Generally a patent is necessary for transfer of the legal title
to public lands.
It is well settled that an action of ejectment cannot be
maintained in the courts of the United States on a merely equitable
title, and there is nothing in this case to exempt it from the rule
that a patent is necessary to convey legal title.
The verdict of a jury determines questions of fact at issue. and
this Court cannot review such determination, or examine the
testimony further than to see that there was sufficient to justify
the conclusions reached.
If the trial court gives the law fully and accurately, covering
all the ground necessary to advise the jury of the rights of the
parties, it is not necessary to instruct them in the very language
of counsel.
When a tract of land is held as a separate and distinct tract,
with boundaries designated so that they may be known, the
possession by the owner or his tenants of a part operates as a
possession of all; but if the tract is cut up into distinct lots,
marked and treated as distinct tracts, the claimant to all must
show possession of all.
On April 12, 1889, plaintiff in error commenced an action of
ejectment in the District Court of Shoshone County, Territory of
Idaho, to recover of defendants the possession of a portion of the
north half of block 22 in the Town of Wallace in said county and
territory, and damages for the detention thereof. After answers by
the several defendants (Idaho having been admitted into the Union
as a state), the case was, on application of the plaintiff,
transferred to the Circuit Court of the United States for the
District of Idaho. The petition for the transfer alleged two
grounds: one diverse citizenship and the other the existence of
federal questions, to-wit, the construction of the act of Congress,
of date July 17, 1854,
Page 166 U. S. 494
c. 83, authorizing the issue and location of Sioux half-breed
scrip, 10 Stat. 304, the construction of sections 2387 to 2389,
Revised Statutes, relating to town sites, and the question whether
section 4556, Idaho Revised Statutes, 1887, is or is not
inconsistent with the laws of Congress governing the possession and
disposition of the public lands. A trial was had before a jury,
commencing on December 4, 1891, which resulted in a verdict for the
defendants. Upon this verdict judgment was entered in their favor,
which judgment was affirmed by the Court of Appeals. 15 U.S.App.
129. Thereupon the case was brought here on error.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
The first question arises on the plaintiff's claim of a legal
title by virtue of a location of Sioux half-breed scrip. It appears
that under the act of Congress, a certificate, No. 430, Letter C,
for 80 acres, was issued to Walter Bourke. This certificate, which
was marked "Not transferable or assignable," was dated November 24,
1856. On June 5, 1886, it was presented by W. R. Wallace at the
local land office at Coeur d'Alene, accompanied by an irrevocable
power of attorney to him executed by Walter Bourke and his wife on
February 27, 1883, and was located upon 80 acres within which was
the property in dispute. When the location papers were transmitted
to the General Land Office at Washington, it was discovered that
Bourke had, on October 26, 1870, applied to the department for a
duplicate certificate on a representation that the original had
been lost or destroyed; that such application had been sustained
and a duplicate certificate issued; that, on March 9, 1880, he had
located such duplicate on land in Dakota and received a patent
therefor. Upon the disclosure
Page 166 U. S. 495
of these facts, the Commissioner of the General Land Office
cancelled this location in Idaho.
Now the contention of plaintiff is that the location of this
scrip operated to transfer the legal title to Bourke by deed, from
whom the plaintiff claimed, that no patent was necessary, and that
whatever of wrong Bourke may have committed, the legal title was in
him, and could only be divested by a suit in equity brought by the
United States. This scrip is of the same character as that which
was before this Court in
Felix v. Patrick, 145 U.
S. 317. While it is true that the act of 1851 does not
in terms provide for the issue of a patent, and simply authorizes
the location of the scrip upon any public lands, yet the general
rule is that a patent is necessary for the transfer of the legal
title to public lands. In
Bagnell v.
Broderick, 13 Pet. 436,
38 U. S. 450,
it was said:
"Congress has the sole power to declare the dignity and effect
of titles emanating from the United States, and the whole
legislation of the federal government in reference to the public
lands declares the patent the superior and conclusive evidence of
legal title. Until it issues, the fee is in the government. By the
patent, it passes to the grantee, and he is entitled to recover the
possession in ejectment."
See also Wilcox v.
Jackson, 13 Pet. 498,
38 U. S. 516;
Langdon v. Sherwood, 124 U. S. 74,
124 U. S. 83, in
which it was said:
"It has been repeatedly decided by this Court that such
certificates do not convey the legal title of the land to the
holder of the certificate, but that they only evidence an equitable
title, which may afterwards be perfected by the issue of a patent,
and that in the courts of the United States, such certificates are
not sufficient to authorize a recovery in an action of
ejectment."
Hussman v. Durham, 165 U. S. 144.
It is true there are exceptions to this rule. One is specially
provided by statute, Rev.Stat. 2449, which makes a certification to
a state equivalent to a patent as a conveyance of title. Again, as
said in
Wilcox v. Jackson, supra, "one class of cases to
be excepted is where an act of Congress grants land, as is
sometimes done in words of present grant." This
Page 166 U. S. 496
exception was recognized in
Wisconsin Central Railroad v.
