Fisher v. Ballinger
Fisher v. Ballinger
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court:
It is here suggested that a moot case only is presented for our consideration.
Without intimating any opinion upon the other questions suggested, we are quite content to rest our decision upon the fundamental proposition that appellant has no right to complain of the refusal of the Assistant Secretary of the Interior to grant him a hearing upon the question whether there was collusion between' appellant and Miss Inkster, assuming that there was such a denial, for the reason that he has no right to protect. We find it impossible to escape the conclusion, from the evidence in' this record, that when Miss Inkster, in July, 1905, filed on this land, it was not desert in character, but that its condition was jDractically the same as it was when.final proof
The decree will therefore be affirmed, with costs.
Affirmed,
Reference
- Full Case Name
- FISHER v. BALLINGER
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Public Lands; Desert Lands; Equity; Officers; Injunction. 1. Desert land so far reclaimed by a former entryman that in one year it produced 200 tons of hay is not subject to desert-land entry after the relinquishment of the land by such entryman. 2. A court of equity will not exercise its discretion and lend its aid in a case where it is clear no equity exists. 3. A bill in equity by the assignee of an entryman of public land against the Secretary of the Interior, who has directed the cancelation of the entry on the ground of fraud and collusion between the entryman a.nd others, to enjoin the Secretary from proceeding further without first according the plaintiff a hearing upon the question of whether such fraud and collusion in fact existed, — will not lie, where it appears that, aside from such question, the land was not subject to the entry made, and that therefore the plaintiff had acquired no right thereunder from the assignor. (Citing Garfield v. United States, 31 App. D. C. 332.)