Heerman v. Rolfe
Heerman v. Rolfe
Opinion of the Court
This is the statutory action to determine adverse claims to real property described as the east one-half of the southwest one-quarter of section 15, township 153, range 67. The complaint is in the usual form alleging title in plaintiff, and that the defendants claim some estate and interest therein adverse to the plaintiff’s title, and prays
Further answering-, defendant alleges that he has for more than three years last past been in the actual, open, notorious, and exclusive possession of said premises to the knowledge of plaintiff, and that plaintiff has never been in the possession thereof, nor prior to the commencement of this action had he ever claimed the same in any manner, nor attempted to assert or acquire possession or control thereof. Defendant also alleges that he and his grantors have paid all the taxes which have ever been paid upon the said premises, and that plaintiff has never paid or offered to pay any portion thereof, nor has he tendered or offered to reimburse defendant for such taxes thus paid by plaintiff. Defendant also alleges that he paid such taxes in good faith and under color of title to the premises in controversy.
The cause was tried in the court below in July, 1904, and judgment was ordered in plaintiff’s favor as prayed for in the complaint on December 28, 1911, and judgment entered thereon in January, 1912, from which defendant appeals and demands a trial de novo in this court.
Quite a large amount of testimony was introduced at the trial, but there is no very material conflict therein. Both parties claim to have derived title from a common source, namely, through the said Demeree as heretofore stated, and the chief controversy between the parties involves questions of law.
Before considering the legal points raised, we deem it advisable to make a brief statement of the facts as disclosed hy the evidence.
John V. Demeree was a Sioux Half-breed, and the government had issued to him the scrip aforesaid in exchange for lands of the Sioux Half-breed Reserve at Lake Peppin, Minnesota, under act of Congress of July 11, 1854, lO.Stat. at L. page 304, chap. 83, and he and his wife duly executed and delivered to one Thomas B. Ware two certain powers of attorney empowering him “to enter into and upou and take possession of any and all pieces and parcels of land, or the timber or other materials thereon, in the territory of Dakota, which we now own or which we may hereafter acquire or become seised of, or in
Acting under these powers of attorney, Thomas B. Ware entered upon certain unsurveyed land in Benson county, where the town of Minnewaukan was to be laid out, and made improvements pursuant to the statute under which the scrip was issued, and located such scrip on October 18, 1883, filing the same in the proper land office, together with his letters of attorney and applications to locate the scrip on the lands in controversy, such lands being then and there described by metes and bounds and by diagram. Such applications were accompanied by the affidavits of Ware showing that the tracts had been entered upon under such scrip, and stating the kind, character, and nature of the improvements that had been made on the land so located, whereupon the register and receiver of the land office indorsed on such applications their certificates, showing that the two items of scrip aforesaid had that day been located on the tract of land pursuant to the provisions of such act of Congress, and by the party duly authorized to make such location. They also certified to the receipt of such scrip from the said Ware. After the land in controversy had been surveyed, and on February 28, 1884, Ware filed in the land office confirmations whereby the lands so entered and scripted were adjusted to the government survey, and were shown to embrace the land described in the complaint.- Subsequently, the government issued patents granting such land to John V. Demerce. After the location of such scrip as aforesaid, and on October 18, 1883, Demerce and wife, by the said Thomas B
Defendant Holfe coneededly holds such title as he may have through Wilbur.
The evidence discloses that thereafter, and on February 26, 1884, John Y. Demerce and wife, for a named consideration of $50, executed a deed of the whole of the premises in controversy to the plaintiff, and it is through this deed of conveyance that the plaintiff asserts title in this action. The proof discloses that plaintiff never paid any taxes on the land.
