In matters which require an executive officer of the United
States to exercise judgment or consideration, or which are
dependent upon his discretion, no rule will issue for a mandamus to
control his action.
Whether the island in the Mississippi River opposite St. Louis
known as Arsenal Island shall be surveyed and brought into the
market is a matter within executive discretion and judgment.
This was an application to the Supreme Court of the District of
Columbia for a mandamus to require the Secretary of the Interior to
cause a survey to be made of an island in the Mississippi opposite
St. Louis. Mandamus being refused, a writ of error was sued out.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case comes before us on writ of error to the Supreme
Page 116 U. S. 424
Court of the District of Columbia. The petitioner applied for a
writ of mandamus against the Secretary of the Interior to order the
survey of Arsenal Island, which is situated in the Mississippi
River opposite the City of St. Louis. He represents that he is the
head of a family, over twenty-one years of age, and a citizen of
the United States; that on the first of September, 1883, he made a
settlement in person on the island; that it contains about 230
acres, is ten feet above high water mark, is not subject to
overflow, is suitable for agricultural purposes, and subject to
preemption under the laws of the United States; that he inhabited
and had improved the land and erected a dwelling house thereon for
the purpose of obtaining a title thereto; that the land is not
mineral, has not been reserved by the government, and never been
surveyed; that there are no improvements on it except such as have
been placed by him, and that the general government has constructed
certain embankments and walls so that the island is now fast and
anchored, and not liable to be changed by the action of the
river.
He further states that in September, 1883, for the purpose of
obtaining a survey of the island in order that he might avail
himself of the rights he had acquired as such settler, he made
application in writing, according to the rules of the Interior
Department, to the Commissioner of the General Land Office for such
survey, stating that the island had never been surveyed by the
government, and that he was desirous that it should be brought into
the market according to the laws of Congress and the regulations of
the General Land Office relating to the disposal of lands embraced
in fragmentary surveys.
He further states that upon the hearing of the application, it
was claimed by the City of St. Louis that the island was formerly
known as the "Quarantine Island," and had been surveyed and set
apart to the city under the provisions of Acts of Congress of June
13, 1812, and of May 26, 1824, relating to school lands, but that
in fact the survey made was of an island above the place now
occupied by Arsenal Island, and that no part of the space embraced
by that survey is now covered by the present island, and in support
of this averment
Page 116 U. S. 425
states that the report made to the Secretary of the Interior by
the Engineer of the War Department, in charge of the government
works in the vicinity, shows that the island is not embraced within
that survey, and is the property not of the City of St. Louis, but
of the United States.
The Commissioner of the General Land Office rejected the
application, but transmitted the papers to the Secretary of the
Interior for his examination and instructions. The immediate
predecessor of the present Secretary concurred with the commission.
Upon the defendant's accession to office, the application was
renewed and rejected. The present petition was then laid before the
Supreme Court of the district, which refused the rule upon him. To
reverse its judgment and obtain the rule prayed, the case was
brought here.
The former Secretary in his opinion adverted to the drifting
character of the island, it being alleged to have changed 1,700
feet from its position when surveyed, to the works of the
government to stay its drifting, and give it permanence, and to the
title asserted to it by the City of St. Louis. He said that even
during the time of a survey, what would be a monument and a
boundary today might require a change tomorrow, and that therefore,
as long as the same causes continue to operate and make the island
a mere moving mass of alluvial deposits, it was useless to
establish corners and monuments, which would be subject to
immediate obliteration. The application to the present Secretary
was accompanied by evidence tending to show that the island was
fast and anchored, a review of the previous decision being sought
on the alleged ground of error in holding the island to be a moving
mass of alluvial deposits. The Secretary declined to review the
decision, and further held that it would be improper to order a
survey, inasmuch as the War Department, under appropriations for
the improvement of the river, was operating upon the island, and it
was unknown to what extent or for what purpose the government might
require the same in connection with the great public work about
which it was engaged.
Without treating the matters set forth in the opinions of
the
Page 116 U. S. 426
Secretaries as established facts, enough appears on the face of
the petition to show that a survey could not properly have been
ordered, and that there was no error in refusing a rule for a
mandamus.
It appears that under acts of Congress, an island situated some
distance above the site of the present island was surveyed and set
apart to the City of St. Louis. It is contended that the present
island represents the one surveyed, it having been carried down the
river by the action of the current. It certainly would be a matter
of doubt, requiring for its solution grave consideration, how far
the title of the city to the island is affected by this movement.
If any doubt may rightfully exist in the mind of the Secretary on
the subject, an answer is furnished to the application for a
mandamus directing him to order a survey to facilitate the
acquisition of that title by others.
It also appears by the petition, and the papers to which it
refers, and the legislation of Congress, that the government is
engaged in works connected with the improvement of the river to
stop the drifting character of the island and give it stability and
permanence. Expenditures largely exceeding any possible return from
the sale of the island would seem to indicate that the government
designs to appropriate it to special uses, and not to open it to
preemption and settlement. In the absence of positive enactment,
the Secretary might therefore properly withhold any action tending
to encourage a settlement there. This consideration alone is
sufficient answer to any rule for a mandamus.
It is settled by many decisions of this Court that in matters
which require judgment and consideration to be exercised by an
executive officer of the government or which are dependent upon his
discretion, no rule for a mandamus to control his action will
issue. It is only for ministerial acts in the performance of which
no exercise of judgment or discretion is required that the rule
will be granted.
Decatur v.
Paulding, 14 Pet. 499;
United
States v. Guthrie, 17 How. 284;
United
States v. Commissioner, 5 Wall. 563;
Litchfield v. Register and
Receiver, 9 Wall. 575,
76 U. S.
577.
Page 116 U. S. 427
Within this principle, there can be no question as to the
correctness of the action of the Supreme Court of the district. Its
judgment is therefore
Affirmed.