1. Where, in ejectment, it appeared that a location of a
military bounty land warrant, duly made by A. on the demanded
premises, the same being a part of the surveyed public land of the
United States, had not been vacated or set aside,
held
that a subsequent entry of them by B. was without authority of law,
and that a patent issued to him therefor was void.
2. A party who has complied with all the terms and conditions
which entitle him to a patent for a particular tract of public land
acquires a vested interest therein, and is to be regarded as the
equitable owner thereof. While his entry or location remains in
full force and effect, his rights thereunder will not be defeated
by the issue of a patent to another party for the same tract.
3.
Branson v.
Wirth, 17 Wall. 32, commented on and approved.
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case was before us at the December Term, 1872.
Branson v.
Wirth, 17 Wall. 32. It comes before us now on a
different state of facts, the original patent to Giles Egerton,
which was not produced on the former trial, being produced on the
trial which has taken place since our decision, and purports to be
for the southeast quarter of section 18, instead of the northeast
quarter in controversy. The question is whether this fact changes
the rights of the parties. A statement of the case, however, is
necessary, U.S. in order to show the precise questions which are
now raised by the record.
The action is ejectment, brought by the plaintiff in error to
recover a quarter section of land in Fulton County, Illinois --
namely the northeast quarter of section 18, township 4 north, range
2 east, from the fourth principal meridian. On the trial, the
plaintiff produced a regular patent for the lot, issued by the
United States to one Edward F. Leonard, dated Feb. 20, 1868, and a
conveyance from Leonard to himself.
The defendants then offered in evidence a duly exemplified copy
of a military land warrant, No. 13,598, bearing date Dec.
Page 98 U. S. 119
3, 1817, issued to one Giles Egerton, a sergeant in the 26th
regiment United States infantry, and purporting to be in pursuance
of the second section of the Act of May 6, 1812, and certifying
that said Egerton was entitled to one hundred and sixty acres of
land, to be located agreeably to said act on any unlocated parts of
the six millions of acres appropriated for that purpose -- it being
conceded that the lot in question is part of said military
reservation. They then proved by an exemplified record of the
General Land Office at Washington, that the aforesaid land warrant
was located according to law on the tenth day of January, 1818, by
Giles Egerton, on the lot in question. The defendants then gave in
evidence an exemplified copy from the records of the land office of
a patent from the United States to Giles Egerton, dated Jan. 10,
1818, reciting that he had deposited the said land warrant, No.
13,598, in the land office, and granting to him the said lot. On
the margin of this certified copy of the patent was written a
memorandum, without date, as follows:
"This patent was issued for the S.E. 1/4 instead of the N.E. 1/4
as recorded; sent a certificate of that fact to E. B. Clemson, at
Lebanon, Ill's, see his letter of 19th May, 1826."
The plaintiff insisted that this memorandum should be read with
the record of the patent. In accordance with our decision in the
former case, the court refused to allow it to be read. The
defendants then offered in evidence a deed from Giles Egerton to
Thomas Hart, dated July 29, 1819, for the southeast quarter of
section 18, reciting that the same was granted to said Giles in
consideration of his military services, as would appear by a patent
dated Jan. 10, 1818. The defendants then gave in evidence an
exemplified copy of a patent from the United States to one James
Durney for the said southeast quarter of section 18, dated Jan. 7,
1818 (three days prior to the date of Egerton's patent), referring
to land warrant No. 5144 as the basis of the grant. The defendants
then gave in evidence a tax title for the lot in question, being a
deed from the Sheriff of Fulton County, Illinois, to one Timothy
Gridley, dated Nov. 14, 1843, under a judgment of June Term, 1840,
for the taxes for the year 1839; and also several mesne conveyances
from the said
Page 98 U. S. 120
Gridley to the defendants in February, 1849; and they proved
that they and their grantors had occupied, cultivated, and had full
and undisturbed possession of the land ever since November, 1843,
paying the taxes thereon. The plaintiff objected to the reception
of this evidence relating to the tax title and possession.
In rebuttal of this defense the plaintiff gave in evidence a
deed for the southeast quarter of section 18 from Thomas Hart to
Samuel F. Hunt, dated May 12, 1824; also a deed from Hunt to one
Eli B. Clemson, dated April 7, 1825; and from Clemson to one John
Shaw, dated Oct. 20, 1829; also an Act of Congress approved March
3, 1827, entitled "An Act for the relief of the legal
representatives of Giles Egerton," by which it was enacted that the
legal representatives of Giles Egerton, late a sergeant, &c.,
be authorized to enter with the register of the proper land office,
any unappropriated quarter section of land in the tract reserved,
&c., in lieu of the quarter patented to said Giles on the 10th
of January, 1818, which had been previously patented to James
Durney. The plaintiff further proved that John Shaw, assignee of
Giles Egerton, on the 6th of April, 1838, entered another quarter
section in pursuance of this act. The plaintiff then gave in
evidence the original patent, dated Jan. 10, 1818, given to Giles
Egerton for the southeast quarter of section 18, purporting to be
based on the warrant in his favor, numbered 13,598. All this
rebutting evidence of the plaintiff was objected to by the
defendants, but was received by the court.
