85 



United States v. Charles Spieth : Timber trespass, civil, Jefferson 

 National Forest. Case settled upon payment of $13.10, value of 

 timber cut. 



United States v. John Carter : Timber trespass, civil, Coeur d'Alene 

 National Forest. Case settled upon payment of $106.52, value of 

 timber cut. 



Law Cases in District 2 



United States v. Frank L. Hudson and Tim Barrett : Grazing tres- 

 pass, Washakie National Forest. On December 17, 1914, consent 

 judgment was entered in the United States District Court for the 

 District of Wyoming in favor of the Government in the sum of $18.88 

 compensatory damages and $50 exemplary damages and costs. 



United States v. Frank L. Hudson and Felix Wilson : Grazing tres- 

 pass, Washakie National Forest. On December 17, 1914, consent 

 judgment was entered in the United States District Court for the Dis- 

 trict of Wyoming in favor of the Government in the sum of $4 com- 

 pensatory damages and $50 exemplary damages and costs. 



United States v. William H. McKinley : Grazing trespass, Monte- 

 zuma National Forest. October 19, 1914, an order was secured from 

 the United States District Court for Colorado to take default judg- 

 ment against the defendant. 



United States v. Joseph H. McNealey : Grazing trespass (criminal), 

 Medicine Bow National Forest. The defendant was found guilty by a 

 jury in the United States District Court for the District of Wyoming 

 and was sentenced to pay a fine of $100 and costs. 



United States v. J. H. McNealey : Grazing trespass, Medicine Bow 

 National Forest. December 19 McNealey deposited with the United 

 States Attorney $15 in full settlement of a grazing trespass committed 

 by him in 1913 on the Medicine Bow National Forest. 



United States v. Henrylyn Irrigation District et al. : Occupancy 

 trespass, Pike National Forest. September 30, 1914, defendants' 

 motion to strike certain portions of the Government's bill was granted 

 by the court, and the defendants were ordered to answer, which answer 

 was filed December 11, 1914. 



United States v. Alice M. Ennis : Involving title to lands in the 

 Harney National Forest. On December 9, 1914, Alice M. Ennis and 

 Charles Ennis, her husband, executed and delivered to the United 

 States a quitclaim deed to 80 acres of land to which patent had 

 issued by mistake. The particular land in question had been recon- 

 veyed to the United States under the lieu-selection provision of the 

 act of June 4, 1897, and lieu lands patented to the claimant in lieu 

 of that relinquished. A patent, however, issued to Alice Ennis for the 

 land reconveyed and was recorded and a quitclaim deed was secured 

 for the purpose of clearing the cloud upon the Government's title 

 thereto. 



