Under the will of a testatrix who resided in New York, Cornell
University, a corporation of that state, was made her residuary
legatee. It was provided in its charter that it might hold real and
personal property to an amount not exceeding $3,000,000 in the
aggregate. The Court of Appeals of New York having held that it had
no power to take or hold any more real and personal property than
$3,000,000 in the aggregate at the time of the death of the
testatrix, and that, under the jurisprudence of New York, her heirs
at law and next of kin had a right to avail themselves of that
fact, if it existed, in the controversy about the disposition of
the residuary estate, this Court held that such decision of the
Court of Appeals did not involve any federal question and was
binding upon this Court.
This Court concurred with the Court of Appeals, 111 N.Y. 66, in
holding that at the time of the death of the testatrix, the
property held by Cornell University exceeded $3,000,000, and
therefore it could not take her legacy.
A federal question was involved in this case, arising under the
Act of Congress of July 2, 1862, 12 Stat. 503, c. 130, granting
lands to the New York to provide a college for the benefit of
agriculture and the mechanic arts.
The legislation of New York on the subject, in its Acts of May
5, 1863, May 14, 1863, April 27, 1865, April 10, 1866, May 4, 1868,
and May 18, 1880, and the contract of the state with Ezra Cornell,
of August 4, 1866, selling to him the land scrip received by the
state from the United States under the act of Congress did not
violate that act.
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD stated the case as follows:
This is a proceeding which originated in the Surrogate's Court
of the County of Tompkins, in the State of New York. John McGraw, a
resident of Ithaca, in that county, died May 4, 1877, leaving, as
his only child and heir, Jennie McGraw, who on the 14th of July,
1880 at Berlin, Germany, intermarried with Willard Fiske, and died
September 30, 1881 at Ithaca, her place of residence, after
reaching the age of 41, without issue, leaving her husband
surviving her. John
Page 136 U. S. 153
McGraw left a last will and testament, which was duly admitted
to probate by the surrogate of Tompkins County, and of which his
daughter, Jennie McGraw, and Douglass Boardman, and the survivor of
them, were made sole executors. His daughter, Jennie McGraw Fiske,
also left a last will and testament, by which she made Douglass
Boardman her sole executor, and which was duly proved and admitted
to probate by the surrogate. Excepting about from $130,000 to
$150,000 in value, which came to her by devise and bequest from her
grandfather John Southworth, the title to the estate and property
which formed the subject of disposition by her will came through
the will of her father, John McGraw.
On the 8th of January, 1883, after due citation of all parties
interested, there was a judicial settlement of the accounts of
Douglass Boardman as executor of Mrs. Fiske's estate, and a decree
entered by the surrogate confirming all payments theretofore made
by the executor and directing the balance of said estate to be paid
to Cornell University as her residuary legatee, and also a decree
settling the accounts of said Boardman as surviving executor of
John McGraw, and transferring the balance of his estate to the
estate of Mrs. Fiske.
On the 6th of September, 1883, on the petition of Willard Fiske
as her surviving husband, the decree settling her estate was opened
by the surrogate, and he was permitted to be heard with like effect
as if he had appeared on the 8th of January, 1883, such opening
being without prejudice to payments made or acts done by the
executor in pursuance of her will and of said decree, but leaving
the validity and effect of those acts and the rights of the
respective parties therein for future adjudication, and on the 24th
of October, 1883, a similar order was made, opening the said decree
of settlement in both estates on the application of certain persons
as the heirs and next of kin of Mrs. Fiske and also on the
application of certain legatees and devisees under John McGraw's
will. Proofs were taken. The case was heard by the surrogate in
November, 1885, and on the 25th of May, 1886, he made and filed his
findings, and entered his decision and decree affirming
Page 136 U. S. 154
in all things his original decrees as to the two estates. On the
23d of June, 1886, the several contestants made and served their
exceptions to his findings, and duly appealed to the supreme court
from his decision and decree. They also requested him to make
certain findings upon questions of fact and rulings upon questions
of law, some of which requests he granted and some of which he
refused, and exceptions were taken of his refusals.
The controversy in the case, so far as it presents itself for
our consideration, is between Cornell University, on the one side,
and the husband, heirs at law, and next of kin of Mrs. Fiske, on
the other side. It was provided by section 5 of the charter of
Cornell University that it might "hold real and personal property
to an amount not exceeding three millions of dollars in the
aggregate," and the material question in dispute is as to whether,
at the time of the death of Mrs. Fiske on the 30th of September,
1881, the university held real and personal property to the amount
of $3,000,000 in the aggregate.
Of the findings of fact made by the surrogate, the following are
the only ones which seem material to the case, as it is before
us:
"62. The Cornell University has had at all times since its
incorporation, and now has, legal and corporate capacity to take,
by gift, grant, or devise, real property in the States of Michigan,
Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, Ohio, Indiana, Kansas, and New Jersey,
and such is the law in those states, respectively, concerning
foreign corporations like the university."
"63. The Cornell University has legal capacity to take, and did
take, by devise, all the real property, the title to which was in
Jennie McGraw Fiske at the time of her death, under her last will
and testament, situate in the states of Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa,
Ohio, Indiana, and New Jersey."
"66. The absolute title to the whole of the land situated in New
Jersey passed, under the will of Mrs. Fiske, to Cornell
University."
"75. At the date of Mrs. Fiske's death, September 30, 1881,
Cornell University had held and owned real and personal
Page 136 U. S. 155
property which it derived from the founder and other friends of
the university, or which was purchased with funds furnished by
them, or with the income of such funds, and which property,
September 30, 1881, was of the value of five hundred and
ninety-eight thousand five hundred and eighty-eight and 65/100
dollars ($598,588.65) in the aggregate."
Then follows a description, by items, of the property thus held
and owned by the university, with the separate value of each item,
as of September 30, 1881. The last item is as follows:
"The farm and grounds on which the university buildings are
located, consisting of about 260 acres, including the buildings and
reservoir, $69,683.33."
"93. The following is a recapitulation of the findings of fact
relating to the property of Cornell University,
viz.:"
"September 30, 1881, Cornell University had, held, and owned the
property derived from individuals, and described in the foregoing
seventy-fifth finding of fact, to the amount and value of not
exceeding $598,588.65 in the aggregate. At the same time, Cornell
University had, held, and owned the property derived from the
nation and state, and described in the foregoing findings, to the
amount and value of not exceeding $2,088,012.78 in the aggregate,
as follows: Western land contracts, $439,834.22; Western lands,
$1,648,178.56; total, $2,088,012.78."
"But under and in pursuance of the Cornell contract of August 4,
1866, the whole net proceeds of the avails of said last-mentioned
property, being the proceeds of the sale of said college land
scrip, or lands located therewith, was at that time due or payable
by Cornell University to the State of New York, and the total
amount and value of the property had, held, and owned by Cornell
University, September 30, 1881, over and above its obligations to
the State of New York, as defined by said contract, was
$598,588.65."
"At that time Cornell University had, held, and owned the right
to"
"the income, revenue, and avails which should be received from
the investment of the proceeds of the sale of the lands, or the
scrip therefor, or any part thereof, granted to the State of New
York by the Act of Congress entitled 'An act
Page 136 U. S. 156
donating public lands to the several states and territories
which may provide colleges for the benefit of agriculture and the
mechanic arts,' approved July 2, 1862,"
"which right to said 'income, revenue, and avails' was granted,
and, for a valuable consideration paid by Ezra Cornell, was
contracted, to Cornell University by section 6 of its charter. The
right to the income, etc., of the proceeds of said sales, September
30, 1881, extended to the college land scrip fund and Cornell
endowment fund as they then existed, and to all the proceeds of
said sales which would or might come to said funds by virtue of the
sale to Ezra Cornell of said college land scrip under his contract
of August 4, 1866."
"At that time, also, Cornell University had possession of the
Cornell endowment fund, and the State of New York had possession of
the college land scrip fund."
TABULAR STATEMENT
Funds derived from individuals, described
in seventy-fifth finding of fact . . . . . . . $ 598,588.65
Funds derived from nation and state:
Western lands. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1,648,178.56
Western land contracts . . . . . . . . . . . . 439,834.22
Cornell endowment fund . . . . . . . . . . . . 128,596.61
College land scrip fund. . . . . . . . . . . . 473,402.87
-------------
$3,288,600.91
"Making the total funds which belonged to Cornell University,
September 30, 1881, under section 5 of its charter, $598,588.65,
and the total funds already realized, and to be realized, only the
right to the income of which at that date belonged to Cornell
University, under section 6, was $2,690,012.26."
"94. I find that the sum of all the property, real and personal,
which the said Cornell University had taken before September 30,
1881, by gift, grant, devise, or bequest, did not exceed one
million and six hundred thousand dollars."
"95. It has not been proved nor established that the property of
the Cornell University, owned and held by it on the
Page 136 U. S. 157
30th day of September, 1881, the date of the death of Jennie
McGraw Fiske, together with that devised and bequeathed by her last
will and testament to said university, exceeded the sum of three
millions of dollars."
On his findings of fact, the surrogate decided and held as
follows, as conclusions of law:
"I decide and hold as conclusions of law that Douglass Boardman,
as executor of the last will and testament of Jennie McGraw Fiske,
deceased, and as sole surviving executor of John McGraw, deceased,
and Cornell University, are entitled to a decree directing:"
"(a) that the accounts of Douglass Boardman as executor of
Jennie McGraw Fiske, deceased, and as sole surviving executor of
John McGraw, deceased, filed in the Tompkins County Surrogate's
office on the 8th day of January, 1883, be and in all respects is
allowed, and the decrees, including the summary statements therein
contained, recorded and entered upon said accounts, be in all
respects ratified and affirmed, including all payments heretofore
made by said executor to Cornell University;"
"(b) that the said executor pay over to Cornell University the
sum of one hundred forty-one thousand six hundred and seventy-six
and 72/100 dollars ($141,676.72), being the balance on hand January
1, 1885, and ready for distribution;"
"(c) and adjudging that said Cornell University is the owner and
entitled to all the rest, residue, and remainder of said estate,
and directing said executor to pay the same, when sold, to said
Cornell University, in money or in such other form or at such other
time as may be mutually agreed upon between said Cornell University
and said executor."
