When the Secretary of the Interior has jurisdiction of a land
contest and grants a rehearing, he is not, nor is this Court, bound
by the facts found by his predecessor on the original hearing,
Potter v. Hall, 189 U. S. 292;
after such a rehearing and when, as in this case, new testimony is
allowed, the decision then made is the ultimate action of the
Department.
Page 212 U. S. 435
The holder of a patent obtained by error of law of, or fraud or
imposition on, the Land Department may be declared to hold the same
as trustee for another, but the fraud must have been so practiced
as to have prevented the unsuccessful party from fully exhibiting
his case, and if the case has been fully considered, the decision
of the proper officer is in the nature of a judicial determination.
Vance v. Burbank, 101 U. S. 514.
18 Okl. 160 affirmed.
Appellant and appellee were respectively plaintiff and defendant
in the courts below, and we shall so designate them.
Plaintiff brought this suit in the District Court of Kay County,
Oklahoma, to be declared the owner of the legal title to Lots 1 and
2 and the E. 1/2 of the N.W. 1/4, ยง 18, Township 26 N., R. 2 E.,
Indian Meridian, and to require a conveyance of the land to him by
defendant. A demurrer to the petition was sustained and a judgment
entered dismissing the suit, which was affirmed by the supreme
court of the territory.
The petition shows the following facts: August 9, 1893, a
portion of the territory, known as the Cherokee Outlet, was opened
for settlement. The plaintiff complied with the terms of the
proclamation of the President of the United States, and, having
served as a soldier during the War of the Rebellion for a period of
two years, and being otherwise qualified, filed in the United
States land office at Perry, Oklahoma, a soldier's declaratory
statement for the land. On the 8th of March, 1894, he duly
transmitted his declaratory statement into homestead entry No.
5588, for the same premises, moved a house upon and took up his
residence upon them, and continuously lived thereon with his family
from such time for seven years, cultivated 40 acres thereof,
"cropped the same, and grazed 40 acres in addition," and erected
improvements of the value of $450. That after such residence and
cultivation, he made application in due form to make final proof,
which offer was rejected.
On November 24, 1893, the defendant made homestead entry No.
4447 upon the land, subject to plaintiff's soldier's
Page 212 U. S. 436
declaratory statement, and on the fourth of March, 1904, filed a
contest affidavit in the land office at Perry, alleging settlement
three days prior to such declaratory statement.
The contest came on for hearing before the local land office,
and that office decided in favor of defendant. This decision was
reversed by the Commissioner of the General Land Office, and, on
appeal to the Secretary of the Interior, by that officer. Their
opinions and judgments are attached to the petition.
A petition for review being filed by defendant, a rehearing was
ordered and the matter remanded to the local land office for
further hearing upon questions of fact, but the petition for review
was denied. The opinion of the Secretary is attached to the
petition. The matter was duly heard by the local office, which
office recommended adversely to plaintiff. The decision was
affirmed by the Commissioner, and the homestead entry of plaintiff
"held for cancellation, subject to the right of appeal." An appeal
was taken to the Secretary of the Interior on July 3, 1900, and
that officer reversed the Departmental decision of June 21, 1898,
in favor of plaintiff, affirmed the ruling of the local land office
against him, and cancelled his entry.
Plaintiff filed a petition for review, which was denied, and the
case was finally closed, the entry of defendant "reinstated, and
his rights in and to said tracts were held to be both prior and
superior to those of this plaintiff."
Defendant submitted his final proofs, and, prior to the
commencement of the suit, obtained a patent conveying to him the
tract in question, and holds the legal title thereto.
The petition alleges the superiority of plaintiff's right to
defendant's right, and that, by a proper application of the law to
the facts, as proved in said cause and found by the decision of the
land office, the claim of the plaintiff
"should have been finally held prior and superior to the claim
of said defendant, and the patent conveying title to said tract
should and would have been made and delivered"
to plaintiff. The misapplication of the law, plaintiff alleges,
consisted in the different
Page 212 U. S. 437
conclusion drawn from the facts in the decision of July 3, 1900,
in which the improvements put upon the land by defendant were
declared sufficient, from that deduced in the decision of June 21,
1898, in which the improvements were decided to be insufficient to
initiate a valid right of settlement. The last opinion is quoted
from as follows:
"After a thorough examination of the testimony, the Department
is of the opinion that the acts of Coate were insufficient to hold
the land against the soldier's declaratory filing of
Greenameyer."
"If it should be conceded that everything claimed to have been
done by Coate in the way of settlement were true, his said acts
would not, in the judgment of this Department, constitute him a
bona fide settler prior to the 19th day of September,
1893, when the defendant made his declaratory statement of
record."
