The Act approved March 2, 1567, c. 208, 14 Stat. 635, confirmed
to the widow and children of one Bouligny the one-sixth part,
amounting to 75,840 acres, of a certain land claim in Louisiana,
and enacted that, inasmuch as the land embraced in the claim had
been appropriated by the United States to other purposes,
certificates of new location, in eighty-acre lots, be issued to the
widow, in lieu of said lands, to be located on public lands. The
next Congress, twenty-eight days afterwards, and on March 30, 1867,
passed a joint resolution, which was approved by the President,
directing the Secretary of the Interior to suspend the execution of
the act "until the further order of Congress." No action had
meantime been taken by the General Land Office to carry out the
act. On a petition by
Page 129 U. S. 471
the widow for a mandamus to the Commissioner of the General Land
Office directing him to execute and deliver to her the
certificates:
"
Held:"
(1) The execution of the act was suspended not merely until the
further order of the same Congress which passed the joint
resolution, but until the further order of the legislative body
called, in Section 1 of article I of the Constitution, "a Congress
of the United States."
(2) The act did not vest in the beneficiaries a title to
specific land nor give them a vested right in the certificates
which were to be issued.
(3) No vested right amounting to property had attached at the
time of the approval of the joint resolution, and it did not
deprive the beneficiaries of any property or right of property in
violation of the Constitution.
(4) If the claim, founded on the act, amounted to a contract,
the demand for relief world be substantially a prayer for a
specific performance of the contract by the United States,
jurisdiction to grant which was not given by statute to the court
below.
Petition for a writ of mandamus. The case is stated in the
opinion.
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a writ of error to review a judgment of the Supreme
Court of the District of Columbia in general term. The writ is
brought by the United States, on the relation of Mary Elizabeth
Levey, intermarried with George Collins Levey, against Strother M.
Stockslager, Commissioner of the General Land Office.
Mary Elizabeth Levey filed a petition in the Supreme Court of
the District of Columbia praying for a writ of mandamus. The
petition set forth that the petitioner was formerly Mary Elizabeth
Bouligny, the widow of John E. Bouligny, deceased, and the person
named in the Act of Congress of March 2, 1867, hereinafter set
forth, and that she is now the wife of George Collins Levey, and
was such on the 29th of March, 1888. The act of Congress referred
to (chapter 208, 14 Stat. 635) was set forth in the petition, and
is in these words:
Page 129 U. S. 472
"
An act for the relief of the heirs of John E.
Bouligny"
"
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
the United States of America, in Congress assembled, that
there be, and hereby is, confirmed to Mary Elizabeth Bouligny,
Corrinne Bouligny, and Felice Bouligny, widow and children of John
E. Bouligny, deceased, the one-sixth part of the land claim of Jean
Antoine Bernard D'Autrive, in the State of Louisiana, said
one-sixth part amounting to seventy-five thousand eight hundred and
forty acres, and that inasmuch as the said land embraced in said
claim
have [has] been already appropriated by the United
States to other purposes, certificates of new location, in
eighty-acre lots, be issued to the said Mary Elizabeth Bouligny,
for her own benefit and that of her said minor children in lien of
said lands, to be located at any land office in the United States
upon any public lands subject to private entry at a price not
exceeding one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre. The
Commissioner of the General Land Office is hereby directed to issue
said certificates of new location in accordance with existing
regulations in such cases."
"Approved March 2, 1867."
The petition set forth that on the 6th of March, 1867, the
petitioner's attorney filed with the Commissioner of the General
Land Office a certified copy of said act and requested that the
certificates of new location named in the act be issued. That the
act was passed by the thirty-ninth Congress, which adjourned on the
3d of March, 1867. That at the next session of Congress, being the
fortieth Congress, the latter Congress, on the 30th of March, 1867,
passed the following joint resolution (No. 35, 15 Stat. 353):
"
Joint resolution directing the Secretary of the Interior to
suspend the execution of a law passed by the thirty-ninth Congress
for the relief of the heirs of John E. Bouligny"
"
Be it resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives
of the United States of America, in Congress assembled, that
the Secretary of the Interior be directed to suspend the
execution
Page 129 U. S. 473
of the act entitled"
"An Act for the relief of the heirs of John E. Bouligny,
approved March second, eighteen hundred and sixty-seven, until the
further order of Congress. Approved March 30, 1867."
That Congress had made no "further order" in the matter. That
the defendant was, on the 29th of March, 1888, and since had been,
and now is, Commissioner of the General Land Office of the United
States. That the petitioner, on that day, demanded of him as such
Commissioner that he issue to her, for her own benefit and that of
her minor children named in the act, certificates of new location
for 75,840 acres, in 80-acre lots, locatable at any land office in
the United States, upon any public lands subject to private entry
at a price not exceeding $1.25 per acre. That such demand was made
in writing at the office of the said Commissioner in Washington.
That he, on the 12th of April, 1888, refused to grant that request.