The decree of the surrogate being in accordance with his
findings and conclusions of law, the husband and the heirs at law
and next of kin of Mrs. Fiske appealed to the supreme court of the
State of New York from the whole of the decree, the appeal being
taken both upon the facts and upon questions of law. The case was
heard by the general term of that court, and is reported in 45 Hun.
354. Judge Hardin, the presiding judge, delivered an opinion, in
which Judge Follett concurred,
Page 136 U. S. 158
and Judge Merwin also delivered a concurring opinion. The three
judges were unanimous in reversing the decree of the surrogate.
In the judgment entered by the general term of the supreme court
on the 14th of December, 1887, the surrogate's finding of fact
numbered 62 was modified so as to read as follows:
"62. The Cornell University has had at all times since its
incorporation, and now has, legal and corporate capacity to take,
by gift, grant, or devise, real property, in the States of
Michigan, Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, Ohio, Indiana, Kansas, and
New Jersey, subject to the limitation in its charter, and such is
the law in those states, respectively, concerning foreign
corporations like the university."
His finding of fact numbered 63 was reversed and stricken out.
His finding, above recited, in No. 66, as to the title to the land
situate in New Jersey was reversed and stricken out. All those
parts of his finding numbered 75 which fixed the value of the last
item mentioned therein at $68,683.33, and which fixed the total
value of the items named in that finding at $598,588.65, and each
clause in any of his findings which recapitulated those values,
respectively at the sums so stated, especially so much of finding
numbered 93 as stated that, on the 30th of September, 1881,
"Cornell University had, held, and owned the property derived
from individuals, and described in the foregoing seventy-fifth
finding of fact, to the amount and value of not exceeding
$598,588.65 in the aggregate,"
were reversed and stricken out, but only insofar as the
aggregate of $598,588.65 was made up of the last item in the
seventy-fifth finding, namely, the farm and university buildings
located thereon, valued by him at $69,683.33. The following parts
of his finding numbered 93 were reversed and stricken out:
"But, under and in pursuance of the Cornell contract of August
4, 1866, the whole net proceeds of the avails of said
last-mentioned property, being the proceeds of the sale of said
college land scrip, on lands located therewith, was at that time
due or payable by Cornell University to the State of New York, and
the total amount and value of the property had, held, and owned by
Cornell University September
Page 136 U. S. 159
30, 1881, over and above its obligations to the State of New
York, as defined by said contract, was $598,588.65, . . . making
the total funds which belonged to Cornell University, September 30,
1881, under section 5 of its charter, $598,588.65, and the total
funds already realized and to be realized, only the right to the
income of which at that date belonged to Cornell University under
section 6 was $2,690,012.26."
His finding numbered 95 was reversed and stricken out. The
judgment of the supreme court then went on to provide as
follows:
"And it is further found, adjudged, and decided by this Court in
pursuance of the statute in such case made and provided that at the
death of Jennie McGraw Fiske, September 30, 1881, the value of the
farm and grounds on which the university buildings are located,
consisting of about 260 acres, including the buildings and
reservoir, was the sum of $400,000, instead of $69,683.33, as found
by the surrogate, and the total value of the items set forth in the
finding of the surrogate numbered 75, including this last item,
viz., $400,000, was $928.905.32. And it is further found,
decided, and adjudged by this Court that the property of the
Cornell University which was held and owned by it when Jennie
McGraw Fiske died, on the 30th day of September, 1881, amounted in
value to the sum of $3,015,414.71, made up as follows:"
Funds derived from individuals, described
in the seventy-fifth finding of fact,
excluding the last item thereof, as
valued by the surrogate . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 528,905.32
The last item in said finding,
viz.,
farm of about 260 acres and university
buildings, as valued by this Court. . . . . . . 400,000.00
Property derived from Cornell contracts
with the state, as valued by the
surrogate in his findings:
Western lands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1,648,178.56
Page 136 U. S. 160
Western land contracts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 439,334.22
Cornell endowment fund. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128,596.61
-------------
Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3,145,014.71
Less amount due to the college land scrip
fund for the last 30 cents an acre on
432,000 acres . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129,600.00
-------------
Balance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $3,015,414.71
"Making the total funds which belonged to Cornell University
September 30, 1881, under section five of its charter,
$3,015,414.71."
"And it is further found, decided, and adjudged that there was
at that time due to the college land scrip fund, and to be treated
as a part thereof, the sum of $129,600, mentioned above."
"And it is further found, decided, and adjudged that the college
land scrip fund, consisting of $473,402.87, together with the sum
of $129,600 as found above, is not the property of Cornell
University, and should not be reckoned or included as a part
thereof, of subject to its charter limitation."
"And this Court does further find and decide that at the date of
the death of said Jennie McGraw Fiske, the said Cornell University
held and owned real and personal property, of which the yearly
income or revenue was more than ($25,000) twenty-five thousand
dollars, exclusive of the college land scrip fund then held by the
Comptroller of the State of New York for the benefit of said
university, and such yearly income and revenue was derived in part
from lands and avails of sales of land which came to Cornell
University through the Cornell contract of August 4, 1866."
"And it is further found, decided, and adjudged by this Court
that at the time of the death of Jennie McGraw Fiske, the Cornell
University had already reached the limit of property prescribed by
its charter, as found above, and was not entitled to, and could
not, take or hold any of the property or funds devised or
bequeathed to it by her last will and testament,
Page 136 U. S. 161
and never had any right, title, or interest in or to the same,
or any part thereof, and that at her deceased the legal right and
title in and to all of the property and funds so devised and
bequeathed by her to the Cornell University passed to and vested in
the appellants according to their several rights therein as between
themselves, as the same may hereafter appear."
The judgment then went on to reverse the surrogate's decree of
May 25, 1886, with costs to be paid by the executor out of the
funds of the estate, and to order the proceedings to be remitted to
the surrogate, and that he enter a decree in conformity with the
judgment of the supreme court, and make a distribution to the
appellants according to their respective rights as between
themselves -- they having already agreed upon such rights -- of all
the property in the hands of the executor of Mrs. Fiske, after
paying debts, expenses, and legacies other than those to Cornell
University, together with all the property and funds which had come
into the possession of the executor, and which he had delivered or
paid over to Cornell University, and that the university restore
into his hands all money and property received from him, and all
dividends, interest, and income therefrom, received by the
university, less any expenses necessarily incurred in investing and
managing the same, and that the surrogate ascertain and fix the
amount so received by the university from the executor, with the
gains, profits, and income thereof, less such expenses, and enforce
restitution of the same to the executor by a decree.
Boardman, as executor of John McGraw and of Mrs. Fiske, and also
Cornell University, appealed to the Court of Appeals of the State
of New York from the judgment of December 14, 1887. The Court of
Appeals affirmed the judgment and, a remittitur from that court
having been sent to the supreme court, an order was entered in the
latter court on the 12th of December, 1888, making the judgment of
the Court of Appeals the judgment of the supreme court and awarding
the costs of the Court of Appeals against the executor and the
university.
Page 136 U. S. 162
The opinion of the Court of Appeals, delivered by Judge Peckham,
is reported in 111 N.Y. 66. The judges were unanimous, except that
Judge Finch took no part. Cornell University and Boardman, as
executor of John McGraw and of Mrs. Fiske, have brought the case to
this Court by a writ of error directed to the Supreme Court of the
State of New York.
Page 136 U. S. 174
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
The questions for consideration here fall within a narrow
compass, for they can embrace only federal questions. The Court of
Appeals, in its opinion, discussed only two questions: (1) whether
Cornell University had power to take and hold property of the value
of more than $3,000,000, and, (2) if it had no such power, whether
it held real and personal property in the aggregate up to such
limit at the time of the death of Mrs. Fiske, on the 30th of
September, 1881. The first question was examined most elaborately
by that court, and it arrived at the conclusions that the
university had no power to take or hold any more real and personal
property than $3,000,000 in the aggregate at the time of the death
of Mrs. Fiske, and that, under the jurisprudence of the State of
New York, her husband and her heirs at law and next of kin had a
right to avail themselves of the fact, if it existed, in the
controversy before the court, that at the time of her death, on the
30th of September, 1881, the university already held real and
personal property up to the proscribed limit. The propositions thus
decided by the Court of Appeals do not involve any federal
question. They depend entirely upon the construction of the
provisions of the charter of the university and upon the municipal
law of the State of New York. The decision upon those questions is
binding upon this
Page 136 U. S. 175
Court in the present case. Therefore the only question subject
to review by us is whether the property held by the university
prior to and at the time of the death of Mrs. Fiske on the 30th of
September, 1881, exceeded the amount which by law it could hold, it
a federal question is involved in that proposition. The Court of
Appeals decided that the property so held by the university
exceeded $3,000,000.
It is contended by the defendants in error that in the
proceedings in the state courts the university did not "claim" any
"title, right, privilege, or immunity" under any statute of the
United States, or which was derived directly or indirectly from any
such statute; that even if the judgment of the Court of Appeals was
binding as between the university and the state, the latter being a
stranger to the proceeding, the title of the university to the
lands and land contracts conveyed to it by Cornell, if held under
the act of Congress involved in the controversy has been affirmed,
and not denied, by the state court; that assuming that the decision
of the Court of Appeals was binding as between the university and
the state, and that the right of the university to the lands and
contracts conveyed to it by Cornell was involved in the proceeding,
still the writ of error will not lie, because the state court
decided not against the title of the university, but against the
title of the state; that the decision of the Court of Appeals did
not affirm the validity of any statute of the state which the
plaintiffs in error claimed to be in contravention of any act of
Congress, nor was the validity of any such statute "drawn in
question" in that court; that the plaintiffs in error did not draw
in question in the state court the validity of any authority
exercised by or under the state, nor was there any decision in the
state court in favor of an authority so exercised, and so
questioned by the plaintiffs in error, and that, aside from any
construction of the act of Congress of which the plaintiffs in
error complain as that on which the Court of Appeals based any
conclusion, there were other grounds which would have led to the
same result if the construction of such act of Congress insisted
upon by the plaintiffs in error had been adopted by the court.
Page 136 U. S. 176
On the other hand, it is insisted by the plaintiffs in error
that this Court has jurisdiction to review the judgment of the
state court under the second clause of section 709 of the Revised
Statutes, because there was drawn in question the validity of
statutes of the State of New York, and of an authority exercised
under those statutes, on the ground of their being repugnant, as
they were finally construed by the state court, to the provisions
of an act of Congress. Without discussing this question of
jurisdiction, it is sufficient to say that a majority of the Court
are of opinion that this Court has jurisdiction. As our conclusion
is that the judgment of the state court must be affirmed, it is not
important to discuss at any length the question of jurisdiction,
because, whether the writ of error is dismissed or whether the
judgment is affirmed, the result is the same -- of allowing the
judgment of the state court to stand in full force.
