Claimants against the government under legislative grants of
public land must show a clear title, as gifts of public domain are
never to be presumed.
The grant of swamp lands to each of the states of the Union by
the Act of September 28, 1850, 9 Stat. 510, did not confer a
similar grant upon the territories, and the subsequent admission of
a territory as a state under an act which provided that all laws of
the United States not locally inapplicable should have the same
force and effect within that state as in other states of the Union
did not work a grant of swamp lands under the act of 1850.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case briefly stated is as follows:
On the 28th of September, 1850, what is now known as the Swamp
Land Act, c. 8, 9 Stat. 519, was passed by Congress. By sections 1,
2, and 3 swamp lands were defined, and a special
Page 110 U. S. 696
grant made to the State of Arkansas. Section 4 is in these
words:
"That the provisions of this act be extended to, and their
benefits conferred upon, each of the other states of the Union, in
which such swamp and overflowed lands, known or designated as
aforesaid, may be situated."
Minnesota was then a territory, and on the 3d of March, 1857, an
Act of Congress, c. 99, 11 Stat. 195, was passed, granting to that
territory, for the purpose of aiding in the construction of certain
railroads, "every alternate section of land, designated by odd
numbers, for six sections in width an each side of each of said
roads." If when the lines of a road were definitely fixed, it
should appear that any of the sections included in the terms of the
grant had been sold or otherwise appropriated by the United States,
authority was given for the selection of others in lieu within
fifteen miles of the line. All lands before reserved to the United
States for the purpose of aiding in any object of internal
improvement or for any other purpose whatever were excluded from
the operation of the act, except for the right of way.
On the 11th of May, 1858, Minnesota was admitted into the Union
as a state. 11 Stat. 285, c. 31. By the act of admission (sec. 3),
"all the laws of the United States," "not locally inapplicable,"
were "to have the same force and effect within that state as in
other states of the Union."
The line of what is now the Sioux City & St. Paul Railroad,
built by a company entitled to the privileges of the Act of March
3, 1857, c. 99, was located in April 1859, and the lands involved
in this suit are odd-numbered sections within the six mile limits
according to that line.
On the 12th of March, 1860, Congress passed an Act, c. 5, 12
Stat. 3, extending the provisions of the Act of September 28, 1850,
c. 84, to the states of Minnesota and Oregon, subject to a proviso,
as follows:
"That the grant hereby made shall not include any lands
which
Page 110 U. S. 697
the government of the United States may have reserved, sold, or
disposed of (in pursuance of any law heretofore enacted) prior to
the confirmation of title to be made under the authority of the
said act."
The lands now in dispute were certified to the state under this
act, and conveyed by the governor to Rice, the appellant. This suit
was brought by the railroad company to establish its title under
the railroad grant by the Act of March 3, 1857, c. 99, as against
the swamp land certificate. The circuit court sustained the claim
of the railroad company, and decreed accordingly. To reverse that
decree Rice took this appeal. The single question presented is
whether the lands passed under the railroad or the swamp land
grant.
That the Swamp Land Act of 1850 operated as a grant
in
praesenti to the states then in existence of all the swamp
lands in their respective jurisdictions is well settled.
Railroad Co. v.
Smith, 9 Wall. 95;
French v. Fyan,
93 U. S. 169;
Martin v. Marks, 97 U. S. 345. As
Minnesota was a territory in 1850, it is conceded that the title to
the swamp lands within its territorial limits did not pass out of
the United States at that time, because there was then no grantee
in existence. It is contended, however, that on the admission of
the state into the Union in 1858, the grant, which had before
rested in compact only, became absolute, and carried the title to
the state, as against the United States and subsequent grantees,
from the date of the original act, September 28, 1850, or at least
from the date of the admission of the state.
In
French v. Fyan, supra, it was said in the opinion at
one place,
"That this Court has decided more than once that the Swamp Land
Act was a grant
in praesenti, by which the title to those
lands passed at once to the state in which they lay, except to
states admitted to the Union after its passage,"
and at another,
"for while the title under the Swamp Land Act, being a present
grant, takes effect as of the date of that act, or of the admission
of the state into the Union, when this occurred afterwards."
From these expressions it is argued that the question of the
right of new states to claim the benefits conferred by
Page 110 U. S. 698
the provisions of the act has been settled. The case which was
then before the Court related only to the operation of the act in a
state which was in existence at the time of its passage, and called
for no consideration of its effect on new states. All that was said
as to new states was merely incidental to the main question, and by
no means intended as an authoritative declaration of the law
applicable to that class of cases. We feel quite at liberty,
therefore, to consider that question an open one, and to treat it
accordingly.
Donations of the public domain for any purpose are never to be
presumed. Those who claim against the government under legislative
grants must show a clear title. The grant under the act of 1850 was
to Arkansas and "the other states of the Union." Arkansas was an
existing state, and the grant was to all the states
in
praesenti. It was to operate upon existing things, and with
reference to an existing state of facts. It granted "the whole of
those swamp and overflowed lands, made unfit thereby for
cultivation, which shall remain unsold at the passage of this act."