Price County, 133 U. S. 496;
St. Paul & Pacific Railroad v. Northern Pacific
Railroad, 139 U. S. 1;
Deseret Salt Company v. Tarpey, 142 U.
S. 241.
It is well settled that an action of ejectment cannot be
maintained in the courts of the United States on a merely equitable
title.
See, in addition to
Langdon v. Sherwood, supra,
Johnson v. Christian, 128 U. S. 374,
128 U. S. 382,
and cases cited.
With reference to the power of the Commissioner of the General
Land Office to cancel an erroneous certificate of location issued
by local land officers,
see Cornelius v. Kessel,
128 U. S. 456;
Knight v. Association, 142 U. S. 161,
142 U. S. 177;
Orchard v. Alexander, 157 U. S. 372. It
is, however, unnecessary to enter into any inquiry as to the power
of the Land Department to issue duplicate in lieu of original scrip
alleged to have been lost or destroyed, or even as to the
regularity of the proceedings by which this certificate of location
was cancelled. It is enough that there is nothing to exempt this
case from the ordinary rule that a patent is necessary to convey
the legal title; that the certificate of location created, at best,
but an equitable title, and that such a title is not sufficient to
sustain an action of ejectment in the federal courts.
We pass, therefore, to the other question, which arises on the
contention of the plaintiff that he was in peaceable possession,
holding under a claim or title, when the defendants forcibly
dispossessed him, and that such prior possession under claim of
title is sufficient to sustain this action against mere intruders.
To an understanding of this question some further facts must be
stated. In May, 1886, and before the certificate of location, one
Trask, a surveyor, surveyed this tract of 80 acres, and laid it off
into lots and blocks. This was done at the instance of Wallace, who
held the scrip and power of attorney from Bourke and who was
proposing to establish the town or Wallace. On this plat, block 22
was laid off into 24 lots, 12 facing north and 12 south, with an
alley between them. On July 31, 1886, Bourke, by his attorney,
Page 166 U. S. 497
Wallace, conveyed this block to plaintiff, the description in
the deed being
"block 22 (twenty-two) in said Town of Wallace, consisting of
twenty-four town lots, each of 25 x 100 ft., and bounded on the
north by Lockey St., on the south by Bank St. and on the west by
Sixth St., on the east by Seventh St., the title of said land
having been vested in the party of the first part by location of
half-breed Sioux scrip issued to the said Walter Bourke under an
act of Congress of July 17th, A.D. 1854, in exchange for lands held
by said party of the first part at Lake Pepin, Minnesota, and now
located and duly recorded in the U.S. land office with field notes
of survey as provided by said act of Congress at Coeur d'Alene
City, Idaho Territory."
At the time of the certificate of location and of the deed, the
80-acre tract was covered with a dense growth of timber, and
plaintiff, who put up a sawmill nearby, proceeded, under contract
with Wallace, to cut down the trees and convert them into lumber at
his mill. In this way, block 22 was substantially cleared of
standing timber. Prior to February 19, 1889, plaintiff had built
two houses on the north half of the block. These houses were on
lots in controversy in this action. There was no fencing around the
block or any part of it. Some board sidewalk had been placed by
plaintiff in front of some of the lots and on one side of the
block, but it was claimed by defendants that this was done in order
to accommodate the travel passing between the depot and a hotel
belonging to the plaintiff some little distance from the lots in
controversy. There was a conflict in the testimony as to the
condition of the block other than the lots upon which the houses
were built, the defendants' testimony tending to show that it was
covered over with stumps, fallen timber, and brush. In May, 1888,
proceedings were taken before the county commissioners of Shoshone
County for the incorporation of the Town of Wallace. On February
19, 1889, there was a general taking possession of vacant lots,
done apparently with a view to the acquiring of title under the
townsite acts of Congress, and among other lots, these in
controversy were taken possession of and fenced by the several
defendants. There was
Page 166 U. S. 498
other testimony bearing upon the question of the alleged
possession by plaintiff, but enough has been stated to outline the
nature of the dispute between the parties. Of course, the verdict
of the jury determines the questions of fact adversely to the
plaintiff, and it is not the province of this Court to review such
determination or to examine the testimony further than to see that
there was sufficient to justify the conclusions reached by the
jury.
We pass, therefore, to consider the charge of the court and the
instructions asked and refused. The plaintiff insists that he
entered into possession by virtue of the deed of July 31, 1886;
that his actual possession of two lots by virtue of the erection of
houses thereon must be taken as constructive possession of the
entire block, there being at the time no pretense of any adverse
possession, and that therefore he was entitled to a peremptory
instruction directing a verdict in his favor. He cites, in support
of the extent of his possession,
Clark v.
Courtney, 5 Pet. 319,
30 U. S. 354,
in which this Court said:
"Where a person enters into land under a deed or title, his
possession is construed to be coextensive with his deed or title;
and, although the deed or title may turn out to be defective or
void, yet the true owner will be deemed disseised to the extent of
the boundaries of such deed or title."