He was asked this question:
Q. Did you ever pay any taxes on this property?
A. No, sir, never had an opportunity; I claimed T owned it as an eighty, and they had no right to assess it as lots.
Q. ,You didn’t offer to pay the taxes on the lots ?
A. No, sir.
It was admitted at the trial that defendant Holfe had paid all the taxes upon the unplatted part of the land in controversy from 1887 to 1902 inclusive, and it was stipulated by plaintiff’s counsel “that defendant Holfe has had this land, the unplaited portion of the south forty of this tract in question, under fence for four years, and as soon as that fact was ascertained by the plaintiff that he instituted the proceedings now pending.” It was also admitted that defendant Holfe had a well upon these premises and it was used daily in the watering of stock and had been for four years.
There is some testimony in the record tending to show that plaintiff, through his agent Campbell, placed a small shack on the premises in
Considerable testimony was introduced relative to the extent of the improvements placed upon the premises prior to the filing of the scrip, but the fact that the land office department accepted the proof offered before them as a sufficient compliance with the statute, and thereafter issued the patents to Demerce, renders such testimony not material. In other words, the government alone can question the sufficiency of such preliminary proof by the entryman. Furthermore, both parties to this litigation base their claim to title under the patents aforesaid, the defendant through a deed executed by Ware as attorney in fact for Demerce pursuant to the powers of attorney aforesaid, and the plaintiff through a deed subsequently executed by Demerce personally. It is for the court, therefore, to decide, under all the facts and the law applicable thereto, which deed should prevail, keeping in view the provision of the Federal statute under which such scrip was issued, prohibiting the assignment thereof, — it being respondent’s contention that the so-called powers of attorney were null and void in so far as they authorized such attorney in fact to sell the land.
In the light of the foregoing statement of facts, we will now consider the propositions of law advanced.
It is first contended by appellant’s counsel, and we think with much merit, that, in view of the fact that seven years and five months elapsed between the trial of the case and the decision thereof by the trial court, and especially in view of the fact that such court made no finding of fact except the ultimate fact of plaintiff’s ownership of the premises, the general rule that where the testimony is conflicting this court should give weight to the findings of the trial court, because of his superior opportunities for weighing the testimony and determining the credibility of the witnesses, should not obtain on this appeal. What
Appellant’s second point is that plaintiff was guilty of gross laches in asserting his alleged rights, and that therefore he ought not to recover. And his next point is that the deed from Demerce to plaintiff was champertous and void under § 8733, Rev. Codes 1905, and numerous decisions of this court cited in the brief. The conclusion which we have reached upon other points makes it unnecessary for us to consider either of the above contentions.
Appellant’s contention under points 4, 5, and 6 are, we think, correct, and this conclusion necessitates a reversal of the judgment. These contentions in the order presented are,
First. That upon the location and surrender of the scrip on October 18, 1883, Demerce acquired an equitable title to the land in controversy, and that the patents, when issued by the government, related back to that date.
Second. The powers of attorney from Demerce to Ware, appellant’s remote grantor, were valid, effectual, and sufficient to authorize the attorney in fact, Ware, to locate and surrender the scrip, and make the filing thereunder in the United States Land Office, and to convey the land acquired thereby; even though the separate and additional power therein purported to make it irrevocable, and released the attorney from any claim to the funds realized on a sale, may have been ineffectual and inoperative; and,
Third. The deeds from Demerce through Ware, his attorney in fact, to Wilbur, were effectual and valid.