We proceed now to give our views as to the case upon its merits.
The conclusion of the Court of Appeals, in its concurrence with the
supreme court that the property of the university exceeded
$3,000,000, was based upon the modifications made by the supreme
court, in its judgment, of the finding of the surrogate as to the
value of the buildings and grounds. The Court of Appeals, in its
opinion (p. 131), states that it agrees with the supreme court in
those modifications, although it was probably bound by the findings
of that court, as there was contradictory evidence in regard to
such value. This Court certainly is bound by the findings of the
supreme court and of the Court of Appeals on that subject. The
remainder of the questions before us depends wholly upon
documentary evidence and upon the construction of statutes and of
written papers. The Court of Appeals, in approaching the question
as to whether the property in controversy, if taken and held by the
university, would exceed the amount which by law it could hold,
says (p. 113):
"The decision of such question depends partly upon the view
which should be taken of the character of the holding under which
the university now possesses certain property, which is described
in the finding of the surrogate
Page 136 U. S. 177
as property derived from the nation and state, and which he
finds amounted to $2,088,012.78, and which was made up, as he also
finds of Western land contracts, $439,834.22, and of Western lands
to the amount of $1,648,178.56, and he states, as part of this
finding, that this total of $2,088,012.78 was due or payable by the
university to the state, or, in other words, that the university
owed the state that sum, and consequently it should not be regarded
as any part of its property. This finding has not been concurred in
by the general term, which has modified it by holding that the same
is to be taken into account as part of the property of the
university. The state of facts under which the question arises is
undisputed, and it becomes a question of law as to what is the
proper legal inference to the drawn from the undisputed facts, and
the decision of that question is reviewable in this court."
On the 2d of July, 1862, Congress passed the following act, 12
Stat. 503, c. 130:
"An act donating public lands to the several states and
territories which may provide colleges for the benefit of
agriculture and the mechanic arts."
"
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
the United States of America in Congress assembled that there
be granted to the several states, for the purposes hereinafter
mentioned, an amount of public land, to be apportioned to each
state, a quantity equal to thirty thousand acres for each senator
and representative in Congress to which the states are respectively
entitled by the apportionment under the census of eighteen hundred
and sixty,
provided that no mineral lands shall be
selected or purchased under the provisions of this act."
"SEC. 2.
And be it further enacted that the land
aforesaid, after being surveyed, shall be apportioned to the
several states in sections or subdivisions of sections, not less
than one-quarter of a section, and whenever there are public lands
in a state subject to sale at private entry at one dollar and
twenty-five cents per acre, the quantity to which said state shall
be entitled shall be selected from such lands within the limits of
such state, and the Secretary of the Interior is hereby
directed
Page 136 U. S. 178
to issue to each of the states in which there is not the
quantity of public lands subject to sale at private entry at one
dollar and twenty-five cents per acre, to which said state may be
entitled under the provisions of this act, land scrip to the amount
in acres for the deficiency of its distributive share, said scrip
to be sold by said states and the proceeds thereof applied to the
uses and purposes prescribed in this act, and for no other use or
purpose whatsoever,
provided that in no case shall any
state to which land scrip may thus be issued be allowed to locate
the same within the limits of any other state or of any territory
of the United States, but their assignees may thus locate said land
scrip upon any of the unappropriated lands of the United States
subject to sale at private entry at one dollar and twenty-five
cents or less per acre,
and provided further that not more
than one million acres shall be located by such assignees in anyone
of the states,
and provided further that no such location
shall be made before one year from the passage of this act."
"SEC. 3.
And be it further enacted that all the
expenses of management, superintendence, and taxes from date of
selection of said lands, previous to their sales, and all expenses
incurred in the management and disbursement of the moneys which may
be received therefrom, shall be paid by the states to which they
may belong out of the Treasury of said states, so that the entire
proceeds of the sale of said lands shall be applied, without any
diminution whatever, to the purposes hereinafter mentioned."
"SEC. 4.
And be it further enacted that all moneys
derived from the sale of the lands aforesaid by the states to which
the lands are apportioned, and from the sales of land scrip
hereinbefore provided for, shall be invested in stocks of the
United States, or of the states, or some other safe stocks,
yielding not less than five percentum upon the par value of said
stocks, and that the moneys so invested shall constitute a
perpetual fund, the capital of which shall remain forever
undiminished (except so far as may be provided in § fifth of
this act) and the interest of which shall be inviolably
appropriated, by each state which may take and claim the benefit of
this act
Page 136 U. S. 179
to the endowment, support, and maintenance of at least one
college where the leading object shall be, without excluding other
scientific and classical studies, and including military tactics,
to teach such branches of learning as are related to agriculture
and the mechanic arts in such manner as the legislatures of the
states may respectively prescribe, in order to promote the liberal
and practical education of the industrial classes in the several
pursuits and professions in life."
"SEC. 5.
And be it further enacted that the grant of
land and land scrip hereby authorized shall be made on the
following conditions, to which, as well as to the provisions
hereinbefore contained, the previous assent of the several states
shall be signified by legislative acts:"
"First. If any portion of the fund invested as provided by the
foregoing section, or any portion of the interest thereon, shall by
any action or contingency be diminished or lost, it shall be
replaced by the state to which it belongs, so that the capital of
the fund shall remain forever undiminished, and the annual interest
shall be regularly applied without diminution to the purposes
mentioned in the fourth section of this act, except that a sum not
exceeding ten percentum upon the amount received by any state under
the provisions of this act may be expended for the purchase of
lands for sites for experimental farms, whenever authorized by the
respective legislatures of said states."
"Second. No portion of said fund, nor the interest thereon,
shall be applied, directly or indirectly, under any pretense
whatever, to the purchase, erection, preservation, or repair of any
building or buildings."
"Third. Any state which may take and claim the benefit of the
provisions of this act shall provide within five years at least not
less than one college, as described in the fourth section of this
act, or the grant to such state shall cease, and said state shall
be bound to pay the United States the amount received on any lands
previously sold, and that the title to purchasers under the state
shall be valid."
"Fourth. An annual report shall be made regarding the progress
of each college, recording any improvements and experiments
Page 136 U. S. 180
made, with their costs and results, and such other matters,
including state industrial and economical statistics, as may be
supposed useful, one copy of which shall be transmitted by mail,
free, by each to all the other colleges which may be endowed under
the provisions of this act, and also one copy to the Secretary of
the Interior."
"Fifth. When lands shall be selected from those which have been
raised to double the minimum price in consequence of railroad
grants, they shall be computed to the states at the maximum price,
and the number of acres proportionally diminished."
"Sixth. No state, while in a condition of rebellion or
insurrection against the government of the United States, shall be
entitled to the benefit of this act."
"Seventh. No state shall be entitled to the benefits of this act
unless it shall express its acceptance thereof by its legislature
within two years from the date of its approval by the
President."
"SEC. 6.
And be it further enacted that land scrip
issued under the provisions of this act shall not be subject to
location until after the first day of January, one thousand eight
hundred and sixty-three."
"SEC. 7.
And be it further enacted that the land
officers shall receive the same fees for locating land scrip issued
under the provisions of this act as is now allowed for the location
of military bounty land warrants under existing laws,
provided their maximum compensation shall not be thereby
increased."
"SEC. 8.
And be it further enacted that the governors
of the several states to which scrip shall be issued under this act
shall be required to report annually to Congress all sales made of
such scrip until the whole shall be disposed of, the amount
received for the same, and what appropriation has been made of the
proceeds."
On the 5th of May, 1863, the Legislature of the State of New
York passed an act, Laws N.Y. 1863, c. 460, entitled
"An act relative to the lands granted to this state by the act
of Congress entitled 'An act donating public lands to the several
states and territories which may provide
Page 136 U. S. 181
colleges for the benefit of agriculture and the mechanic arts,'
approved second July, eighteen hundred and sixty-two, and
authorizing the sale thereof, and the investment of the proceeds of
such sales."
By this act, the state duly accepted the grant and gave its
assent to the conditions thereof. The Comptroller was authorized to
receive the land scrip (as the state had no public lands of the
United States, unappropriated, within its borders), and to sell the
same, and to make all necessary arrangements, employ agents, etc.,
as he deemed expedient for effecting a judicious sale of such
scrip. Land scrip representing 989,920 acres of land was then
issued by the Secretary of the Interior to the Comptroller, and was
embraced in 6,187 pieces of scrip for 160 acres each. The
Comptroller sold scrip for 68,000 acres at the rate of 85 cents an
acre, and for 8,000 at 83 cents an acre.
By an act passed May 14, 1863, Laws of New York of 1863, c. 511,
the legislature appropriated the income and revenue which might be
received from the investment of the proceeds of the sale of any of
the lands granted to the state by the Act of Congress of July 2,
1862, to the People's College, located at Havana, in Schuyler
County, on certain conditions expressed in the act.
On the 27th of April, 1865, Laws of New York of 1865, c. 585,
the legislature passed an act creating Cornell University as a
corporation and appropriating to it the "income, revenue, and
avails which shall be received from the investment of the proceeds
of the sale of the lands, or of the scrip therefor," granted to the
state by the Act of Congress of July 2, 1862, to be paid over to
the trustees of the university, "for its use and behoof, in the
mode and for the purposes in said act of Congress defined." This
gift was expressed in the act to be upon the condition that Ezra
Cornell should give $500,000 to the university and $25,000 to the
trustees of Genesee College, located at Lima, New York, and the
provisions of the act were to take effect only in case of the
noncompliance of the trustees of the People's College at Havana
with the provisions of the Act of May 14, 1863. Section 5 of the
Act of April 27, 1865, was in these words: "§ 5. The
corporation
Page 136 U. S. 182
hereby created may hold real and personal property to an amount
not exceeding three millions of dollars in the aggregate." Both of
the gifts above specified were made by Mr. Cornell.