Upon this evidence, each party asked the court for instructions,
and the instructions given were 1st that the defendants had proved
that the land in controversy was granted by the United States to
Giles Egerton on the 10th of January, 1818, and that Egerton had
conveyed it to Thomas Hart, which constituted an outstanding title
that defeated the plaintiff's right of recovery; 2d, that
defendants had shown that on the 10th of January, 1818, the land
warrant of Giles Egerton was duly located on and upon the land in
controversy, which location was not shown to be vacated or set
aside, and therefore said land was not subject to entry by or grant
to Leonard in 1868, and a verdict was thereupon given for the
defendants.
Page 98 U. S. 121
To these instructions the plaintiff excepted; and whether they
were correct is the question now before the court.
Each of these instructions was based upon undisputed facts, and
if either was correct in point of law, the defendants had a
complete defense, and the judgment must be affirmed.
We are satisfied that the second instruction, at least,
correctly expressed the law of the case, and renders the production
of the original patent to Egerton entirely immaterial. The land in
question was shown to have been located in his favor in due form,
under a regular military land warrant, and no attempt was made to
show that this location was ever vacated or set aside. Whilst it
was in force, no other could lawfully be made on the same land. A
subsequent location, though followed by a patent, would be void.
Everything was done which was required to be done to entitle
Egerton to a patent for the land. Being for military bounty, no
price was payable therefor. The land became segregated from the
public domain, and subject to private ownership, and all the
incidents and liabilities thereof.
The rule is well settled, by a long course of decisions, that
when public lands have been surveyed and placed in the market, or
otherwise opened to private acquisition, a person who complies with
all the requisites necessary to entitle him to a patent in a
particular lot or tract is to be regarded as the equitable owner
thereof, and the land is no longer open to location. The public
faith has become pledged to him, and any subsequent grant of the
same land to another party is void, unless the first location or
entry be vacated and set aside.
This was laid down as a principle in the case of
Lytle v.
Arkansas, 9 How. 314, and has ever since been
adhered to.
See Stark v.
Starrs, 6 Wall. 402. Subsequent cases which have
seemed to be in conflict with these have been distinguished from
them by the fact that something remained to be done by the claimant
to entitle him to a patent, such as the payment of the price, the
payment of the fees of surveying, or the like. The proper
distinctions on the subject are so fully stated in the case of
Stark v. Starrs, supra, 76 U. S.
Whitney, 9 Wall. 187,
The Yosemite Valley
Case, 15 Wall. 77,
Railway
Company v. McShane, 22 Wall. 444, and
Shepley v.
Page 98 U. S. 122
Cowan, 91 U. S. 330, that
it would be supererogation to go over the subject again.
But it is said that Giles Egerton and his grantees and all other
persons are estopped from any claim under his location of the
northeast quarter of section 18, by his accepting a patent for the
southeast quarter, and by the further fact that his grantee,
finding the southeast quarter already granted to another party
(namely, to James Durney), applied to Congress for leave to make,
and actually made, another location in lieu thereof.
This question of estoppel was fully considered by us when the
case was formerly here; and the principles which were then laid
down are equally decisive of the case as it now stands. The
original patent to Egerton had not then been exhibited in evidence,
it is true; but we do not see that the case is materially altered
by its production.
The difficulty of applying the doctrine of estoppel arises from
the fact that there is no privity between the defendants and the
parties who procured the act of Congress referred to. The
defendants rely, and have a right to rely, on the fact that the lot
in question was located in due form of law, and that it thereby
became exempt from further location until the first location should
be set aside. The fact that a clerical error was made in the patent
issued to Egerton; that his grantees, instead of claiming the
northeast quarter (as they might have done), claimed the southeast
quarter, which had been previously granted to another person; and
that they solicited the privilege of locating another lot in lieu
thereof -- are all matters with which the defendants have nothing
to do. Congress might have given to those parties a dozen lots
without affecting the defendants, unless the latter were in some
way bound by their acts. We are unable to see how they were or
should be bound thereby. They do not claim under those parties, and
have no privity with them whatever.
As, however, the question of estoppel was fully discussed in the
previous judgment, it is unnecessary to enlarge upon the
subject.
Judgment affirmed.