UNITED STATES V. BEGGERLY
524 U.S. 38 (1998)
NATURE OF THE CASE: This was a dispute over a land settlement agreement and a federal
appellate court decision to allow the reopening of a prior judgment.
FACTS: The U.S. was assembling lands for the National Seashore and brought a 1979 quiet
title action against Beggerly (D). The case turned on whether, before the date of the
Louisiana Purchase in 1803, the land had been deeded to a private individual. The case
settled on the eve of trial for a relatively modest sum of money; this reflecting the
uncertainty of D's title. Judgment was entered based on that settlement. Twelve years later,
D sued in District Court to set aside the settlement and obtain a damage award for the
disputed land. During the prior litigation, Government officials searched public land
records and told D that they had found nothing proving that any part of Horn Island had ever
been granted to a private landowner. Even after the settlement in the original case, D
continued a title search and in the National Archives in Washington, found materials that
showed that on August 1, 1781, Bernardo de Galvez, then the Governor General of Spanish
Louisiana, granted the island to a private party. Armed with this new evidence, D filed a
new complaint to set aside the judgment of the prior suit. The District Court dismissed. The
Court of Appeals reversed; the suit satisfied the elements of an independent action under
FRCP 60(b).
ISSUE:
RULE OF LAW:
HOLDING AND DECISION:
LEGAL ANALYSIS:
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