In this state of things, as the Court of Appeals says in its
opinion (p. 116),
"the great question then arising was in regard to the best means
of disposing of such scrip for the best price, so that the income
for the university should be increased to the greatest extent
therefrom. The result of throwing into market such an enormous
amount of the public lands as had been donated by Congress to the
several states was a fall in the market value of the land, and, of
course, of the scrip which represented it. In the fall of 1865, Mr.
Cornell had purchased some scrip of the Comptroller, representing
100,000 acres, for $50,000, and had given his bond for that sum
upon condition that all the profits which should accrue from the
sale of the land should be paid to the Cornell University."
The legislature then passed, on the 10th of April, 1866, an act,
Laws of New York of 1866, c. 481, entitled "An act to authorize and
facilitate the early disposition by the Comptroller of the lands or
land scrip donated to this state by the United States," and which
was in the following words:
"SECTION 1. The Comptroller is hereby authorized to fix the
price at which he will sell and dispose of any or of all the lands
or land scrips donated to this state by the United States of
America by Act of Congress approved July second, eighteen hundred
and sixty-two, and entitled 'An act donating public lands to the
several states and territories which may provide colleges for
instruction in agriculture and the mechanic arts.' Such price shall
not be less than at the rate of thirty cents per acre for said
lands. He may contract for the sale thereof and sell the same to
the trustees of the Cornell University. If the said trustees shall
not agree with the said Comptroller for the purchase thereof, then
the commissioners of the land office may receive from any person or
persons an application for the purchase of the whole or any part
thereof at the price so fixed by the said Comptroller, and may, if
they are satisfied that the said person or persons will fully carry
out and perform
Page 136 U. S. 183
the agreement hereinafter mentioned, sell the same or any part
thereof to the said person or persons. But said trustees or such
person or persons shall at the same time make an agreement, and
give security for the performance thereof to the satisfaction of
the Comptroller, to the effect that the whole net avails and
profits from the sale of scrip, or the location and use by the said
trustees, person, or persons, of the said lands, or of the lands
located under said scrip, shall from time to time, as such net
avails or profits are received, be paid over and devoted to the
purposes of such institution or institutions as have been or shall
be created by the act, chapter five hundred and eighty-five of the
laws of eighteen hundred and sixty-five of the State of New York in
accordance with the provisions of the act of Congress hereinbefore
mentioned. And the said trustees, person, or persons to whom the
said lands or scrip shall be sold shall report to the Comptroller
annually, under such oath and in such form as the Comptroller shall
direct the amount of land or scrip sold, the prices at which the
same have been sold, and the amount of money received therefor, and
the amount of expenses incurred in the location and sale
thereof."
"§ 2. The Comptroller is authorized from time to time, as
he shall see fit, to make such examination into the actions and
doings of his vendees of said lands or scrip therewith as he shall
deem necessary to ascertain and determine what are the net avails
of the said lands or scrip from the sale or from the location and
use thereof by his said vendees."
"§ 3. This act shall take effect immediately."
Under this act the Comptroller fixed the price of the land at
fifty cents per acre, which, under all the circumstances, was
considered a fair amount. The trustees of the university did not
apply to purchase the scrip under the act of 1866, and on the 4th
of August, 1866, the commissioners of the land office made an
agreement with Ezra Cornell for the sale to him of all the
remaining scrip undisposed of, represented by 5,087 certificates of
160 acres each. The agreement was entered into between the
commissioners and Mr. Cornell under the authority of the above act
of 1866, and was in these words:
Page 136 U. S. 184
"This agreement, made this fourth day of August, eighteen
hundred and sixty-six, between the people of the State of New York,
through their commissioners of the land office, acting under and by
virtue of chapter 481 of the Laws of 1866, of the first part, and
Ezra Cornell, of Ithaca, New York, of the second part, witnesseth
that the said party of the first part hereby agrees to sell and
assign and deliver to the party of the second part all of the
agricultural land scrip now in the possession or ownership of the
State of New York, consisting of five thousand and eighty-seven
certificates, each representing one hundred and sixty acres, on the
following terms and conditions:"
"
First. That said party of the second part shall
receive said scrip from time to time, as the same can be
judiciously located, in parcels representing not less than
twenty-five thousand acres, paying therefor into the treasury of
the state, on its assignment and delivery to him by the Comptroller
at the rate of thirty cents per acre, in lawful money of the United
States, or in the stocks of the United States or of the State of
New York, or in other good and safe stocks or bonds, to be approved
by the Comptroller, and drawing not less than five percent interest
per annum, and at the same time depositing with the Comptroller
stocks or bonds, to be approved by him, to an amount equal to an
additional thirty cents per acre, as security for the fulfillment
by the party of the second part of the conditions of this
agreement, so far as they relate to the execution of a mortgage to
the state on the land to be entered and located with said scrip, on
the fulfillment of which said stock or bond so deposited as
security shall be returned to said party of the second part."
"
Second. That whenever any parcel of scrip sold and
delivered to the said party of the second part under and by virtue
of this agreement shall have been located by him or his agents, the
said party of the second part hereby agrees that he will without
delay furnish to the commissioners of the land office of this
state, or to some member thereof to be designated by a resolution
of the board, a full and complete list and description of the land
so located, and said
Page 136 U. S. 185
board of commissioners shall, within at least sixty days
thereafter, and from time to time subsequently as may be found
expedient, affix a minimum valuation, by quarter sections at which
the same may be sold by said party of the second part. And the said
party of the second part further agrees that he will annually and
from time to time, whenever required by the commissioners of the
land office, render for their information to the Comptroller a
full, just, and true account of all sales and leases made by him,
said report to be made in such form and under such oath as the
Comptroller shall direct, and will pay into the Treasury of the
state the whole of the net profits arising therefrom, which shall
be ascertained by deducting from the gross receipts on sales the
original cost of thirty cents per acre, the cost and expenses
attending the location, management, and sale of said lands, the
taxes assessed and paid on the same by the party of the second
part, and the interest at the rate of seven percent per annum on
the several amounts actually expended and liabilities incurred for
such purposes. But it is expressly agreed by the party of the
second part that he will not sell any portion of said lands at a
price below the minimum valuation thereon which may from time to
time be fixed by the commissioners of the land office without first
obtaining their consent to do so in writing."
"
Third. That the stipulations and conditions of this
agreement shall apply to each and every parcel of scrip assigned
and delivered to said party of the second part under this
agreement, and the Comptroller shall defer or suspend further
assignments and deliveries of scrip whenever the party of the
second part fails to perform such stipulations and conditions in
respect to any scrip sold and delivered to him under this
agreement, until they have been complied with. Except,
nevertheless, that stocks or bonds as security for the return and
mortgage of lands located under scrip issued to the party of the
second part shall in no case be required when there shall remain in
the hands of the Comptroller, by virtue of this agreement,
mortgaged lands, not released, equal in quantity to the scrip which
may be issued to the party of the
Page 136 U. S. 186
second part and remain not located and mortgaged as provided by
this agreement."
"
Fourth. That as often as and whenever the party of the
second part shall furnish a description of any of the lands
selected and located by him under and by virtue of said scrip, he
shall immediately execute a mortgage thereon to the people of this
state, to be approved by the Attorney General, conditioned that the
said party of the second part will fully keep and perform each and
every of the terms and conditions he is required to do, keep, and
perform, and this agreement is declared to be a continuing
agreement, and a suit or suits at law or in equity may be from time
to time instituted and maintained thereon, and upon any or all of
said mortgages, for any violation of such terms and conditions,
whenever such violation may occur. Said mortgages shall be
delivered to the Comptroller or to the commissioners of the land
office."
"
Fifth. Whenever the party of the second part shall
sell or dispose of any section of the lands acquired by him under
this agreement, and pay into the treasury of the state the net
profits resulting from such sale, after the deductions hereinbefore
mentioned and provided for, the party of the first part shall
execute and deliver to the party of the second part a full and
sufficient release of the portion sold from the lien of the
mortgage, so that a clear title can be vested in the purchaser or
purchasers."
"
Sixth. That, of the moneys arising from sales or
leases made by the party of the second part and paid into the state
treasury, as herein provided, a proportion equal to thirty cents
per acre shall be added to, and form a part of, the fund known and
designated on the records of the Comptroller's office as the
'College Land Scrip Fund,' and the remainder shall constitute a
separate and distinct fund, which shall be the property of the
Cornell University, to be known as the 'Cornell Endowment Fund,'
the principal of which shall forever remain unimpaired, the income
to be annually appropriated by the legislature, and paid over from
time to time to the trustees of the Cornell University, to be by
them devoted to the purposes of the institution. "
Page 136 U. S. 187
"
Seventh. That the said party of the second part
further agrees to purchase the whole of the aforesaid scrip, and
select and locate lands under and by virtue thereof, and execute
mortgages thereon as hereinbefore provided, within four years from
the date hereof, and that he will sell the lands within twenty
years from date, and pay the net profits arising from such sales
into the treasury of this state; and, until the same shall be so
sold, and the net profits so paid, he will pay all taxes which may
be assessed thereon, and preserve and maintain a title thereto
unimpaired, to which the liens created by said mortgages shall
attach. And, if any event shall occur making it needful for the
people of this state to incur any expense to preserve the lien of
said mortgages, the same shall be paid out of the proceeds of the
sales of said lands, and if, after the expiration of the period of
four years hereinbefore fixed, any of said scrip shall remain with
this state, and not have been paid for by the party of the second
part, the same shall be released thereafter from the conditions and
stipulations of this agreement."
The Court of Appeals says (p. 122):
"There was no sum provided in the act of Congress for the sale
of the scrip. It was in the discretion of the state to sell it at
any price it could obtain, either at public or private sale, and it
could sell the whole or any part of such scrip at any time, but the
proceeds of such sale were to be invested under the act of
Congress, and the income applied as therein provided for. If there
be any ambiguity in the meaning of the agreement as a whole, it is
not improper to see what meaning was attached to it by the persons
who executed it, if possible, and also to look at the surrounding
facts, so that we my place ourselves in the same position as the
contracting parties, and thus learn what was in contemplation."
