Combs v. Jelly
Combs v. Jelly
Opinion of the Court
It appears in this case that on the 24th of March, 1862, the plaintiff commenced an action against Elijah Shepherdson and M. D. Shepherdson to recover a certain sum of money, and on that day caused an attachment to be issued and levied upon the premises in controversy. Judgment was afterwards entered, execution was issued, the premises were sold and conveyed by the Sheriff to the plaintiff, the deed being executed September 12, 1863. In 1858 Elijah Shepherdson and M. D. Shepherdson were in possession of the premises, and so remained up to September, 1861, when M. D. Shepherdson left the premises. On the 25th of February, 1862, Elijah Shepherdson sold and conveyed the premises to the defendant. The conveyance purports to be executed by E. and M. D. Shepherdson, but was in fact executed only by Elijah Shepherdson. On the 8th of December, 1863, the defendant made an application to the State Locating Agent to locate the premises as a portion of the lands to which the State was entitled under the grant of seventy-two sections of land by Congress to the State for a State Seminary. Such proceedings were thereupon had that the location was made, and was approved by the proper officers on the part of the State and by the Register and Receiver of the United States Land Office at Marysville, and on the 5th of October, 1863, the Register of the State Land Office issued to the defendant a certificate of purchase.
The plaintiff sued in ejectment to recover the possession of the premises. The Court below found for the plaintiff as to the undivided half of the premises. The defendant appeals from the judgment and from the order denying his motion for a new trial.
The Court found, among other things, that the Shepherd-sons were tenants in common of the premises; that by the deed from Elijah Shepherdson to the defendant he became a tenant in common with M. D. Shepherdson, and that by the execution of the Sheriff’s deed the plaintiff became the owner
The defendant, in his motion for a new trial, specifies several particulars in which the evidence is insufficient, as he alleges, to justify the findings; but as we are not apprised of the positions taken by the plaintiff, and have not the assistance of a brief or points and authorities in his behalf, we shall confine our attention to one point, and that is, whether the defendant’s certificate of purchase was fraudulent, and therefore void.
Ho complaint seems to have been made as to the regularity ' of any of the proceedings, and there is no room for doubt that the land was public land of the United States, subject to be selected on behalf of the State, in part satisfaction of the grant of Congress. We understand the finding to mean that the defendant acquired no right or title in or to any portion of the premises by means of the certificates of location and purchase, but that the whole proceeding was void in toto because of the fraud of the defendant. This fraud consists of the single circumstance that the information upon which the officers of the State acted, which was derived from the affi
Admitting, for the purposes of the argument, that at the time of the application for the location of the land, M. D. Shepherdson was a tenant in common with the defendant, of the possession of the premises as a parcel of public lands; that such tenancy in common constituted a “ valid claim existing-to said land adverse to his (the defendant’s) own,” within section four of the Act of 1863 (Statutes 1863, p. 593); and that the one half of the improvements on the land were the property of M. D. Shepherdson; the question recurs, did the mistake in these respects of the defendant—his unintentional misrepresentations—his constructive fraud in making the statements in his affidavit, render the certificate of purchase void, so that the sale might be attacked collaterally? It appears very plainly that it did not. The proceeding amounted to a contract between the State and the purchaser, the State standing in the position of a private proprietor, but simply conducting the negotiations and expressing her assent to the contract in a mode differing from that employed by a private person; and such contract will not be held void, unless, under similar circumstances, a contract between two private persons would be so held. It is evident that a mistake, an unintentional misrepresentation, or any fraud falling short of positive or actual fraud, will not avoid a contract ab initia. If not absolutely void, it may not be attacked collaterally. Those may be proper grounds upon which an action may be brought to set aside the contract and cancel the certificate; and perhaps one who shows a better right than that held by the
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for-a new trial.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- CHARLES COMBS v. ANDREW JELLY
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