UNION PAC. BY. 00. ,. UNITED STATU.
975
W. C,. Perry, U. S. Atty. .. . T. (T. L.Bond, on the1?rlef),for.appellee Willlam Hoard. N. H.Loomis (A. 1. Williams (and R. W. Blair, on the brief), for appellee Union Pac. Ry. Co.. Fred M. Dudley, Northern Pac.R. Co., flIed brief by . leave of court. Before CALDWELL, SANBORN, and THAYER, Circuit Judges. SANBORN, Circuit Judge, after stating the facts as above, delivered the opinion of the court. The principles announced in U. S. v. Winona & P. R. Co. (No. 564) 67 Fed. 94:8, are decisive of this case. Conceding, but not deciding, that by the previous flling of the declaratory statement pre-emption rights had attached to this land at the time when the line of the railroad OPP9$ite to it was definitely fixed; this land was excepted from the grant to the railroad company. But the land was within the jurisdiction, and its disposition within the power, of the land departmentof the United States. The patent issued by that department to the railroad company was not void, but conveyed the legal title. The appellee William Hoard was a bona· fide purchaser for value of that title, without of any defects in it; and his equitable rights as such purchaser are superior to the equitable claims of the United States to have the title restored to it, and constitute a oomplete defense to this suit. The decree below must be affirmed. without costs to either party in this court; and it is soor(J.(ilred.
UNION PAC. RY. CO. et at v. UNITED STATES. (Circuit Court ·ot .Appeals, Eigbth Circuit. May 6, 1893.) No. 307. L ESTOPPEL AGAINST THE UNITED STATES.
A suit in wbich the United States bu no interest, and in which It t. under no obUgationeither to the pubUc or to the party for whose benefit the suit is brought, can be sustained no better in the name of the United States than in. the name of the real party in interest; and an estoppel which 'would operate against the rights of such party will bar recovery, notwithstanding that the .United States is the formal complainant. U. S: v. Winona & st. P. R. Co. (No. 564) 67 Fed. 948, tollowed.
t.
SAME-PUBLIC LANDS-SUIT TO CANCEL RAILROAD GRANTS.
Certain lands were enepted out ot a railroad grant because a pre-emption claim had attached thereto at the time or adefinlte location of the road. Subsequently, the pre-emptioner relinqUished his claim, and the land was sold by the railroad compa.ny, and the title conveyed by it was at length obtained by one W. tor his wife, llnd they took possession under their deed. They, however, concealed from the railroad company and trom the United Stales that they had bought the railroad title; and atterwards W. made a homestead entry upon the land, which entry, atter a contest betore the land department with the railroad company, was caneeled, and'. patent was issued to the railroad comtlany. W. haVing died, his wite caused the deed conveying the railroad title to her to be raeorded, thus. showing a perfect chain ot title trom the United State.
through the railroad company to herself. She then procured an abstract of this title, and, upon t,he faith of it, procured trom antnvestment company a loan secured by a mortgage of the land. Afterwards, with the purpose of dischargIng the land In part at'least from the lien of the mortgage, she petitioned the UnIted States, through the land office, to bring a suit to cancel the <patent to the railroad company on the ground that slie and her children, as heirs of W., were entitled to the land under her husband's homestead entry, and this suit was accordingly brought. Helli, that she was estopped to set up this claim as against the mortgage, and that the United States had no interest to protect or governmental duty to perform, and hence that the suit instituted in its name was for her benefit alone, for which reason the estoppel operated as' a bar to the suit, notwitbstanding that the Uniteti States was the complainant.
Appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Kansas.' This is an appeal from a decree in favor of the UnIted 'States which an· nulled a patent of 160 acres of land to the appellant the Union Pacific Rail· way Company, upon the title evidenced by which a mortgage for $2,200, whicb was held by the appellant WllUam Dalrymple, rested. The case was heard below upon the bill exhibited by the United States and the answers of the railway company. When a suit in equity. is heard on the bill and the answers, the material allegations of the answers must be taken to be true, and the averments of the bill that are denied by the answers to be false. Leeds v. Insurance 00., 2 Wheat. 880, 884; U. B. v. Trans-Missouri Freight Ass'n, 7 C. C. A. 15, 82, 58 Fed. 58. Under thIs rule the material facts in this case are these: By the act of July 1, 1862 (12 Stat. c. 120, §§ 3, 9, pp. 489, 492, 494), and the varIous acts amendatory thereof, the United States granted to the Leavenwortb, Pawnee & Western Railway Company of Kansas, a cor· poration, certaIn of tbe publlc lands, to aid in the construction of a railroad and telegraph line from the Missouri river"at the mouth of the Kansas river, to a place of connection with the PacIfic Railroad of Missouri on the one bundredtb meridian west of Greenwich, described in that act. Tbe original grant, so far as it is material to this case, was in these words: "Tbat there be, and Is hereby, granted to the said company, for the purpose of aiding in the con· struction of saId railroad and telegraph line, and to secure the safe and speedy transportation of the mails, troops, munitions of war, and public stores thereon, every alternate section of public land, designated by odd numbers, to the amount of five alternate sections per mile on each side. of said road, on the line thereof, and within the limits of ten miles on each side of said road, not sold, reserved or otherwise disposed of by the United States, and to which a preemption or homestead claim may not have attached, at the time the line of said road is definitely fixed." The act of July 2, 1864, also provided that Whenever 40 consecutive miles of any. portion of said railroad and telegraph line was completed, as required by the act, patents should be issued conveying the right and title to said lands to the company on each side of the road as far as the same was completed. By the act of July 2, 1864 (13 Stat. c. 216, § 4, pp. 356, 358), 3 of the act of July 1, 1862, was amended . by striking out the word "five" wherever it occurs, and inserting in lieu of it the word "ten," and by striking out the word Wherever it occurs; and inserting in place of it the word "twenty." The name of the Leavenworth, Pawnee & Western Railroad Company of Kansas was subsequently changed to the Union Pacific Railway Company, Eastern Division, then to the Kansas Pacific RaJ.lroad Company, and the company was finally consolidated with· the Union Pacific Railway Company, the appellant, which has succeeded to all the rights this railway company acquired under any of its names. The railroad company earned its grant by tlie timely and fit construction of .its railroad and telegraph line. The 160 acres of land in controversy here was a part of an odd section within the place limits of the grant to this company by, the acts we have mentioned. On May B, 1867, the railroad company filed Its map of the definite location of the line of Its railroad opposite to this land. On April 14, 1866, olie James S. Grier, who was a minor 20 years of age, filed his declaratory statement upon this land
UNION PAC. BY. CO. Itt
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UNITED
97'l
the proper land office, by whIch he alleged that he had settled thereon under'the pre-emption laws. On August ]2, 1868, he relinquished his pre-emption claim to this land. On September 10, 1868, th,e railroad company sold and conveyed this tract of land by a warranty deed to one James Waddle. On February 10, 1871, Almer Weller bought the land of Waddle, and the latter conveyed it by warranty deed either to him or to his wife, Hannah E. Weller. Thereupon Weller and his wife took possession of the land under this deed, and have ever since retained it. They concealed from the raIlroad company and from the United States the fact that they had bought the title Waddle received from the raUroad company; and on October 9, 1871, Weller made a homestead entry upon the land, which was on October 22, 1875, after a contest and trial before the land department of the United States of the claim!! of Weller and the railroad company, canceled by the commissioner of the general land office. On December 31, 1877, the United State!! issued a patent of thililland to the railroad company. At some time prior to September, 1886, Weller died intestate, and left his wife, Hannah E. Weller, and five children, his sole surviving heirs; and Hannah E. Weller recorded in the county in which this