The facts sufficiently appear in the opinion. This is an action of ejectment for the recovery of the possession of a tract of unsurveyed government land containing about forty acres.
Plaintiff introduced testimony tending to prove prior possession of the demanded premises, and an ouster, and rested his case. No evidence was introduced tending to show the nature of defendant's claim. A motion for nonsuit was granted, upon the ground that plaintiff had not acquired, nor shown any intention of acquiring, the government title to the land. In support of the ruling, respondent relies upon the provisions of an act of congress entitled "An act to prevent the unlawful occupancy of public lands," approved February 25, 1885 (23 Stat, at Large, 321). The provisions of the act upon which reliance is placed are those which declare that the inclosure of any portion of the public domain to which the person making the inclosure has no claim or color of title or asserted right, made in good faith, with a view to entry under the land laws of the United States, or any fencing or inclosing of such lands whereby others are prevented from settling thereon under the public land laws of the United States, is unlawful.
Prior to the adoption of this statute, the supreme court of the United States, in Atherton v. Fowler,96 U.S. 513, and other cases, had held that a pre-emption right to public land could not be initiated by intrusion upon the possession of another. In that case the court said: "It is not to be presumed that congress intended, in the remote regions where these settlements are made, to invite forcible invasion of the premises of another, in order to confer the gratuitous right of preference of purchase on the invaders. In the parts of the country where these pre-emptions are usually made, the protection of the law to rights of persons and property is generally but imperfect under the best of circumstances. It cannot, therefore, be believed, without the strongest evidence, that congress has extended a standing invitation to the strong, the daring, and the unscrupulous to dispossess by force the weak and the timid from actual improvements on the public land, in order that the intentional trespasser may secure by these means the preferred right to buy the land when it conies into market." (Pages 516, 517.) *Page 183
Advantage was taken of this ruling to fence large bodies of public land by persons having no claim of right thereto, to the exclusion of persons desiring to make bona fide settlements thereon. To protect actual settlers in good faith against this wrongful interference, congress declared the acts prohibited by the statute misdemeanors, punishable by fine and imprisonment, and authorized the president to employ force to remove and destroy the inclosures. The act does not, however, in terms, permit a private person to dispossess the occupant of an unlawful inclosure, and the reasons given in Atherton v. Fowler; refute such a construction.
The case of Laurendeau v. Fugelli (decided by the supreme court; of Washington Territory in the year 1889) is directly in point. In that case the plaintiff held by possession only. Defendant, whom the court presumed to be a pre-emptor, broke down a portion of plaintiff's fence, entered upon and took possession of the land. It was claimed that plaintiff was within the prohibitions of the act of congress forbidding the fencing of public lands, and, therefore, defendant could lawfully enter. Upon this point the court said: "To invoke the act of 1885 as a license to opposing claimants, pre-emptors, and the like, of a law unto themselves that either may break down the inclosure of the other and lawfully enter, is to use a rule made for desperate cases, requiring desperate remedy, and in itself exceptional; to overturn the law; to bring chaos instead of social order; to make the court a useless formality, and the law an object of contempt." (21 Pac. Rep. 30.)
It is unnecessary for us to go to the full extent of the Washington case, for the reason that in the case at bar no evidence was introduced touching defendant's claim, and, for aught that appears, he may have had no better right than the plaintiff. Upon the facts, we consider that plaintiff established a prima facie case, and that the nonsuit ought not to have been granted. The judgment of the district court is reversed, and cause remanded. *Page 184