And it is alleged that defendant --
"Coate reached the land between one and two o'clock on the
afternoon of the opening, and remained on or adjacent to the claim
until the twentieth -- four days. All that he did in these four
days was to stick his flag and dig a hole which he calls a starting
of a well, twp feet deep and two and one-half or three feet across.
He then left and went back to his home in Kansas, 150 miles
distant. The digging of this hole would not require more than an
hour's labor by one man. This was all he did between the 16th and
20th, while he remained on or near this claim, to his return to
Kansas; the rest of his time he spent 'watching people off' of the
claim and in going to Newkirk on the 19th to 'file by mail.' He did
not return to the claim after leaving, on the 20th of September,
until the 22d of October, and his return at that time was due to
the fact that he received a letter from one White, stating a
soldier had filed on the land."
It is alleged that the two decisions were made upon "precisely
the same state of facts," that the decision of June 21, 1898, and
October 5, 1898, correctly applied the law, and that of July 3,
1900, reversing the prior decisions, misapplied the law.
Page 212 U. S. 438
For a second cause of action, plaintiff alleged the foregoing
facts, and further alleged that fraud and deceit were practiced
upon the land office by defendant, which caused the defeat or
plaintiff in the litigation, and that, by cunning and deceit,
defendant so concealed his fraudulent practices from plaintiff that
the latter was unable to procure evidence to prove the fraud in the
contest suit. That about the first of December, 1893, the plaintiff
learned that defendant was the owner of and in possession of 160
acres of land in Morris County, Kansas; that he obtained an
abstract of the "registry records" of Morris County, which showed
that defendant was owner of 180 acres of land, and July 9, 1894, he
further learned that, in January of that year, defendant had
fraudulently placed on record a deed for the land to his
son-in-law, to enable defendant to make proof before the Land
Department, and that plaintiff was unable to obtain proof thereof
in time to use in said contest. That the nature of defendant's
fraud was such that he could and did conceal it from plaintiff and
the Land Department; that the deed, while it was executed upon the
27th of January, 1894, was antedated so as to appear to have been
made August 30, 1893, and that, by these fraudulent means,
defendant caused it to appear that he had sold and conveyed the
land on the 30th of August, 1893, whereas he continued to own the
same until January, 1894, and was therefore disqualified from
taking and holding any interest in the land involved in the action.
And it is alleged that defendant introduced in evidence in the
contest cause a certified copy or statement from the records of
Morris County, in order to deceive the Land Department and defraud
plaintiff, and to establish that defendant had the necessary
qualifications to make entry and settlement upon the land.
It is alleged that plaintiff has but recently discovered the
"evidence to prove the foregoing charge of fraud, concealment, and
imposition, and is now able to prove the facts as to both as set
forth." Other facts will appear in the opinion.
Page 212 U. S. 441
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA, after stating the case as above, delivered
the opinion of the Court.
The case presents apparently contradictory decisions between two
Secretaries of the Interior, and, plaintiff contends, upon the same
set of facts. But this contention is not sustained by the record.
The first decision of the local office was adverse to the
plaintiff, but the decision was reversed by the Interior
Department, the Commissioner and the Secretary of the Interior
taking a different view of the facts from that taken by the local
land office. But a rehearing was granted, and while, in the opinion
granting it, the Secretary repeated his view of the facts, further
testimony was allowed to be introduced. Further testimony was
introduced, and the local office found that, while it was
conflicting,
"the preponderance of it showed: first, That the contestant
settled on the land in controversy on the afternoon of
September
Page 212 U. S. 442
16, 1893; that he put up a flag and commenced a well; that he
remained thereon until the 20th of September, 1893; that he
returned in October, 1893, and built a small house, put up a few
trees, and had some breaking done; that he again went to Kansas in
November, 1893, and remained there until February, 1894, when he
again returned to the land in controversy and built a large and
better house; that he has resided [upon], improved, and cultivated
part of the said land from that time to the present; that he has
substantially complied with all the requirements of the homestead
law."
"Second. We find that his absence from the land from November,
1893, to February, 1894, was excusable because of his financial and
physical condition."
"
* * * *"
"Fourth. We find that there was no fraud in conveying the land
formerly owned by the contestant to his son-in-law some months
before the opening of the country to settlement."
"Fifth. That the settlement rights of the contestant were
commenced before the defendant filed his soldier's declaratory
statement, and that the said rights so acquired have been followed
up as required by law."
The office recommended that the entry of the defendant "be
permitted to stand." The finding and decision were successively
affirmed by the Commissioner of the General Land Office and the
Secretary of the Interior, in an elaborate opinion, in which the
testimony was quoted and commented upon. And to these decisions we
must look as the ultimate action of the Department. It is of no
legal consequence that different views were expressed in other
decisions. It is not contended that Secretary Hitchcock, when he
rendered the last decision, did not have complete jurisdiction of
the case. It seems to be contended that he was bound by the facts
found by his predecessor, Mr. Bliss, and that this Court is
likewise so bound. The contention is untenable.