"It is known that at the time of the passage of the Act of April
10, 1866, sales of the scrip had almost ceased. It was thought that
there was a good chance that the land which might be located under
this scrip would in the future greatly appreciate in value, and it
was the wish of those interested in its welfare that the university
should in some way reap the
Page 136 U. S. 188
benefit of this increase. But it had no funds to purchase the
scrip, and it needed ready money as a income to aid it in the
discharge of its duties as an educational institution. Hence, the
problem was to find someone who would purchase the scrip and pay
for it, and then locate and sell the lands at the higher prices
which it was hoped they would attain, and give the profits to the
university. A glance at the correspondence between Mr. Cornell and
the Comptroller and at the minutes of the proceedings of the land
commissioners, and the other evidence in the case shows that there
was no one else than Mr. Cornell who was ever thought of as a
person who would take upon himself such burdens, troubles, labors,
and responsibilities for the purpose of giving away all the profits
which might in the future arise from such sales. It is seen by
reference to that correspondence that Mr. Cornell and the
Comptroller differed in regard to the construction of the act, the
Comptroller holding that the act really meant that the net avails
of the scrip should be placed under the custody of the state, while
it may be inferred that the idea of Mr. Cornell was that the
profits after paying the original thirty cents and the additional
thirty cents, if realized, as the purchase price of the scrip might
be placed as he should choose, provided the university should
receive the benefit of the whole income arising from such profits.
Under date of June 9, 1866, Mr. Cornell, in his letter to the
Comptroller, speaks of his differing with the Comptroller in his
construction of the law, but adds:"
"Appreciating, as I do most fully, your motives for desiring to
give the utmost possible security and permanency to the funds which
are in a great degree to constitute the endowment of the Cornell
University, I shall most cheerfully accept your views so far as to
consent to place the entire profits to be derived from the sale of
the lands to be located with the college land scrip in the treasury
of the state
if the state will receive the money as a separate
fund from that which may be derived from the sale of scrip, and
will keep it permanently invested, and appropriate the proceeds
from the income thereof annually to the Cornell University, subject
to the direction of the trustees thereof, for the general purposes
of the institution,
Page 136 U. S. 189
and not to hold it subject to the restrictions which the act
of Congress places upon the fund derivable from the sale of the
college land scrip, or as a donation from the government of the
United States, but as a donation from Ezra Cornell to the Cornell
University."
"Mr. Cornell thus plainly understood that the purchase price of
the scrip from the state was thirty cents an acre, with a possible
thirty cents more if he should realize that sum on the sale of the
land, and that any sum beyond that came to him as profits on his
sale of the scrip or land to third parties, and that sum, being his
own profits, he was willing to donate to the university, and for
that purpose to pay the same into the treasury of the state, the
same to be invested, and the income therefrom to be paid by the
state to the university for the general purposes of the
institution, and not as part of the purchase price of the scrip to
be invested under the act of Congress. It was after the receipt of
this letter that the agreement was made, the subdivision six
containing, in substance, the provision asked for by Mr.
Cornell."
"While, in some portions of this agreement, if read alone, and
laying aside all knowledge of the contemporary history of the
events surrounding it, there might arise some doubt as to the
meaning of such portion, yet when read as a whole, and in the light
of those events, I think no real and grave doubt can exist as to
the meaning of this instrument. It seems clear to my mind that the
state sold this land scrip at thirty cents per acre, with an
additional thirty cents if so much should thereafter be realized
upon the sale by the vendee of the state, and that this constitutes
the purchase price of such scrip, which, when assigned to Mr.
Cornell by the state in accordance with the terms of the contract,
he became the legal owner of. He, it is true, also agreed that his
profits should be paid into the treasury of the state, but they
were to be paid therein
as profits, and not as any portion
of the purchase price of the scrip, and they were to be paid, and
were in fact paid, as profits of Mr. Cornell, and they were
received under that agreement as the property of the Cornell
University, the income of which was to be paid to it for its
general purposes,
Page 136 U. S. 190
and the principal was to constitute the Cornell endowment fund.
I cannot see that in all this there was nothing but an agency
created in behalf of the state, and that Mr. Cornell was such
agent, and that the whole profits realized were really nothing but
the proceeds of the sale of the lands by the state. The state, on
the contrary, by the very terms of the agreement, sold the scrip,
and the legal title, by patents from the government of the United
States, was vested in Mr. Cornell when he located the lands under
the scrip which he had purchased and took out his patents upon such
location. Neither can I see that the purchaser of the scrip gave,
or intended to give, or was supposed to give, his profits as part
of such purchase price. His agreement is plain, and in it he stated
what such purchase price was, and what he would give for the scrip,
and the fact that he agreed to pay his profits, if any were
realized, into the treasury of the state as the property of the
university, which was to have the income thereof paid over to it
for its general purposes, does not, to my mind, render such profits
any portion of the purchase price of the scrip. They were profits
which he hoped to be able to realize in the future, but were
entirely speculative in character and amount, dependent largely
upon the judgment with which the lands were located and the time
and manner of their sale. All this Mr. Cornell was willing to do
for this university, but the agreement shows that he was to do it
as a gift of his own, and not as a mere agent of the state or of
the United States, and that all the compensation he sought for his
services, his trouble, and his responsibilities, great and onerous
as they were, was the fact that all this should go to the
university as his gift, and the state become the custodian of the
profits under a duty to appropriate the income to the trustees for
the general purposes of the university."
"The counsel for the institution may be entirely right in his
statements as to the law regarding this branch of the question, if
he is right in the fundamental proposition as to the
profits' being a part of the purchase price or the avails
of the sale of the scrip by the state; but until he can maintain
the correctness of that proposition, I do not think his
argument
Page 136 U. S. 191
reaches the trouble. I do not think the proposition is correct.
The profits were the avails of the sale of the scrip by Mr.
Cornell, not in any sense the avails of the sale of the scrip by
the state. I think also that the agreement is fully authorized by
the Act of April 10, 1866. It gives the right to the commissioners
of the land office to sell the scrip or any part thereof for the
price which was to be fixed by the Comptroller, and not less than
thirty cents per acre. The right to sell the scrip at the price
fixed by the Comptroller was based upon the condition that the
persons who purchased at such price should also agree to pay over
the net avails or profits from the sale by them of the scrip or
lands located under it as they should be received, and that they
should be 'devoted to the purposes of such institution or
institutions as have been or shall be created by the act, chapter
585 of the Laws of 1865' (the charter of Cornell University), in
accordance with the provisions of the act of Congress before
mentioned. This does not mean that all these possible profits are
to be deposited in the state treasury subject to the same rules
that would obtain in the case of the purchase price of the scrip,
but only that they shall be devoted to the institution created by
the act of 1865 in accordance with the provisions of the act of
Congress already mentioned. Of course the purchase price, that
which was fixed by the Comptroller, was to go into the treasury,
and be invested as provided for by the act of Congress."
"The reference in the above section of the act of 1866 to such
institution or institutions as have been or shall be created by the
act, chapter 585 of the Laws of 1865, can of course be to none but
the Cornell University, and hence the provision in the agreement
that the profits shall all be devoted to that institution was
proper. As that university had complied with all the conditions
imposed upon it by the state as a condition to its right to receive
all the income from this fund, the right to it could not be taken
from it. This the commissioners of the land office stated in their
report to the constitutional convention in answer to a request from
that body for information as to this land scrip, and in this
report, under date
Page 136 U. S. 192
of July 22, 1867, the Comptroller, as a member of the board of
commissioners of the land office and one of the officers who
executed the contract with Mr. Cornell in August, 1866, stated as
follows:"
" In deciding what portion of the income of the money paid into
the treasury under the agreement with Mr. Cornell would be subject
to this limitation [set forth in the act of Congress] as to its use
and application, the commissioners of the land office assumed that
the prohibition applied only to the purchase money received by the
state on a sale of the scrip, and that the ultimate profits to be
derived from the location and sale of the lands by the purchaser
formed no part of the purchase money, and need not therefore be
included. The nominal price which was fixed on the scrip by the act
of 1866, and for which it was sold, in consideration of the
stipulation to pay over the net profits, being less than the market
rates, it was stipulated in the sixth section of the agreement that
an additional thirty cents per acre from the net profits should,
when such profits were paid into the treasury, be added to the
purchase money, thus increasing the price to sixty cents per acre,
the current rate for the scrip at the date of the transaction, and
limiting the purposes to which it may be applied in conformity with
the terms of the grant by Congress."
"Here, then, in addition to the language as used in the
agreement itself, which, when read as a whole, seems to me quite
plain, we find what Mr. Cornell was willing to do, as set forth in
his letter to the Comptroller above quoted from, in which he claims
the act permitted it, and he would donate the profits as a gift
from himself to the university, and we find in an official report
of one of the officers executing the contract, speaking for himself
and associates, what was their understanding of this agreement.
From all sources, the agreement itself, and the separate views of
the parties to it, it appears the construction should be and was
that the profits formed no part of the purchase price or the avails
of the sale of the scrip by the state over the thirty cents per
acre, if realized, and that such profits belonged to the university
by the gift of Mr. Cornell, the vendee of the scrip from the
state,
Page 136 U. S. 193
the income to be paid to the trustees of the university for the
general purposes of the same."
By an Act passed May 4, 1868, Laws of New York of 1868 c. 554,
the legislature authorized the Comptroller to invest the moneys
which might be received in excess of sixty cents per acre under the
contract of August 4, 1866, and which thereunder went into "the
Cornell endowment fund" not only in stocks of the United States or
of the State of New York, or in some other safe stocks yielding not
less than five percent per annum on the par value thereof
(according to the restriction in section 4 of the Act of Congress
of July 2, 1862), but also "on bonds secured by mortgage upon
unencumbered real estate situated within this state, worth at least
double the amount secured by such mortgage." The statute also
provided as follows:
"The said fund, and the interest and income thereof, subject to
the expenses of the care and management of the same, shall be held
for and devoted to the purposes of the said Cornell University in
pursuance of the contract before mentioned."
As to this statute, the Court of Appeals says (p. 127):
"This must be taken as a legislative recognition of the fact
that the agreement of sale to Mr. Cornell was for thirty (possibly
sixty) cents an acre, and that all profits belonged to Mr. Cornell,
but that by an agreement he had agreed to give them to the
university for the general purposes thereof. We cannot assume that
the state would have run counter to the express provisions of the
act of Congress by enacting that the purchase price of the scrip
might be invested in a manner forbidden by that act."
In 1873 the legislature appointed a commission, consisting of
William A. Wheeler, John D. Van Buren, and Horatio Seymour, to
ascertain the condition of the land grant and to report whether the
acts of Congress and of the legislature had been complied with in
the sale and disposition of the lands. The first two named of the
commissioners reported in April, 1874, that the profits realized by
Mr. Cornell from the sale of the lands formed part of the purchase
price of the scrip, while Governor Seymour reported that he was of
a contrary opinion.