Regarding the first proposition, it is respondent’s contention that while the powers of attorney were valid and effectual to authorize Ware to locate the scrip for Demerce, that the portion of such powers of attorney authorizing him to sell the land to be thereafter acquired through such scrip, and providing that the same should be irrevocable, amounted to an assignment of the scrip contrary to the act of Congress under which the same was issued as aforesaid. lie also contends, as we understand it, that the location of this scrip having been made by metes and bounds, and not accompanied by a diagram denoting natural objects and distances so as to fix with certainty the exact location wanted, that Demerce acquired no interest in the land until February
The Minnesota supreme court in Buffalo Land & Exploration Co. v. Strong had before it for consideration scrip issued under this same act of Congress, and a power of attorney in all respects like that in the case at bar, and we think the opinion in that case conclusively answers respondent’s contention that the powers of attorney, being irrevocable, operated as an assignment of the scrip. This point being respondent’s main contention, we feel justified in quoting liberally from the opinion of the Minnesota court. Among other things, that court said:
“There was no substantial difference between the power to locate the scrip considered in Midway Co. v. Eaton, supra, and the one now before us. The attorney in fact, or his substitute, was irrevocably vested in terms with all such power and authority as Bettijohn himself could exercise if personally present; and the acts of such attorney, <or his duly authorized substitute, were fully ratified and confirmed.*56 Nothing more need be said about this power. The only difference between the power to sell under consideration in this case last mentioned, and the one now before us, arises out of the clause in the latter whereby, and in consideration of'the sum of $160 paid by the attorney in fact named in the power, there was irrevocably vested in such attorney the power to grant, bargain, sell, demise, convey, and confirm any tract of land which Pettijohn might acquire by virtue of the scrip location; and the latter, for this same consideration, also released to his attorney all claim to any of the proceeds of a sale, lease, or contract relative to any part of said land. It is well settled, with certain exceptions, that a principal named in a power of attorney may revoke such an instrument at his mere pleasure, although the agency may be expressly declared to be irrevocable in terms. This rule of law applies to the power to locate, which expressly provided that it was irrevocable. But when the authority or power is coupled with an interest, or where it is given for a valuable consideration, or where it is part of a security, the power is irrevocable whether so expressed or not.
“The power to sell was therefore irrevocable, because it was executed for a valuable consideration. But we do not regard this fact as distinguishing this case from one where the power to sell may be revoked at will, whether there is or is not a provision declaring it irrevocable. But the fact that the power to sell was irrevocable did not operate to,, nor did it, transfer the scrip, or have any more effect upon the transaction than if the power had been simple, and in terms exactly that considered in the Midway Case. The inhibition found in the statute, applies solely to a transfer or sale of the scrip, and in this case the scrip was to be located by the attorney in fact in the name of Pettijohn, and the patent would issue to Pettijohn, and to no one else. When the location was made under the power, the land became Pettijohn’s, and could have been conveyed by him at any time before an exercise of the-authority found in the power to sell.
“The case is governed in part by Gilbert v. Thompson, 14 Minn. 544, Gil. 414, and is not distinguishable from Thompson v. Myrick, 20 Minn. 205, Gil. 184. In the first of these cases it was held that the right to acquire lands by means of this scrip was a personal right in the one to whom the scrip was issued, and was not property, in the sense of the right being assignable; that no restraint was imposed by-*57 the statute upon the right of property in land acquired by a location of the scrip after such location. In the scrip itself, said the court, the Half-breed had nothing which he could transfer to another, but his title to the land, when perfected under it, was as complete as though acquired in any other way. The title vested absolutely. In the Thompson Case it appears that, with a view to the location of the scrip for the benefit of the beneficiaries, one Myrick placed the same, with powers of attorney, in the hands of Thompson, and at the same time entered into a written agreement with Thompson, in which he agreed that, upon the location of the scrip, he would secure the title to the land located to be lawfully vested in Thompson. The consideration was $2,800, evidenced by a note payable in one year from its date, and to be secured upon the land as Thompson should acquire title. Thompson located the scrip, and demanded a conveyance of the title. Myrick refused, and conveyed the land to his wife, who was also a defendant in the suit. Specific performance was decreed by the trial court, and its decree was affirmed by the supreme court of the state and of the Hnited States.
“If such a contract did not operate as a transfer of the scrip, we fail to see” how the power of attorney now before us could have that effect. If anything, the intent to secure title to the land was much more manifest through the Myrick-Thompson contract than it was by an irrevocable power of attorney executed for a valuable consideration. It could make no possible difference whether $160 was actually paid before the location in consideration of the execution of a power, or $2,800 was to be paid afterwards, for the title.
