Stalnaker v. Morrison
Stalnaker v. Morrison
Opinion of the Court
On the eighteenth day of January, 1871, the plaintiff in error settled upon a tract of land in Oass county, belonging to the United States, and on the sixteenth day of February following filed with the register of the proper land office his declaratory statement of his intention to pre-empt the same. The tract oí land m question
Section 2261 of the Revised Statutes of the United States provides that: “When any person settles or improves a tract of land, subject at the time of settlement to private entry, and intends to purchase the same under the preceding piovisions of this chapter, he shall, within thirty days after the date of such settlement,-file with the register of the proper district a written statement describing the land settled upon, and declaring- his intention to claim the same under the pre-emption laws; and he shall moreover within twelve months after the date of such settlement make the proof, affidavit, and payment herein before required.”
Sections 2265 and 2266 require the claimant to file
Section 2267 provides that: “All claimants of preemption rights under the two preceding sections shall, when no shorter period is prescribed by law, make the proper proof and payment for the land claimed within thirty months after the date prescribed therein respectively for filing their declaratory notices has expired.”
On the sixth day of March, 1868, Congress passed an act providing that “ nothing in the act approved July 1, 1862, entitled, ‘ An act to aid in the construction of a railroad and telegraph line from the Missouri river to the Pacific ocean, and to secure the government the use of the same for postal, military, and other purposes,’ and the acts amendatory thereof, shall be held to authorize the withdrawal or exclusion from settlement and entry, under the provisions of the pre-emption or homestead laws, the even-numbered sections along the routes of the several roads therein mentioned which have been or may be hereafter located; provided, That such sections shall be rated at two dollars and fifty cents per acre, and subject only to entry wider those lanes; and the secretary of the interior be, and he is hereby authorized and directed to restore to homestead settlement, pre-emption, or entry, according to existing laws, all the even-numbered sections of land belonging to the government, and now withdrawn from market, on both sides of the Pacific Railroad and branches, wherever said road and branches have been definitely located.”
The B. & M. R. R. extension is one of the branches referred to in the above act, and the lands within the limits of the grant belonging to the United States are not subject to private entry, and were not at the time the plaintiff settled upon the land in dispute. It is only in cases where lands are subject to private entry at the date of settlement that payment must be made within a year.
In Towsley v. Johnson, 1 Neb., 95, this court say: “The object of the guards thrown around the privilege of pre-emption by the law is to secure on the public lands actual, permanent settlers.” The plaintiff in this case is shown to be an actual, permanent settler, who went upon the land in question for the purpose of cultivating the same and making his home thereon. Can the same be said of the defendant? Has there ever been an actual bona fide attempt even, by him, to make an actual settlement on the lands in question? If so, the record fails to disclose it.
The claim of danger, in a peacable law abiding community, evidently afforded a convenient pretext for not residing on the land, but is not entitled to much consideration. The equities of the case are clearly with the plaintiff. The jurisdiction of a court of equity is undoubted to determine the rights of the parties. Johnson v. Towsley, 13 Wall, 73. 1 Neb., 95. And under the code, an equitable defense may be set up in an action of ejectment.
The judgment of the district court is reversed,
Judgment accordingly.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Samuel Stalnaker, in error v. John Morrison, in error
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published