Page 136 U. S. 194
The legislature ultimately, and by an act passed May 18, 1880,
Laws of New York of 1880, c. 317, directed the Comptroller, upon
the request of Cornell University, to assign, transfer, pay, and
deliver to the latter
"all moneys, securities, stocks, bonds, and contracts
constituting a part of, or relating to, the fund known as the
'Cornell Endowment Fund,' now held by the state for the use of said
university."
This was done because, under an agreement made between Ezra
Cornell and his wife and the university, on the 13th of October,
1874, with the consent of the Comptroller and the commissioners of
the land office, Mr. Cornell and his wife had conveyed to the
university all their rights under any agreement between him and the
state relating to the land scrip or to any lands located or to be
located under it, and the university had covenanted that it would
assume and perform all the agreements made between him and the
state in reference to the land scrip or the land, and would
discharge his obligations held by the state. The university had
paid to the state a part of the additional thirty cents per acre
which the state was to receive, if realized, as the purchase price
of the scrip.
On all these facts, the Court of Appeals says in its opinion (p.
128):
"The state has made and makes no claim that any portion of these
profits over the thirty cents an acre forms any portion of the
purchase price of the sale of the scrip by it. The university, by
its agreement with Mr. Cornell and by taking exactly his position,
and by receiving the moneys and securities on the Cornell endowment
fund by virtue of the act of 1880, clearly has taken the position
that it was the owner of this fund, and was not indebted to the
state therefor. Its reports show that they [the trustees of the
university] claimed that it had no debts, and they acknowledged
none to the state on account of this fund. If it existed, it would
certainly be a somewhat onerous position for the state to be in. It
must have all the proceeds of the sale of this scrip, including in
such case all the profits of the past, and what may hereafter
arise. It must pay all expenses, etc., after location, in the way
of taxes, and all incurred in the management and disbursement of
the moneys, and must invest in stocks of the kind
Page 136 U. S. 195
described in the act of Congress, and must forever guarantee the
whole amount, so that if any of the principal is lost, it must be
supplied by the state, and it must pay over the five percent
interest on the whole of this fund to the university. This, of
course, does not weigh in case the decision were that the law is in
that condition. For the reasons already given, I do not think it
is."
On the question whether the legislation of New York, or the
agreement of August 4, 1866, was in violation of the act of
Congress, the Court of Appeals says (p. 129):
"Interpreted as we have interpreted the agreement and the act of
the legislature of New York, the remaining inquiry is does the New
York statute, or the agreement under it, run counter to the act of
Congress creating this land scrip trust? I think not. It provides
that all moneys derived from the sale of the land scrip by the
state shall be invested, etc., as therein prescribed. The scrip is
to be sold by the state, which could not itself locate the land,
and the avails of such sale are to be invested. The avails of the
sale of the scrip by the state were the purchase price thereof, and
if I am right that the profits formed no part of such purchase
price, but were the property of the vendee of the state, which he
agreed to give to the university for general purposes as his gift
and to form the property of the university, then the act of
Congress has no concern with it."
"Another consideration may be adverted to. It is exceedingly
doubtful in my mind whether the university can be heard to claim
the existence of this alleged doubt under the facts of this case.
The state has made and makes no claim upon the university for the
property or any portion of it. It was placed in its possession by
virtue of the consent of the state, evidenced by the passage of an
act authorizing and directing it. The university has claimed to be
the owner of it, and no one has drawn its rightful title in
question. Can it now, while enjoying, without hostile claim from
any source, the full control of the property, as its absolute
owner, set up, as a reason why it should be allowed to take other
property, that perhaps hereafter some one may make a claim that the
property
Page 136 U. S. 196
does not belong to the university, but that it is a trust fund
originating in the act of Congress? If the state or the United
States were to commence some proceeding, based on the counsel's
argument, to reclaim possession of the property, there is nothing
in the present attitude of the university which would necessarily
estop or in any way conclude it from denying that any such trust
exists or that any case had been made for taking the possession of
the property out of its hands. So far as appears, it seems that
this assumed indebtedness is entirely gratuitous on its part, and
that there is no creditor who makes the claim, no one who questions
its title. It is going a good ways, under such circumstances, to
lay much weight on a liability which, up to this proceeding, was
never admitted by the university and it not now asserted by anyone
else. It would seem as if property which was thus in the possession
of the corporation, unclaimed by anyone else, was held by it within
the meaning of its charter, and that the question in regard to the
character of its holding was merely an abstract one with which
courts would not deal, at least so far as this proceeding is
concerned."
"In all these matters, it must be borne in mind the parties have
all been acting in the most entire and perfect good faith. This was
no scheme to avoid or evade the provisions of the act of Congress.
The price of sixty cents an acre which the state got for the land
was all it was worth at the time. Its future value depended upon
many contingencies. The state had the right to sell the scrip for
such price as it might agree on with a purchaser. This it did. The
university wanted money to pay its expenses. It could not very well
wait for twenty or even five years for the purpose of seeing how
the value of this scrip would appreciate, if at all. The
legislature was equally in earnest in its desire for the prosperity
of the institution; so were the state officers, and, above and
beyond all, so was Mr. Cornell, its generous founder, and already
the donor of such a large amount of money. Taking all the
circumstances into consideration, the plan carried out was hit
upon, and the amount of the Cornell endowment fund and the property
arising therefrom must be regarded as a gift of the donor and
Page 136 U. S. 197
founder, and not as a violation of either the act of Congress or
of the act of our own legislature."
The Court of Appeals then states (p. 131) the position of the
university with reference to the value of its property, as follows:
funds from individuals (including the value of the university
buildings, farm grounds, etc. at $69,683.33), as fixed by the
surrogate, $598,588.65; western lands, $1,648, 178.56; western land
contracts, $439,334.22; total, $2,686,101.43. It states that the
supreme court advanced the $69,683.33 to "$385,000," being an
advance of "$315,316.67," and that adding this $315,316.67 to the
$2,686,101.43 makes a total of $3,001,418.10 without counting as
property the college land scrip fund in the hands of the state. The
statement that the supreme court advanced the $69,683.33 to
$385,000 would appear by the record to be a clerical error, for
although Judge Merwin, in his opinion in the supreme court, states
that the appellants there were entitled to a finding that the
property represented by the item of $69,683.33 was at the date of
the death of Mrs. Fiske, of the value "at least" of $385,000, the
judgment of the supreme court expressly adjudges that the item of
$69,683.33 is fixed by it at $400,000, and that it finds that the
value of the property of the university held and owned by it at the
death of Mrs. Fiske was $3,015,414.71. But in either case, the
amount exceeded $3,000,000.
We concur with the Court of Appeals in the conclusion that the
sixty cents per acre was the purchase price of the land scrip; that
under the agreement of August 4, 1866, the profits to be made by
Mr. Cornell, although to be paid into the treasury of the state,
were not any portion of the purchase price of the scrip, but were
to be paid in, and were in fact paid in, as his profits, and were
received by the state, as the sixth section of the agreement
states, as "a separate and distinct fund, which shall be the
property of the Cornell University, to be known as the "Cornell
Endowment Fund," and that the income of the money was to be paid to
the university for its general purposes, and the principal was to
constitute the Cornell endowment fund."
Page 136 U. S. 198
The Court of Appeals states that it cannot see that in all this
there was nothing but an agency created in behalf of the state, and
that Mr. Cornell was such agent, and that the whole profits were
really nothing but the proceeds of the land scrip sold by the
state. In this connection, a reference may not be inappropriate to
the clear and incisive statement of Governor Seymour in his
minority report, before referred to. After stating that his
associates were of opinion that the contract was an actual sale to
Mr. Cornell, but that all profits made from the land were part of
the purchase money, and so subject to the restrictions of the act
of Congress, Governor Seymour says that he is forced to the
conclusion that the construction which involves merging the two
funds into one is inconsistent with the pledges of the state to
Congress. He adds:
"When New York accepted the grant of the general government, it
did so with the full knowledge of this clause in the act of
Congress,
viz.,"
"that the grant of land and of land scrip hereby authorized
shall be made on the following conditions, to which, as well as to
the provisions hereinbefore contained, the previous assent of the
several states shall be signified by legislative acts."
"One of these conditions is 'that in no case shall any state to
which land scrip may thus be issued be allowed to locate the same
within the limits of any other state.' This state only had the
right to sell its scrip. If it has no right to locate land openly
and directly, can it do the same thing under cover and indirectly?
If the state can claim all the proceeds of the lands entered by its
scrip in the State of Wisconsin, after deducting the costs of taxes
and expenses and the price of its scrip, does it not claim and get
everything it would if the land had been taken up in the name of
the state? Is there any stronger or clearer way of saying that a
man is entitled to all there is of value in any property than to
say he has a right to all the money it will bring after paying
taxes and expenses? Does any citizen of our country hold a more
ample interest in land by virtue of deeds or patents than is held
by him who has a right to all that it will bring by sales or leases
after paying taxes and expenses? All of our citizens who have lands
in western states or elsewhere in fact own
Page 136 U. S. 199
them upon these terms. Is the case in any way changed by using
the term
profit, in place of the word
proceeds,
to express the amount the state can claim by their construction of
the contract? Any construction of the contract with Mr. Cornell
which makes the state the substantial owner of these lands, and
converts the transactions into any agency is not merely a technical
and immaterial violation of its pledges. It conflicts with the act
of Congress and infringes in a serious way upon the rights of
Wisconsin and other states where the lands held by Mr. Cornell are
situated. The careful way with which the law of Congress
distinguishes between the proceeds of land and of land scrip was
designed to protect such states. But for the restraints of the act,
the old states could enter all their scrip at the land offices of
the west. Their wealth would enable them to pay taxes and keep the
lands from market for an advance of price. For this reason the
restriction was put into the act. Ownership by this state under
cover, no matter what terms are used to hide its interests or what
objects or pretexts are displayed as an excuse for its action, is a
violation of its pledges to Congress and of the rights and
interests of other states. As a rule, individuals are unable for
any length of time to hold large tracts of land. Nearly the whole
amount of scrip given by Congress to the several states has been
used by settlers to buy homes in the west, and has thus promoted
their prosperity. Congress contemplated this when it for bade one
state to take up land within the bounds of another. The agreement
is a sale of the scrip to Mr. Cornell, and the profits made by him
out of the lands taken up by him with the scrip, when given to the
university, will be a gift for the general purposes of the
institution, 'and not subject to the restrictions of the act of
Congress.' These profits will be the result of his skill and labor.