Potter v.
Hall, 189 U. S. 292. In
that case, it was said:
"The fact that the final conclusion as to the ultimate facts
Page 212 U. S. 443
reached by the Department differed from the conception of such
ultimate facts entertained by the Department in previous stages of
the controversy affords no ground for disregarding the conclusion
of ultimate fact finally reached, which was binding between the
parties."
But besides, as we have seen, additional testimony was taken. It
was upon that testimony, as well as upon that which was before
Secretary Bliss, that the decision of Secretary Hitchcock was
based. It is true the petition alleges that such decision was made
upon "precisely the same state of facts" as that of Secretary
Bliss, but the allegation is contradicted by the exhibits which are
attached to the petition and expressly made part thereof.
The contentions upon which plaintiff bases his second cause of
action are equally without merit. The issue of fraud which
plaintiff made upon the ownership of land in Kansas and the
conveyance thereof to his son-in-law was passed on by the Land
Department and decided adversely to plaintiff. There was evidence
other than copies of the record. The integrity of the deed by the
defendant to his son-in-law was challenged. The evidence is not
recited in the opinion of the local land office. It is recited in
the opinion of Secretary Hitchcock, and it tended to show that the
deed was a consummation of transactions between defendant and his
son-in-law which established its validity, and which were
inconsistent with the supposition of its having been antedated.
However, the issue was met and decided upon testimony submitted,
and no fact is alleged which supports the statement that plaintiff
was prevented from exhibiting his whole case. He had certainly
plenty of time for preparation. The land was opened to settlement
September 3, 1893. On the nineteenth of that month, plaintiff filed
his soldier's declaratory statement upon the land. Defendant made
his homestead entry November 24, 1893, and on the twenty-eighth of
March, 1894, instituted a contest against plaintiff, which was not
heard until October 18, 1895. A decision was rendered on such
contest October 24, 1895.
Page 212 U. S. 444
The progress of the case was somewhat slow in the Interior
Department, the rehearing applied for by defendant being granted
February, 1899, five years after the institution of the contest. It
thus appears that plaintiff had from the twenty-eighth of March,
1894, until October 18, 1895, to prepare for the first hearing upon
the contest, and had over five years to the final hearing, in 1899.
And he alleges that he had learned as early as January, 1894, that
the deed of defendant to his son-in-law was fraudulent. It is true
he attempted to show diligence in his investigations, but all he
did was to visit Morris County in 1894, and to send an attorney
there in 1899, who discovered nothing. And he finally alleges that,
on or about the first of March, 1901, which was after the
proceedings in the Land Department had closed, he learned "of the
existence of proof sufficient to substantiate the allegations of
fraud and imposition on the defendant's part." From whom or how he
learned it or what defendant did to keep it from him is not
alleged. These allegations only show that the plaintiff has further
evidence upon one of the issues made before the Land Department,
which he had abundance of time and opportunity to discover and
present, and no fact is alleged that anything was done to prevent
him from discovering or presenting it, except the general
allegation that cunning and deceit were practiced upon him. Of what
they consisted he does not allege, or why they endured and were
successful for over five years and until the case was closed in the
Land Department.
The case therefore falls within the doctrine of
Vance v.
Burbank, 101 U. S. 519;
De Cambra v. Rogers, 189 U. S. 119;
Estes v. Timmons, 199 U. S. 391;
United States v. Throckmorton, 98 U.
S. 65;
Friese v. Hummel, 26 Or. 152. In
Vance v. Burbank, supra, this Court said, expressing the
principle that is to be applied in cases like that at bar:
"It has also been settled that the fraud in respect to which
relief will be granted in this class of cases must be such as has
been practiced on the unsuccessful party, and prevented him from
exhibiting his case fully to the Department, so that it may
Page 212 U. S. 445
properly be said there has never been a decision in a real
contest about the subject matter of inquiry. False testimony or
forged documents even are not enough, if the disputed matter has
actually been presented to or considered by the appropriate
tribunal.
United States v. Throckmorton, 98 U. S. 61;
Marquez v. Frisbie, 101 U. S. 473. The decision of
the proper officers of the Department is in the nature of a
judicial determination of the matter in dispute."
The cases adduced by plaintiff are consistent with that
principle. They only declare the general doctrine that the holder
of a patent may be declared to hold the same as trustee for another
when he has procured it by an error of law committed by the Land
Department, the facts being undisputed, or by fraud or imposition
upon that Department. Of the character of the fraud and in what way
or under what circumstances exerted in order to be a ground of
relief, the cases we have cited are examples.
Decree affirmed.