Ehrhardt v. Hogaboom/Opinion of the Court

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
795135Ehrhardt v. Hogaboom — Opinion of the CourtStephen Johnson Field

United States Supreme Court

115 U.S. 67

Ehrhardt  v.  Hogaboom


This is an action for the possession of a tract of land in Sacramento county, California, designated as the north-east quarter of section 6 of a certain township, which is described. The plaintiff below, the defendant in error here, deraigns her title, through a patent of the United States embracing the demanded prmises, bearing date June 10, 1875, issued to one Elkanah Baldwin, a settler under the pre-emption laws, and his conveyance to her of the land patented to him. On the trial the patent and the conveyance to the plaintiff were produced and given in evidence. The defendant thereupon admitted that he was in possession of 20 acres of the tract covered by the patent, lying south of a certain fence, but contended that these 20 acres were swamp and overflowed lands, which passed to the state of California under the act of congress of September 28, 1850. This character of the land as swamp and overflowed he offered t prove by parol, but the offer was rejected, and we think correctly. He did not connect himself in any way with the title to the 20 acres. The certificate of purchase from the register of the state land-office, which he produced, related to different land,-to what constituted a portion of the south-east quarter of section 6, whereas the land in controversy is part of the north-east quarter of that section. He was, as to the 20 acres, a simple intruder without claim or color of title. He was therefore in no position to call in question the validity of the patent of the United States for those acres, and require the plaintiff to vindicate the action of the officers of the land department in issuing it. It does not appear that the 20 acres formed a part of any land selected by the state, or claimed by her as swamp and overflowed land. A patent of the United States, regular on its face, cannot in an action at law be held inoperative as to any lands covered by it, upon parol testimony that they were swamp and overflowed, and therefore unfit for cultivation, and hence passed to the state under the grant of such land on her admission into the Union.

In French v. Fyan, 93 U.S. 169, this court decided that by the second section of the swamp-land act the power and the duty devolved upon the secretary of the interior, as the head of the department which administered the affairs of the public lands, of determining what lands were of the description granted by that act, and made his office the tribunal whose decision on that subject was to be controlling; and he was to transmit a list of such lands to the governor of the state, and, at the latter's request, issue a patent there for to the state. In that case, parol evidence to show that the land covered by a patent to Missouri under the act was not swamp and overflowed land was held to be inadmissible. On the same principle, parol testimony to show that the land covered by a patent of the United States to a settler under the pre-emption laws was such swamp and overflowed land must be held to be inadmissible to defeat the patent. It is the duty of the land department, of which the secretary is the head, to determine whether land patented to a settler is of the class subject to settlement under the pre-emption laws; and his judgment as to this fact is not open to contestation in an action at law by a mere intruder without title. As was said in the case cited of the patent to the state, it may be said in this case of the patent to the pre-emptioner: it would be a departure from sound principle, and contrary to well-considered judgments of this court, to permit, in such action, the validity of the patent to be subjected to the test of the verdict of a jury on oral testimony. 'It would be,' to quote the language used, 'substituting the jury, or the court sitting as a jury, for the tribunal which congress had provided to determine the question, and would be making a patent of the United States a cheap and unstable reliance as a title for lands which it purported to convey.' The judgment is therefore affirmed.

Notes

[edit]

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work of the United States federal government (see 17 U.S.C. 105).

Public domainPublic domainfalsefalse