It is the intent of the act of 1862 that no state shall, under any
pretense, in any manner or in any degree, acquire title or right to
lands in another state."
We are of opinion that by the terms of the agreement the state
sold the scrip to Mr. Cornell, and that the legal title to the
lands located by him under the scrip was vested in him when he took
out patents upon such location. The terms of
Page 136 U. S. 200
the agreement show that the profits which Mr. Cornell hoped to
realize from the sale of the lands, beyond the second thirty cents
per acre, were intended by both parties to the agreement to be a
gift from Mr. Cornell personally to the university, and not from
him as a mere agent of the state or of the United States, and that
the state became the custodian of such profits not under the act of
Congress, but under the duty which it assumed to take care of the
fund as a fund belonging to the university, as the property of the
university, and to appropriate the income to the trustees of the
institution for its general purposes. The state has provided, as
required by the act of Congress, for the investment, in the manner
prescribed by that act, of the moneys derived from the sale of the
land scrip. It was under no obligation to treat as falling within
the provisions of the act of Congress any other moneys than those
derived from the sale of such scrip, or any moneys derived from the
sale of the lands which the purchaser of the scrip should locate
and obtain patents for. The state could not itself, or by an agent
acting in its behalf, locate or obtain patents for any land which
the scrip represented. Therefore the claim of the university and of
Mr. Boardman as executor that the act of Congress was violated in
the transaction between the state and Mr. Cornell, and that the
moneys and property derived from the sale of the lands by Mr.
Cornell formed, on the actual facts, no part of the $3,000,000 of
property held by the university is not warranted by law.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of the State of New York,
entered December 12, 1888, establishing as its judgment the
judgment of the Court of Appeals of New York, rendered November 27,
1888, affirming the judgment of the supreme court herein, entered
December 14, 1887, is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE GRAY,
dissenting.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY and myself dissent from the views expressed and
the conclusions reached in the foregoing opinion
Page 136 U. S. 201
By the Act of Congress of July 2, 1862, making a grant, and the
act of the Legislature of the State of New York, of May 5, 1863,
accepting the same, a trust was created in the State of New York in
respect to this land scrip. This is evident from these
sections:
"An act donating the public lands to the several states and
territories which may provide colleges for the benefit of
agricultural and the mechanic arts."
"
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
the United States of America in Congress assembled that there
be granted to the several states, for the purposes hereinafter
mentioned, an amount of public land, to be apportioned to each
state, a quantity equal to thirty thousand acres for each senator
and representative in Congress to which the states are respectively
entitled by the apportionment under the census of eighteen hundred
and sixty,
provided that no mineral lands shall be
selected or purchased under the provisions of this act."
"SEC. 2.
And be it further enacted that the land
aforesaid, after being surveyed, shall be apportioned to the
several states in sections or subdivisions of sections, not less
than one-quarter of a section, and whenever there are public lands
in a state subject to a sale at private entry at one dollar and
twenty-five cents per acre, the quantity to which said state shall
be entitled shall be selected from such lands within the limits of
such state, and the Secretary of the Interior is hereby directed to
issue to each of the states in which there is not the quantity of
public lands subject to sale at private entry at one dollar and
twenty-five cents per acre to which said state may be entitled
under the provisions of this act, land scrip to the amount in acres
for the deficiency of its distributive share, said scrip to be sold
by said states, and the proceeds thereof applied to the uses and
purposes prescribed in this act, and for no other use or purpose
whatsoever,
provided that in no case shall any state to
which land scrip may thus be issued be allowed to locate the same
within the limits of any other state, or of any territory of the
United
Page 136 U. S. 202
states, but their assignees may thus locate the land scrip upon
any of the unappropriated lands of the United States subject to
sale at private entry at one dollar and twenty-five cents, or less,
per acre,
and provided further that not more than one
million acres shall be located by such assignees in anyone of the
states,
and provided further that no such location shall
be made before one year from the passage of this act. . . ."
"SEC. 4.
And be it further enacted that all moneys
derived from the sale of the lands aforesaid by the states to which
the lands are apportioned, and from the sales of land scrip
hereinbefore provided for, shall be invested in stocks of the
United States, or of the states, or some other safe stocks,
yielding not less than five percentum upon the par value of said
stocks, and that the moneys so invested shall constitute a
perpetual fund, the capital of which shall remain forever
undiminished, except so far as may be provided in § fifth of
this act, and the interest of which shall be inviolably
appropriated, by each state which may take and claim the benefit of
this act, to the endowment, support, and maintenance of at least
one college where the leading object shall be, without excluding
other scientific and classical studies, and including military
tactics, to teach such branches of learning as are related to
agriculture and the mechanic arts, in such manner as the
legislatures of the states may respectively prescribe, in order to
promote the liberal and practical education of the industrial
classes in the several pursuits and professions in life."
"SEC. 5.
And be it further enacted that the grant of
land and land scrip hereby authorized shall be made on the
following conditions, to which, as well as to the provisions
hereinbefore contained, the previous assent of the several states
shall be signified by legislative acts:"
"First. If any portion of the fund invested as provided by the
foregoing §, or any portion of the interest thereon, shall by
any action or contingency be diminished or lost, it shall be
replaced by the state to which it belongs, so that the capital of
the fund shall remain forever undiminished, and the annual interest
shall be regularly applied, without diminution,
Page 136 U. S. 203
to the purposes mentioned in the fourth section of this act,
except that a sum not exceeding ten percentum upon the amount
received by any state under the provisions of this act may be
expended for the purchase of lands for sites or experimental farms
whenever authorized by the respective legislatures of said
states."
"
* * * *"
"Seventh. No state shall be entitled to the benefits of this act
unless it shall express its acceptance thereof by its legislature
within two years from the date of its approval by the
President."
Under this statute, the action of the state designating one
beneficiary was not final, and it could withdraw thereafter the
income from one institution and bestow it upon another, even as it
did in fact in this case, as shown by the record. Suppose,
hereafter, Cornell University should be so conducted that its
"leading object" should not be "to teach such branches of learning
as are related to agriculture and the mechanic arts," as required
by the act of Congress. It would be the right and the duty of the
state to take the fund, and apply it to that purpose by other means
and instruments. The sacredness of the duties cast upon a trustee,
recognized from time immemorial, obtains, and the subsequent
transaction by which the land scrip was disposed of cannot be
interpreted as if it were a disposition by an absolute owner of his
property. A trustee may not speculate in respect to trust property
for his own benefit, or for the benefit of a friend, or in favor of
any institution. The fact of a trust compels that all received as
the proceeds of trust property, directly or indirectly, must be
adjudged forever within the obligations of that trust. The scrip
became the property of the state in trust. The act of Congress
determines the fact, the nature, and extent of the trust. It grants
land or, in the absence of public lands within the state, scrip to
the corresponding amount. It provides in section 2 that where scrip
is taken by a state, it may be sold by it, "and the proceeds
thereof applied to the uses and purposes prescribed in this act,
and for no other use
Page 136 U. S. 204
or purpose whatsoever." Section 3, while referring to the land
which may be taken under the act, indicates fully the scope and
intent of the trust by enacting
"that all the expenses of management, superintendence, and taxes
from date of selection of said lands, previous to their sales, and
all expenses incurred in the management and disbursement of the
moneys which may be received therefrom, shall be paid by the states
to which they may belong, out of the treasury of said states, so
that the entire proceeds of the sale of said lands shall be
applied, without any diminution whatever, to the purposes
hereinafter mentioned."
Section 4 provides
"that all moneys derived from the sale of lands, and from the
sales of land scrip, shall be invested, etc., and that the moneys
so invested shall constitute a perpetual fund, the capital of which
shall remain forever undiminished, and the interest of which shall
be inviolably appropriated, etc., specifying the purposes of the
appropriation."
Obviously the scope of this is that all moneys derived from this
property, whether land or scrip, whether obtained directly or
indirectly, are consecrated to the purposes designated, and must be
held by the state in trust forever. Among the limitations provided
is that expressed in the second clause of the fifth section,
that
"no portion of said fund, nor the interest thereon, shall be
applied directly or indirectly, under any pretense whatever, to the
purchase, erection, preservation, or repair of any building or
buildings."
Nothing can be clearer from this statute than that a state
accepting its provisions constituted itself a trustee, with the
obligation that it should devote to the purposes of the act all the
proceeds of the land or land scrip which it might obtain directly
or indirectly.
The State of New York, having no public lands within its limits,
received scrip; but the scrip was subjected to the same trust that
land would have been subjected to, and was subjected to, when taken
by any state. All expense in respect to the location and management
of the lands, or the investment of the funds, was to be borne by
the state in order that the net proceeds of this grant, no matter
how obtained, should be appropriated to the purposes expressed.
Hence the state
Page 136 U. S. 205
of New York, accepting the trust, was powerless to repudiate its
obligations or to provide for an appropriation for any other
purposes or under any other conditions of the moneys which might be
received, directly or indirectly, from the disposition of this
trust property. Prior to November 24, 1865, scrip to the aggregate
amount of 176,000 acres was sold at prices ranging from fifty to
eighty-five cents, the average being sixty-five nearly.
The first selection of the beneficiary of this trust was the
People's College of Havana, but that selection was not
satisfactory, and on April 27, 1865, Cornell University was
established by act of the legislature of New York, and it was
designated as the beneficiary, the act providing, as a condition of
this selection, that Cornell University should be endowed to the
extent of $500,000 by Ezra Cornell. The provision in section 4 in
its charter that "the corporation hereby created may hold real and
personal property to an amount not exceeding three millions of
dollars in the aggregate" evidently means that the property of the
corporation shall not exceed three millions after deducting the
amount of all its debts and obligations, and does not include
property which the state might retake at any time, and
a
fortiori property which the state, under a duty imposed upon
it by law, owned upon a trust which it could not divest itself of.