The Court declined to give such peremptory instruction, but
charged as follows:
"It is the law that where a party holds a tract of land as a
separate and distinct tract, and as one tract, under a claim of
title, as the boundaries of the tract are so designated, described,
and marked that they may be known, his possession, either by
himself or tenants, of a part of the tract operates as possession
of all."
"If, in this case, you find that this half block was held by
plaintiff as one tract or parcel of land, and that it was so marked
out and designated in any way that defendants could know its
location, and plaintiff had possession of any part of it, such
possession extended to and gave him possession of the entire tract;
but if, on the contrary, it was cut up into separate and distinct
lots, and so marked upon the ground, and was held
Page 166 U. S. 499
and treated as distinct tracts, then be must show the possession
of all thereof."
"
* * * *"
"11th. The next question is what are the acts of ownership and
possession to which your attention must be directed? As acts of
ownership and possession, the plaintiff claims he entered upon the
premises in good faith, in pursuance of his deed; that he thereupon
proceeded to clear the land of its timber, and to prepare it for
occupation; that he put sidewalks along the sides of a portion of
it; that he put them there as the owner of the ground, for its
convenient use, and to improve and enhance its value; that, as such
owner and claimant, he caused water to be conducted to to some part
of the premises; that he paid taxes on the premises, and that he
has always, since purchasing the ground, claimed to own it, and has
openly and publicly exercised control over it."
"If these assertions of plaintiff are true, and that these acts
were done by him or by his agents, you are instructed that they
constituted in him such a possessory title to the premises in
dispute as the government will protect, and as against any other
person claiming by a similar or subsequent possessory title."
"12th. On the contrary, the defendants claim that the
plaintiff's entry on the land was not in good faith to hold it;
that his object was to cut therefrom for milling purposes the
timber thereon; that he did not clear the land; that the sidewalks
were not constructed for the benefit of the property, or because
plaintiff owned it, but to benefit and add to the convenient use of
other property he owned and business he was operating in that
vicinity; that the water he had conducted there was not to benefit
the premises, but was a part of the town system or waterworks, and
that the plaintiff had, through himself or his agents, ceased to
exercise control over the property, and that, on the 19th day of
February, 1889, it was vacant, unoccupied lands of the United
States, and that on such day they peaceably entered the
premises."
"If you find the claim of the defendants to be true, then their
entry and possession was lawful. "
Page 166 U. S. 500
It is not necessary for a court to give instructions in the very
language of counsel. It is enough if it gives the law fully and
accurately, and we think this charge not only stated the law
accurately, but also covered all the ground that was necessary in
order to fully advise the jury of the rights of the plaintiff.
While his deed was of block 22, it describes the block as composed
of 24 lots, and the plat upon which the deed was based shows that
there was an alley running through the block, and separating the 12
lots on the north from the 12 lots on the south. It was therefore
not a single tract. Further, plaintiff, in his complaint, thus
described the property for which he sued:
"Said half block, being 300 feet long in an east and west, and
100 feet wide in a north and south direction (except two separate
lots, pieces, or parcels of land described on the plat of said town
as lots twelve (12) and twenty (20) in said block twenty-two (22),
each of said lots being 25 feet wide and 100 feet long)."
In respect to which the court of appeals, in its opinion, well
said:
"It may be observed that plaintiff alleged that the lots which
he claims to have been in possession of tenants were 'two separate
lots, pieces, and parcels of land' from the land sued for. Can
their possession therefore be the possession of land from which
they were 'separate'?"
We do not think it could have been properly held as matter of
law that the plaintiff was in constructive possession of this
entire half block, and the rule of law in respect to such
constructive possession was in the charge we have quoted correctly
stated. In this respect, it may not be inappropriate to notice two
sections of the territorial statutes -- 4040 and 4556 Rev.Stat.
Idaho 1887 -- the first of which, referring to property held for
five years under a claim of title founded upon a written
instrument, declares that the property so included in such
instrument is deemed to have been adversely held, "except that,
when it consists of a tract divided into lots, the possession of
one lot is not deemed a possession of any other lot of the same
tract," and the second provides that in an
Page 166 U. S. 501
action for the possession of "a lot or parcel of land, situated
in any city, town or village on the public lands," the plaintiff is
required to prove and actual enclosure of the whole lot, or the
erection of a dwelling house or other substantial building on some
part thereof, and adds that
"proof of such building, with or without enclosure, is
sufficient to hold such lot or parcel to the bounds thereof, as
indicated by the plat of such city, town or village, if there be
one, and if there be no such plat, then to hold the same, with its
full width and extent from and including such building to the
nearest adjacent street, where the intervening space has not been
previously claimed by adverse possession."
As to the circumstances to be considered in determining the
question of possession other than the instrument under which the
title is claimed, we think the court, in paragraphs 11 and 12,
heretofore quoted, stated the law in such a way as to give the
plaintiff no ground of objection, and as, upon these instructions,
the jury found the facts adversely to the plaintiff, we must accept
that finding as conclusive. We see no error in the record, and the
judgment of the court of appeals is
Affirmed.