That on the 13th of April, 1888, she duly appealed from the
decision and refusal of the Commissioner to the Secretary of the
Interior. That the said secretary, on the 3d of May, 1888, approved
the decision of the Commissioner, and that she had theretofore
repeatedly made application to the Commissioners of the General
Land Office to issue said certificates of new location, and always
met with a refusal to issue them.
The petition prayed that a writ of mandamus might issue to the
said Commissioner directing him to execute and deliver such
certificates to her.
On an order to show cause, returnable in the general term of the
court, the respondent put in an answer setting forth that no action
had been taken by the General Land Office for the purpose of
carrying out and giving effect to the provisions of the Act of
March 2, 1867, prior to the passage of the joint resolution of
March 30, 1867; that, by the passage of such joint resolution, the
power of the respondent to issue the certificates was suspended
until the further order of Congress; that Congress had made no
further order; that the Act of March 2, 1867, did not give to the
relator or to the heirs of John E. Bouligny a vested right to the
certificates; that, as the Act of
Page 129 U. S. 474
March 2, 1867, directed the Commissioner to issue the
certificates "in accordance with existing regulations in such
cases," it would have imposed upon the respondent the exercise of
an official duty within his discretion and not reviewable by the
court; that such official duty is not a ministerial duty; that if
the relator had acquired a vested right to the certificates under
the act, a remedy was afforded in the Court of Claims under §
1059 to recover their value, provided the petition setting forth
the claim had been presented to the court within six years after
the claim first accrued, and that the petition ought to be
dismissed. The relator put in a demurrer to the answer on the
ground that it did not set up any legal defense; that the remedy in
the Court of Claims, suggested by the answer, did not exist in law;
that the right in the certificates, given by the act of Congress,
was a vested right, which could not be and was not taken away by
the joint resolution, and that the joint resolution was
unconstitutional and void. The court, in general term, overruled
the demurrer, and, the relator electing to stand upon it, a
judgment was entered, discharging the rule to show cause, and
dismissing the petition.
An opinion was delivered by the court in general term. It held
that the Act of March 2, 1867, was not a grant, and nothing passed
by it; that the Louisiana lands named in it were never possessed by
the confirmees, and were not to be possessed by them; that under
such circumstances, there could be no confirmation in regard to
them; that the provision for certificates in lieu of them was not a
grant, and nothing passed by it, because it was wholly executory;
that, the certificates never having been prepared or come into
existence, the effect of the joint resolution could at most, only
be to impair the obligation of a contract, and was not the taking
of private property; that the contract supposed to exist by virtue
of the Act of March 2, 1867, could not be enforced, either by the
executive or the courts, until the United States should grant
permission for such enforcement, nor after such permission had been
withdrawn; that the power to perform the contract, and the right to
insist upon its performance, existed only while such
Page 129 U. S. 475
permission existed; that the relief sought by the relator
amounted to a specific performance of the alleged contract of the
United States by one of its officers; that this could not be
enforced when the United States had withdrawn its consent; that a
writ of mandamus to compel the performance of an official act by a
public officer could not be employed to enforce the specific
performance by the United States of a contract, and that the
respondent had no official duty or power in the premises since the
passage of the joint resolution.
The principal question argued at the bar was as to the effect of
the joint resolution in suspending the execution of the prior act.
There is nothing in the suggestion of the relator that the joint
resolution intended only a suspension of the execution of the act
during the existence of the fortieth Congress and until that
Congress should further order. We do not think that such is the
proper construction of the joint resolution. It suspends the
execution of the act "until the further order of Congress" -- that
is, until the further order of the legislative body called, in
Section 1 of Article I of the Constitution, "a Congress of the
United States," consisting of a Senate and House of
Representatives, in which are declared to be vested all legislative
powers granted by the Constitution. The joint resolution was one of
the character mentioned in Section 7 of Article I of the
Constitution, to which the concurrence of the Senate and House of
Representatives was necessary, and which was approved by the
President, and took effect only on such approval. It had all the
characteristics and effects of the Act of March 2, 1867, which
became a law by the approval of the President. Until Congress
should further order, the operation of the Act of March 2, 1867,
was by the joint resolution effectually suspended.