Here a reference to Mr. Cornell and his connection with this
transaction is appropriate. A man acquiring wealth by his own
exertions, the dream of his later years was a university bearing
his name, and so munificently endowed as to become, like Yale and
Harvard, a center of learning, and his purchase of the scrip, and
his transaction with the state, must be interpreted in the line of
this thought. It was the glory of a great university which he hoped
to realize, one which would link his name with its glory. The means
were subordinate; the glory and strength of Cornell University was
the purpose. Unquestionably inspired by his thought and wish, on
April 10, 1866, the legislature passed an act for the future
disposal of the scrip, and authorized the Comptroller to fix its
price. That price was
Page 136 U. S. 206
not to be less than thirty cents per acre. The act also provided
that he might contract for the sale thereof to the trustees of
Cornell University and that, if they did not purchase, the
commissioners of the land office might contract for the sale to any
person or persons, but added expressly that
"said trustees or such person or persons shall at the time make
an agreement, and give security for the performance thereof to the
satisfaction of the Comptroller, to the effect that the whole net
avails and profits from the sale of scrip, or the location and use
by the said trustees, person, or persons of the said lands, or of
the lands located under said scrip, shall from time to time, as
such net avails or profits are received, be paid over and devoted
to the purposes of such institution or institutions as have been or
shall be created by the act, chapter five hundred and eighty-five
of the Laws of eighteen hundred and sixty-five of the State of New
York, in accordance with the provisions of the act of Congress
hereinbefore mentioned. And the said trustees, person, or persons
to whom the said lands or scrip shall be sold shall report to the
Comptroller, annually, under such oath and in such form as the
Comptroller shall direct, the amount of land or scrip sold, the
prices at which the same have been sold, and the amount of money
received therefor, and the amount of expenses incurred in the
location and sale thereof."
This act has a two-fold aspect: it is the legislation of a
sovereign state prescribing the duties and powers of one of its
officials, and it is also a declaration of the duties cast by a
trustee upon its agent in respect to trust property. In either
aspect, its voice is potential in respect to that which was under
the authority thereafter done by official or agent. It must be
borne in mind that the state had no land -- nothing but scrip. This
fact was known, and must be recognized in any interpretation of the
powers granted. What were they? First, to sell for cash at a price
not less than that to be fixed by the Comptroller; second -- and
this was obviously in view of propositions or suggestions made by
Mr. Cornell as to what he was willing to do -- that if no sale for
cash was made, the scrip might be disposed of to anyone who would
give to this
Page 136 U. S. 207
fund the full benefit of any profits made by the location of the
scrip upon public lands. Can it be doubted under such a statute
that if no absolute sale for cash was made, and the alternative
proposition was finally accepted by the official and agent of the
state and trustee, the net profits of such location and sale were
to become and be a part of the trust funds? If language means
anything, it means this. No stipulation by official or agent could
nullify or thwart the express limitations of this power. An
illustration or two will make this clear. Suppose, under this
authority, the land commissioners had contracted with Mr. Cornell
to take the scrip and locate it upon public lands, and out of the
proceeds pay thirty cents an acre to the fund, and give the balance
to the commissioners for their private gain, or to the state for
the public purpose of a state house, or other matter of general
interest. Would any court or any person uphold for a moment the
validity of such a contract so far as respects the latter
provisions, and would not the universal voice declare that
notwithstanding it, the entire proceeds of the location of scrip
and sale of lands belonged to the fund of which the state was the
trustee? That is this case. The Comptroller fixed the price at
fifty cents an acre -- about fifteen cents an acre less than had
theretofore been realized. Not only that, but while it is in
evidence that the amount of scrip authorized by the act of Congress
created a temporary depression in price, so that, although no land
was purchasable from Congress at less than $1.25 per acre, the
price of scrip was temporarily reduced to less than half that
figure, yet, as appears from the report of a commission appointed
in 1874 by the State of New York to inquire into this college land
grant, the cash market value of the scrip was always at least fifty
cents an acre, and the sales by other states of scrip, amounting in
all to 5,699,600 acres, ranged from fifty to ninety cents, only
120,000 acres having been sold below fifty cents. It is thus
obvious that the depression in price was only temporary. The prior
experience of the State of New York -- the whole experience of
other states -- tends to show that fifty cents was the minimum
value of this scrip.
Page 136 U. S. 208
No sale was made, no contract of sale entered into at the price
fixed by the Comptroller. The contract entered into was by virtue
of the alternative authority given. That contract was upon this
proposition from Mr. Cornell:
"Appreciating, however, as I do most fully, your motives for
desiring to give the utmost possible security and permanency to the
funds which are, in a great degree, to constitute the endowment of
the Cornell University, I shall most cheerfully accept your views
so far as to consent to place the entire profits to be derived from
the sale of the lands to be located with the college land scrip in
the treasury of the state, if the state will receive the money as a
separate fund from that which may be derived from the sale of
scrip, and will keep it permanently invested, and appropriate the
proceeds from the income thereof annually to the Cornell
University, subject to the direction of the trustees thereof, for
the general purposes of said institution, and not to hold it
subject to the restrictions which the act of Congress places upon
the fund derivable from the sale of the college land scrip or as a
donation from the government of the United States, but as a
donation from Ezra Cornell to the Cornell University."
"Acting upon the above basis, I propose to purchase said land
scrip as fast as I can advantageously locate the same, paying
therefor at the rate of thirty cents per acre in good seven percent
bonds and securities, and obligating myself to pay the profits, as
specified in chapter 481 of the Laws of 1866, into the treasury of
the state, as follows: thirty cents per acre of said profits to be
added to the college land scrip fund and the balance of said
profits to be placed in a separate fund, to be known as the
'Cornell University Fund,' and to be preserved and invested for the
benefit of said institution, and the income derived therefrom to be
paid over annually to the trustees of said university for the
general purposes of said institution."
It is unnecessary to notice other portions of the
correspondence, or to review the contract, for all of significance
is expressed in this proposition. It is not an absolute sale of the
scrip for so much money. The obligation assumed by Mr. Cornell to
the state was thirty cents an acre, and the net profits
Page 136 U. S. 209
of the location of the scrip on public lands, and sale of the
lands. In briefer words, thirty cents an acre, and net profits, was
his offer. True, he proposed that only part of the profits, to-wit,
thirty cents an acre, should pass to the fund, but what authority
had the commissioners for making such a limitation in the contract?
Suppose, after the making of the contract, the commissioners had
declined to transfer the scrip to him. Could he have compelled the
specific performance, by mandamus, of that contract? Would not a
clear and satisfactory answer have been that the commissioners had
no authority to partition the profits. The limit of their authority
was a contract by which the agent and locator should pay to the
state the whole net profits of the location. As Mr. Cornell could
not have compelled by mandamus the performance by the commissioners
of the contract, so, on the other hand, having received the scrip
and located it and disposed of the land and paid the money into the
state, that unauthorized stipulation becomes surplusage. It cannot
relieve the State of New York from its liability as trustee. It is
not potent to turn a portion of the proceeds of this scrip into
other channels or to other uses. The fact that all the proceeds
were going to the selected beneficiary doubtless led the
commissioners to indifference as to the stipulations of the
contract, but such indifference did not enlarge their powers nor
make valid the stipulation in excess thereof. It seems strange that
a trustee can avail itself of a disregard by its agent of his
instructions so as to relieve itself of responsibility for about
four-fifths of the proceeds of the trust property. Yet such is the
result of the conclusions reached by this Court.
We are sustained in this view by a report of a majority of the
commission appointed in 1874, by the Legislature of the State of
New York, to inquire into this fund, for they say:
"The question was raised in the Comptroller's report of 1869 and
earlier whether this agreement of 4th August, 1886, was a sale of
the scrip to Mr. Cornell; whether it was not 'in substance, an
agency with a transfer of title for the purpose of facilitating the
object in view.' We are of the opinion that the agreement was an
actual sale to Mr. Cornell, but that all his profits made from
these lands are part of the purchase
Page 136 U. S. 210
money, and so subject to the restrictions of the act of
Congress. Everything that forms a part of the consideration for the
sale of the trust property by the state belongs to the trust fund
created by Congress."
And again:
"We are asked finally to recommend 'what legislation is
necessary to properly secure said funds in compliance with the act
of Congress.' None seems to be necessary in reference to the fund
to be derived from what are called the 'ultimate net profits' from
the location and sale of the lands by Mr. Cornell under the
agreement of August, 1866. By his contract with the state, he is to
pay these profits into its treasury, and he has twenty years in
which to complete the sale of the lands. This fund is, in our
opinion, a part of the proceeds of the scrip within the purview of
the act of Congress, and cannot be legally distinguished from the
other fund. Mr. Cornell seems to have taken this view before
entering into the contract, for, in a public communication dated
October 26, 1869, referring to a letter from himself to Comptroller
Hillhouse in June, 1866, he says:"
"I volunteered to create a fund three or four times as large as
that which the state could produce for the same object that
Congress intended, and at my own risk and expenses, without
charging a single dime to anybody for my services."
"He could not impose on the state treasury a new and distinct
trust as to any part of the consideration he was to pay. Unless
these profits are part of the purchase money, the state gave to
him, for the college bearing his name, a monopoly of the scrip, on
long credit, for a price much less than its cash value. The second
thirty cents per acre provided for in the agreement being dependent
solely on contingent profits, which might not be realized, if at
all, for twenty years, and then without interest, was not at the
date of the agreement equivalent to more than from seven to ten
cents. These profits being part of the purchase money, the state is
bound to receive them when from time to time realized and invest
them in the manner prescribed by the act of Congress, and to
appropriate the income to the educational purposes in the act
defined."
It is true a minority of that commission dissented, but the
Page 136 U. S. 211
reasoning of the minority makes the contract of no validity
except as to the sale of the scrip for thirty cents an acre, and
leaves only that amount as the fund for which the state is
responsible. The reasoning is that the state was not authorized
under the act to itself locate scrip on lands in another state, and
if the profits of the location were to belong to the state, it
would follow that the state was the beneficial owner of the lands
thus located, and therefore there was a direct evasion of the act
of Congress. Concede the force of that reasoning, and who can take
advantage of it? Can the state, which has received the proceeds of
such location, say that it had no authority to receive them, and
can it, after receiving them, repudiate its liability as trustee
for that which it has received as the proceeds of the trust
property? It scarcely need be said that no subsequent legislation
on the part of the State of New York, and no agreement between it
and Cornell University as to the possession of these funds, can
have the effect to relieve the state from its liability as trustee,
or place the title to those funds elsewhere than in the state.