land was situated the deed of February 10, 1871, from Waddle, which then ran to her, so that there appeared of record a perfect chain of title from the United States through the railroad company and Waddle to herself. She was still in possession of the land, and she then procured an abstract of this and, for the purpose of procuring a loan upon the securi:y ot her title to the land, furuished it to the Lombard Investment Company, a corporation, which, in reliance upon the abstract, the record title, and her possession, and without notice of any defect in this title, loaned to Hannah E. Weller, at her request, $2,200 upon the security of her mortgage upon this land. This mortgage was dated September I, 1886. It contained full covenants ot warranty of the title, and secured the payment of a promissory DOte of $2,200 made by Hannah E. Weller, and payable to the Lombard Investment Company. On September 25, 1886, the appellant William Dalrympie' purchased and paid a valuable consideration for this note and mortgage in good faith, without notice of any defects in the title disclosed by the abstract. According to the answers of the railroad company, and J;)alrymple, which stand admitted in this case, Hannah E. Weller knew all these facts; but she did not disclose to the United States the fact that she or hethusband had procured the title of Waddle under the patent to the railroad company. But for the purpose of discharging the land In part at least from the lien of the mortgage, and of preventing the appellant Dalrymple from collecting the amount owing to him on this mortgage debt, she petitioned the United States, through the general land office, to bring this suit to cancel the patent to tlie railroad company on the ground that she and the other heirs of Weller held the possession of, and were entitled to the title to, the land under the homestead entry made by her husband in 1871 only, and she thereby induced the United states to bring and prosecute this suit. The United States has no interest in the suit, and the real parties to the controversy are Hannah E. Wel1er and William Dalrymple, the holder of her mortgage.
Henry P. Lowenstein (A. L. Williams, John O. Gage, Watson J. Ferry, Oharles E. Small, and N. H. Loomis, on the brief), for appellants. W. O. Perry, U. S. Atty. Before OALDWELL, SANBORN, and THAYER, Oircult Judges. SANBORN, Oircuit Judge, after stating the facts as above, delivered the opinion of the court. The principles announced in U. S. v. Winona & St P. R. 00. (No. 564) 67 Fed. 948, are decisive of this The terms of the grant onder the act of July 1, 1862 (12 Stat. c. 120, §§ 3,9, pp. 489, 492, 494), differ in no particular, essential to the decision of this case, from thbse: considered in that case. 11 Stat 195. v.67F.no.8-62
978
J'EDERAL REPORTER,
vol. 67.
Conceding, but not deciding, that the filing of the declaratory statement of Grier was sufficient evidence that pre-emption rights had attachedto the land in controversy here, when the line of the railroad was definitely fixed opposite to it, it follows from the views expressed in that case (1) that this land was excepted from the grant to the railroad company; but (2) that the land was within the jurisdiction, and its disposition within the power, of the land department of the United States, and the patent to the railroad company issued by that department wa:s not void, butit conveyed the legal title to the railroad company and its grantees; (3) that the appellant Dalrymple was a bona fide purchaser pf a mortgage for '$2,200, which is a lien upon all that legal title that Hannah E.Weller acquired through the deed from the immediate grantor of the railroad company; and (4) that the equitable rights of a bona fide purchaser are superior in a case of this character to, the equitable claims of the United States to have the title restored to it, and constitute a complete defense to this suit. There is another fatal objection to the maintenance of this suit It is that this iS4 8uitin which the United States has no interest to pro>tect, and. no governmental duty to perform, and that it is prosecuted in its name at the instigation and in the interest of, a private individual, to obtain relief that she is estopped from recovering in her own name by every> principle onaw and of equity. It was instituted and is prosecuted at the instigation and on the petition of a mortgagor to annul a title wllich she obtained ,aloan of $2,200 upon the faith of her representation that she had a perfect title to the land. The patent was issued in 1877. It is claimed in this suit that Almer of Hann!lh,E. Well\,!r, the mortgagor here, was Weller, the to title to this land· ,under his hOJll,estead entry. Either Almer'or Hannah had this legal title under the patent through the deed from: Waddle from the time the patent was issued, and during all time, they were in possession. ' If' 4,lmer had the title, of what could he complain? If Hannah, his