The present case is not at all like the cases of which
Morrow v. Whitney, 95 U. S. 551,
112 U. S. 112 U.S.
693, is a type. The statute involved in that case was the Act of
February 21, 1823, c. 10, 3 Stat. 724, in reference to land claims
in the Territory of Michigan. The third section of that act
directed that patents should be issued to persons whose claims to
land had been regularly filed with the commissioners
Page 129 U. S. 476
appointed under the Act of May 11, 1820, c. 85, 3 Stat. 572, and
whose claims had been favorably reported on by said Commissioners,
and the statute confirmed such persons in their claims. That was a
statute confirming to persons claims to specific lands, and the
patents were to issue for those very lands. The principle
established by the decisions of this Court in regard to such cases
is one always to be adhered to. We do not depart from it in the
present case, but only hold that it is not applicable here. The
principle thus applied in
Morrow v. Whitney, supra, is
that an act of Congress recognizing the validity of the claim of an
individual to specific land, as against the United States, operates
to transfer to him the interest of the United States, as
effectually as a grant could have done; and where such individual
has the possession of the land or some estate in it and the United
States still hold the legal title to it, the confirmation is
substantially a conveyance of an estate or right in the land by the
United States to such individual; and where the land has boundaries
which are clearly defined or are capable of identification, such
confirmation perfects the claimant's title to the very land,
without the issuing of any patent therefor. But this doctrine
necessarily applies only to a case where the United States intend
by the statute to transfer to and vest in the beneficiary, a title
to specific land. The present is not such a case. What is stated by
the Act of March 2, 1867, to be confirmed is "the one-sixth part of
the land claim" mentioned, said one-sixth amounting to 75,840
acres, but the statute states that the land embraced in the claim
has "been already appropriated by the United States to other
purposes." Therefore the beneficiaries could acquire no title to it
from the United States. The act then proceeds to provide for the
issuing of certificates of new location, not covering any part of
the 75,840 acres which had been already appropriated by the United
States to other purposes, nor covering any specific public lands.
The new lands were to be "in lieu" of the lands lost, and were to
be selected and located at some land office, and upon public lands
which were subject to private entry, and were so subject at a price
not exceeding $1.25 per
Page 129 U. S. 477
acre, and the certificates were to be issued by the Commissioner
of the General Land Office "in accordance with existing regulations
in such cases."
Nor did the Act of March 2, 1867, give to the widow and children
of Bouligny a vested right in the certificates of new location
which were to be issued. No certificates were prepared for issue;
no step was taken by the Commissioner of the General Land Office
toward issuing them; no new lands were selected or located, and the
whole thing remained
in fieri, and subject to the control
of Congress.
The cases, cited by the counsel for the relator, of
Fletcher v.
Peck, 6 Cranch 87,
Dartmouth
College v. Woodward, 4 Wheat. 518,
McGee v.
Mathis, 4 Wall. 143, and
United States v.
Schurz, 102 U. S. 378, do
not apply to the present case. There was here no contract between
the United States and the widow and children of Bouligny in the
sense of the cases referred to. In
Fletcher v. Peck, a
tract of land had been sold by the Governor of Georgia, under the
authority of an act of the legislature, to persons who had conveyed
it to purchasers for a valuable consideration without notice. It
was held that a subsequent legislature could not afterwards repeal
the act on the ground that it had been passed through bribery. In
Dartmouth College v. Woodward, it was held that a charter
granted to a private corporation was a contract. In
McGee v.
Mathis, it was held that a direct grant of land by the United
States to a state was a contract, and in that case the scrip had
been issued by the state, and was in the hands of the person
entitled to receive it, and for that reason it was held that it
represented land, and that the act under which it had been issued
could not be repealed by the state. In
United States v.
Schurz, a patent for land had been signed, sealed, perfected,
and recorded, and the power of the Land Department over it had
ceased, so that a writ of mandamus to the Secretary of the
Interior, to deliver it to the person in whose favor it had been
made out would lie.
It is also contended for the relator that she acquired, under
the Act of March 2, 1867, a right which amounted to property, and
of which she could not be deprived by the United States
Page 129 U. S. 478
under the joint resolution, because that was not due process of
law. But we are of opinion that the cases cited on that subject by
the relator are not applicable. Inasmuch as nothing had been done
by the officers of the Land Department under the Act of March 2,
1867, and no certificates had been made out, and the whole matter
still remained executory, no vested right had attached at the time
of the approval of the joint resolution. Therefore that resolution
did not deprive the widow and children of any property, or right of
property, in violation of the Constitution. The transaction was
merely the ordinary one of a direction by statute to a public
officer to perform a certain duty, and a subsequent direction to
him by statute, before he had performed that duty, or had entered
upon its performance, not to perform it.
Williams v.
Commissioners, 35 Me. 345;
Butler v. Palmer, 1 Hill
324;
Hampton v. Commonwealth, 19 Penn.St. 329; Sedgwick on
Stat. & Const.Law, Pomeroy's notes, 2d ed., 112.
But if the contention of the relator that the provisions of the
Act of March 2, 1867, amounted to a contract between the United
States and the widow and children were correct, that very fact
would show that the relief here sought could not be granted to the
relator. She prays for a writ a mandamus against the Commissioner
of the General Land Office to issue and deliver to her the
certificates of new location; but in case her claim were in fact
founded on contract, her demand for relief would substantially
amount to a prayer that the United States be decreed specifically
to perform the contract. No jurisdiction is given by any statute to
the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia of a suit against the
United States or a public officer for the specific performance of a
contract made by the United States.
On the whole case, we are of opinion that the judgment of the
court below, in general term, must be
Affirmed.