The Secretary of the Interior was required to make out, "as soon as
practicable," lists and plats of lands, the greater part of which
were "wet and unfit for cultivation," and to transmit the lists,
etc., to the governor of the proper state. There is not a word in
the act to show that the grant was to be a continuing one. It was
to take effect at once, between an existing grantor and several
separate existing grantees. There were undoubtedly at that time
lands "wet and unfit for cultivation" in the territories as well as
in the states. Confessedly no grant was made to the territories or
any of them. This shows clearly the intention of Congress not to
dispose of any more swamp lands at that time and in that way than
those in the states. It was clearly within the power of Congress to
make the same grants to territories if it had been considered
desirable. Cases are numerous in which grants were made to
territories to aid in building railroads. The Act of March 3, 1857,
making the grant to the Territory of Minnesota, is one instance of
that Kind. The swamp land grants were made to enable the states to
construct the necessary levees and drains for the reclamation of
the lands. They were therefore
Page 110 U. S. 699
in aid of public improvements, and could as well be made to the
territories as to the states.
At the time of the original grant, it was not known when another
state would be admitted into the Union, nor what would then be the
wants of the United States or the condition of the swamp lands.
Events might happen that would render such a grant at that time
entirely inappropriate. Seven states have been admitted since --
three before the late civil war began, and four afterwards -- and
in six of them there must have been public lands which were in part
was and unfit for cultivation. Minnesota was the first and Oregon
the second state admitted. None were admitted until nearly eight
years after the act was passed, and the last did not come in until
nearly twenty-five years had elapsed. If the interpretation which
has been put on the act by the appellant is the true one, every
parcel of public land in the territories, as subdivided under the
law for sale, the greater part of which was "wet and unfit for
cultivation" on the 28th of September, 1850, was from that date
reserved to and set apart by the United States for donation to any
new state that might thereafter be admitted to the Union, within
whose boundaries it should fall. Nothing was reserved from the
railroad grant to the Territory of Minnesota on the 3d of March,
1857, except lands theretofore reserved by the United States for
some purpose, and if these lands were reserved at all, they were
for the purposes of this donation. If reserved, they could neither
be sold to purchasers nor settled upon for preemption, for the
reservation is of lands unsold at the date of the passage of the
act.
Such a reservation was clearly not in the mind of Congress, and
the subsequent legislation as well as the language of the act shows
it. Of the language of the act enough has already been said. We
therefore turn to the subsequent legislation. As has been seen,
Minnesota was admitted into the Union as a state on the 11th of
May, 1858. Oregon was admitted on the 14th of February, 1859. 11
Stat. 383, c. 33. In the acts of admission there were specific
grants of land to each state for certain purpose, but no reference
was made directly or indirectly to the swamp lands. All the grants
made were in
Page 110 U. S. 700
consideration, among other things, of an undertaking on the part
of the state, irrevocable without the consent of the United States,
that the state should never interfere with the primary disposal of
the soil within the same by the United States, or with any
regulations Congress might find necessary for securing the title in
the soil to
bona fide purchasers. It is of some
significance also that the act of Congress authorizing the people
of the Territory of Minnesota to form a state government
preparatory to their admission into the Union, c. 6, 11 Stat. 166,
in which the propositions for grants of lands were contained, was
passed on the same day with the act making the railroad grant under
which the appellee now claims. Following this on the 12th of March,
1860, nearly two years after Minnesota was admitted, and one year
after the admission of Oregon, the act extending in express terms
the provisions of the Swamp Land Act to these states was passed. In
this way, as we think, for the first time the swamp lands falling
within the description of the act of 1850, and then unsold or
otherwise disposed of, were granted. No similar laws have been
passed in favor of states which have since been admitted into the
Union. In 1873, when the statutes of the United States were
revised, the Swamp Land Acts were reenacted in sections 2479 and
some others which followed. § 2479 is as follows:
"To enable the several states (but not including the states of
Kansas, Nebraska, and Nevada) to construct the necessary levees and
drains to redeem the swamp and overflowed lands therein, the whole
of the swamp and overflowed lands made unfit thereby for
cultivation, and remaining unsold on or after the 28th day of
September, A.D. 1850, are granted and belong to the several states
respectively in which such lands are situated,
provided,
however, that said grant of swamp and overflowed lands, as to
the States of California, Minnesota, and Oregon, is subject to the
limitations, restrictions, and conditions hereinafter named and
specified as applicable to said three last states
respectively."
Then follows § 2490, continuing in force the specific provisions
in the Act of March 12, 1860, extending the benefits of the act to
Minnesota and Oregon.
Page 110 U. S. 701
Much stress was laid in the argument on the provision in the act
admitting Minnesota into the Union, to the effect that
"all the laws of the United States which are not locally
inapplicable shall have the same force and effect within that state
as in the other states of the Union."
This is disposed of by what has already been said. As the act of
1850 related only to states in existence when it was passed, it was
locally inapplicable to Minnesota until its provisions were
actually extended to that state by the Act of March 12, 1860. It
follows that the title of the railroad company under the act of
1857 is superior to that of the appellant. The lands were not at
the time of the passage of that act reserved to the United States
for any purpose, and they were not therefore excepted from its
operation.
The decree of the circuit court is affirmed.