States, whether
surveyed or unsurveyed, with the intention of claiming the same
under the homestead laws shall be allowed the same time to file his
homestead application and perfect his original entry in the United
States land office, as is now
Page 156 U. S. 547
allowed to settlers under the preemption laws to put their
claims on record, and his right shall relate back to the date of
settlement, the same as if he settled under the preemption
laws."
By this section, for the first time, the right of a party
entering land under the homestead law was made to relate back to
the time of his settlement. But this act was passed long after the
rights of the railway company had accrued and the legal title had
passed to it. It is not operative, therefore, to divest such legal
title or enlarge as against such title any equitable rights which
the defendant theretofore had. They must be determined by the law
as it stood at the time he made his entry, or at least prior to the
time that the title passed to the railway company. Now, from his
own testimony, while he moved on the land in October, 1866, he made
no application to enter it until after the lands had been
withdrawn. It is true that he claims that he had permission from
the register of the land office to go upon the land and occupy it,
but the register had no power to give such permission. He had no
general control over the unappropriated public lands; he could vest
no rights, legal of equitable, in any individual other than such as
are authorized by statute. His authority was limited to receiving
and acting upon applications for homestead or preemption entry, and
it cannot be that any such unauthorized permission of a local land
officer can create a right not given by the statute, or defeat a
title conveyed by the government in full compliance with the law.
This is not like the cases just decided in which the local land
officer refused to receive an application which he ought to have
received; neither is it one in which such officer failed to do
anything which he ought to have done. No application was made for
an entry. The excuse tendered is that he was not possessed of
sufficient money to pay the required fees -- the father-in-law and
the son-in-law had but $13 between them, and $20 was the amount
necessary for the entry of the two homesteads -- but, unfortunate
as the defendant's situation then was, much as he may be entitled
to sympathy, it cannot be
Page 156 U. S. 548
that when he fails, even by reason of his poverty, to do that
which the law prescribes as the initiation of any rights in the
land, he is nevertheless entitled to the same protection which he
would receive had he complied with the statute. Leniently as the
conduct of a settler is always regarded by the courts, it cannot be
that such leniency will tolerate the omission by him of any of the
substantial requirements of the statute in respect to the creation
of rights in the public lands.
There was no error in the conclusions of the supreme court of
the state, and its judgment is therefore
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY was not present at the argument, and took no
part in the decision of this case.