“The fact that the two powers may have been given at the same time, and with an intent that through one the real estate located by virtue of the other should be conveyed to a third party, does not amount to an assignment of the scrip itself,—the only act forbidden. The powers are entirely separate and independent. The exercise of one does not depend upon the exercise of the other. Hoover is made the agent to locate; Hale, to sell. The power to locate was revocable; the power to sell was irrevocable. If the transactions were intended as a conveyance of the land, and represented that intention, they could not be shown to be a transfer of the scrip. Midway Co. v. Eaton, supra.”
The Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Midway Co. v. Eaton, 183 U. S. 602, 46 L. ed. 317, 22 Sup. Ct. Rep. 261, affirming
After the land was attempted to he thus thrown open for settlement, a filing was made by one Frank Hicks, to whom patent was subsequently issued, and Hicks and his wife conveyed to the plaintiff. The defendants, Eaton et al., claim under the Half-breed scrip locations and sundry mesne conveyances. The Supreme Court in its opinion reviewed and quoted at length from Gilbert v. Thompson, 14 Minn. 544,
We quote from the opinion as follows: “If evidence was excluded in Gilbert v. Thompson, it was admitted and considered in Thompson v. Myrick; and in both cases the delivery of scrip and its location raider letters of attorney were decided to be valid, forming in one case a good title, and in the other constituting a ground for a compulsory conveyance from the Half-breed. The moral and legal effect of the transfer of scrip ivas declared by the court in Gilbert v. Thompson. The first involved, the court said, no Turpitude nor the breach of any legal duty, as in the case of an attempt to transfer a pre-emption right;’ of the second, it was said, it would be of no effect as a transfer; that The title to the scrip would remain in him (the Half-breed), and the title to the land covered by it would vest in him (the Half-breed), just ns though no such attempt had been made.’ The power of attorney, however, was given full legal effect as authority to sell the land located. It is true the court excluded parol evidence of an intention to transfer the scrip. But why ? Manifestly, because the transactions did not constitute a transfer of the scrip as such, and their legal character could not be destroyed by parol proof that they were intended to be something else. In other words, the court decided that the transactions were intended as a conveyance of the land, and represented that intention, and could not be shown to be a transfer of the scrip. And in Thompson v. Myrick the court observed: ‘We can conceive of no reason why Myrick was not at liberty, either before or after location was made, to enter into an agreement to secure the title (inuring from the location) to the plaintiff upon the payment of an agreed consideration.’ The reasoning and the conclusions of the supreme court of Minnesota were approved by this court, as we have seen.”
In the light of these controlling authorities, our duty seems plain, and we deem an extended discussion of the questions involved quite nnneeessary.
Respondent’s counsel were evidently led astray by certain decisions and rulings of the Department of the Interior, especially with reference to the construction of that portion of the act under which this scrip was
We think respondent’s counsel are also clearly in error in the contention that Demerce acquired no title which he could convey until February 28, 1884, the date when he made the application to adjust the scrip locations to the government subdivisions. The validity of the locations made on October 18, 1883, was not questioned by the government in any respect. On the contrary, the Land Department on that date accepted the scrip as properly located, and issued receipts therefor. The date of such original locations must therefore be deemed the date when Demerce’s equitable title vested. See Allen v. Merrill, 8 Land Dec. 207; Harmon v. Clayton, 51 Iowa, 36, 50 N. W. 541.
Respondent at all times had at least constructive notice of appellant’s rights. Not. only this, but the general equities of the case largely preponderate in appellant’s favor, and as we have seen, the contentions of respondent lack support in the authorities.
It follows that the judgment should be and the same is accordingly reversed, and the District Court directed to enter a judgment in defendant’s favor, quieting title as against the plaintiff to the lands in controversy, as prayed for in the answer, appellant to recover his costs and disbursements in both courts.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.