Easley v. Kellom, 81 U.S. 279 (1871)
U.S. Supreme Court
Easley v. Kellom, 81 U.S. 14 Wall. 279 279 (1871)Easley v. Kellom
81 U.S. (14 Wall.) 279
Syllabus
1. Where the Land Department of the government, denying an unfounded preemption claim in the government lands set up by a person indebted to several persons, proceeds to sell the lands at public auction as part of the public lands, and the debtor and several of his creditors enter into an agreement that the land shall not be bid up, but, on the contrary, shall be struck off at as low a price as possible to one of the creditors, who shall divide it among such creditors as will come into an agreement to receive it in satisfaction of their debts, and the land is thus sold at an under price, creditors who have not come into the arrangement cannot set the arrangement aside. The government alone can interpose.
2. A bill of review held to have been properly entertained on the after-discovery of a lost paper, and a former decree held, on the new evidence, to have been rightly reversed.
On the 25th of June, 1857, Harrison Johnson having, as he supposed, the west half of a preemption right of 160 acres within the limits of the City of Omaha, gave a mortgage or deed of trust on it to secure the payment of his note to Easley and Willingham. Sometime afterwards, the City of Omaha filed a caveat against Johnson's claim, and on the 29th of December, 1859, the commissioner of the land office gave notice to the local register and receiver that Johnson's certificate of location had been cancelled. Thereupon the property was advertised for sale as a part of the public lands. Johnson being in debt to several other persons, including one Kellom, it was proposed between him and some of these creditors that the property should be bid off at as low a price as possible, so that the creditors might receive satisfaction for their claims and that something might be left for him.
An agreement was drawn up and signed by Johnson and several of his creditors, but Easley and Willingham and one or two others refused to come into it. They insisted on their priority of lien. The sale took place in August, 1860. In pursuance of the agreement, Johnson bid off the southern half of the 160 acres at the minimum government price in the name of his mother, and Kellom, on behalf of the creditors, bid off the northern half, each part containing forty acres of the land mortgaged. Kellom executed conveyances to the other creditors who, with himself, had signed the agreement, so as to divide between them the eighty acres purchased by him, in proportion to their claims against Johnson, and these creditors gave Johnson acquittances in full. Johnson's mother was in possession of her portion ever since the sale, he living on a part of it.
In 1866, Easley and Willingham filed their bill against Kellom, Johnson his mother, and several creditors, to foreclose their mortgage. They charged first that the cancellation of Johnson's preemption right was procured by his complicity and acquiescence, for the purpose of defrauding them out of their mortgage debt and paying the other creditors, and secondly that when the public sale took place, it was agreed between Johnson and the other creditors who participated in the purchase that Johnson was to have an interest in the purchase proportionate to the claims of those creditors who did not sign the agreement, so that he might afterwards make settlements with them. All the answers denied these charges; that of the mother alleged further that she was a bona fide purchaser of the eighty acres purchased by her; and those of the other defendants alleged that Kellom was a similar purchaser of the eighty acres purchased by him. They further insisted that the complainants' mortgage, or trust deed, being made by Johnson before he obtained a patent for the land, was void by the 12th and 13th sections of the preemption act of September 4th, 1841. *
Upon these pleadings the parties went into proofs. No evidence, however, was adduced to show that the cancellation of Johnson's preemption certificate was improperly obtained, and the case was therefore to be considered upon the hypothesis that he had no valid claim and that the land belonged to the government, and was properly sold as such in 1860.
But on the question with regard to the agreement made between Johnson and his creditors, the preponderance of the evidence seemed to establish the allegations of the bill. Neither the original agreement between Johnson and the creditors, though it had confessedly been in writing, nor any copy of it, could be found, and the parol evidence, taken after the lapse of seven years (notwithstanding the stout assertions of Kellom and the creditors associated with him to the contrary) went to show that Johnson had reserved an interest in such portion of the land as would have belonged to the creditors that failed to come into the agreement. Johnson himself testified this. The consequence was that a decree was entered for the complainants, against Kellom and those who received portions of his purchase, for one undivided half of the property in their possession covered by the mortgage. The decree did not touch the mother's half.