wife, had it, she undoubtedly had it with his consent. If not, he could have maintained a suit in equity at' any time dUring his life, and his heirs could ha1teml:!.intained one at any tim\,! since his del;li;]l, for a decree that Hannah held thisJegal title in trust ,for him, or for tll.em. Bogan v. Mortgage Co., 11 C. C. A. 128, 63 Fed. 192, andcasea cited. Almer Weller made no, complaint regarding this title from 1877 until he died. one ()! his heirs except Hannah have' ever oomplained of it since. Hannah, who, acc'ording to the records of the county in whlch the land is situated, has held this legal title since 1877, never complained because she held it until after she had borrowed the $2,200, and-'then, not for the purpose of strengthenlng:her own title, but to weaken the security of the loan she had procured, and to defeat its collection. To obtain this 19JUl, she cl;lused a deed to heTself of the title under the patent to the railroad company to be recorded, and· Illhe presented to the mortgagee an abstract which disclosed a title in her under the patent to the railroad company. She wa,s then in possession of the land; alld if the claim she now make II, that, she was not entitled t() this land, but that it belonged of right not to her alone, but to her and her children, the
UNION PAC. BY·.
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9irl
heirs of Almer Weller, under his homestead claim, is well founded, she knew that fact, and concealed it from the mortgagee in 1886, when she induced it to loan its money on the faith of the perfect title her abstract and possession disclosed. She cannot be heard to assert that fact now to defeat this mortgage in the .hands of a bona fide purchaser. In Paxson v. Brown, 10 C. C. A. 135,143,61 Fed. 874, this court declared: "No principle is more salutary, none rests on more solid foundations, than that one who, by his acts or representations, or by his silence when he ought to speak out, intentionally or through culpable negligence induces another to believe certain facts to exist, and the latter rightfully acts on such a belief, so that he wlll be prejudiced if the former is permitted to deny the existence of such facts, is thereby conclusively estopped to interpose such denial This principle. is salutary,. because it represses fraud and falsehood. It rests on the soUd foundatiOn of our comD;lOn sense of justice. which revolts at the idea of rewarding the intentional or culpably negligent deceiver at the expense ot the purchaser who believed him. Cairncross v. Lorimer, 3 Macq. 828; plckerson v. Colgrove, 100 U. S. 578. 582; Kirk v. Hamilton, 102 U. S. 68, 75;· v; 'Snyder, 64 Mo. 516; Pence v. Arbuckle, 22 Minn. 417; ·Crook v. CorIl()1ation ot SeatOI'd, L. R. 10 Eq. 678; Futon v. Faxon, 28 Mich. 159."
Upott this principle, the mortgagor, Hannah E. Weller, was estopped to maintain a suit to defeat or weaken the lien of this mortgage, and we think in this case the government is in the same position. It not denied that, if the United States was prosecuting this suit to enforce the rights or to protect the interests vested in it as a sovereign government; it might not be affected by the equitable estoppel which bars .this mortgagor. U. S. v. Winona & St. P. R. Co. (No. 566) 67 Fed. 948, and cases cited. But that is not the position of the United States in this case. The government has no inter-est in this suit. If this decree is affirmed, the United States will become a mere conduit to pass the legal title to this land from Hannah E. Weller to Hannah E. Weller and the children of her husband. The government can receive no purchase price for the land,nor can it retain the land itself. Moreover, the uncontradicted averments of the answers are that this suit was instigated by this mortgagor for the sole purpose of defeating the collection of her mortgage debt; that she induced the government to institute it by filing a petition which did not disclose the essential fact that either she or her husband held the legal title under the patent she asked the government to set aside; and that the only real parties in interest in this suit are this mortgagor and William Dalrymple, the assignee of this mortgage. Private parties cannot be permitted under such circumstances to use the name of the United States to shield them· selves from the just consequences of· their own acts, or to deprive bona fide purchasers of their defenses in equity. A suit in which the United States has no interest, and in which it is nnder no obligation to the public or to the party for whose use the suit is brought and prosecuted, can be sustained no better in the name of the United States ,than. in the name of the real party in interest. Individuals cannot in that way avail themselves of the privileges and exemptions which are bestowed upon the government, not for the benefit of private 'parties" but for the protection of the interests of the publ1?:
980
ftDERAL'REPORTER,
vol. 61.
and to enable the United States to discharge its duties and obliga· tions as a sovereign government U. S. v. San Jacinto Tin Co., 125 U. S. 273,285, 8 Sup. Ct. 850; U. S. v. Beebe, 127 U. S. 338, 8 Sup. at 1083; Curtner v. U. S., 149 U. S. 662, 13 Sup. Ct 985,1041. The decree below must be reversed, and the case remanded, with directions to dismiss the bill; and it is so ordered.
ULMAN T. IAEGER et al. (Circuit Court, D. West Virginia. May 17, 18915.l 1. EQUITY PLEADING-DEMURRER-ExHIBITS. lIS
Upon demurrer to a bill, the exhibits filed with the bfll are to be read part of It. and the statements found In them must be accepted as true against the demurrants. A bUl by a landowner to cancel numerous tax deeds, held by dUferent persons under a sale made by the commissioner of school lands, in West Virginia, In one proceeding to forfeit the lands for taxes, may be maintained as a bUl to remove cloud from title, and on the ground of avoiding a multiplicity of suits, where all the parties claim under a common source of title. Where lands are forfeited for nonpayment of taxes in West Virginia, and are sold by the commissioner of school lands, the title acquired by virtue of the tax deeds Is the same title as that of the original owner, and he is to be regarded as the common source of title, notwithstanding that the same has passed through the state to the purchasers at the tax sale.
2.
EQUITY JURISDICTION-BrLL TO CANCEL TAX DEEDS-MULTIPLICITY OF SUITS.
8.
SAME-TAX SALES-SCHOOL LANDS.
"
LACHES-DEMURRER TO BILL.
The question of laches cannot be considered upon demurrer to the blIl where the bill alleges that complainant was ignorant of the matters constituting the foundation of his right, and that, as soon as he discovered them, he took the necessary steps to assert his right.
Ii.
EQUITY PLEADING-MULTIFARIOUSNESS-JOINDER OF PARTIES.
In a blll and cross bill for partition between tenants in common of a tract of land, it is proper to join as defendants numerous purchasers at a tax sale of part of the land, for the purpose of canceling their deeds, on the ground that the tax proceedings were Invalld; and such bills are not rendered multifarious by such joinder. Whether or not a bill Is multifarious is a question which rests largely In the discretion of the court, and a decision overrullng an objection based on that ground wili nm be reviewed on appeal.
SAME-DrscRETION OF COURT.
Okey Johnson and Gauch, Flournoy & Price, for A. J. Ulman. Jas. H. Ferguson and P. W. Strother, for W. G. W. Iaeger. John S. Wise, W. E. Chilton, and E. Spencer Miller, for trustees. Brown, Jackson & Knight, A. C. Snyder, T. S. Heintze, and D. E. Johnston, for Bramwell and others. Payne & Green, for Dwight Devine. Watts & Ashby, for David E. Johnston and Stealeys. Before GOFF"Circuit Judge, and JAOKSON, Distriot Judge. JAOKSON, District Judge.. Alfred J. Ulman filed. his bill in the oircuit court of McDowell county, W. Va., against W. R. Iaeger, "'·. G. W. Iaeger, and others, claiming that he was a cotenant of W. R.