After the expiration of the time limited by the Act of June 8,
1872, 17 Stat. 339, c. 354, for the completion of its road to Santa
Fe, if not before that time, the Denver and Rio Grande Railway
Company was entitled to claim the benefit of the Act of March 3,
1875, 18 Stat. 482, c. 151, upon complying with its conditions.
The Act of March 3, 1875, 18 Stat. 482, c. 151, granting a right
of way to railroads through the public lands, and authorizing them
to take therefrom timber or other materials necessary for the
construction of their roadways, station buildings, depots, machine
shops, sidetracks, turnouts, water stations, etc., permits a
railway company to use the timber or material so taken on portions
of its line remote from the place from which it is taken.
In its ordinary acceptation and enlarged sense, the term
"railroad" includes all structures which are necessary and
essential to its operation.
While it is well settled that public grants are to be construed
strictly as against the grantees, they are not to be so construed
as to defeat the intent of the legislature or to withhold what is
given.
General legislation offering advantages in the public lands to
individuals or corporations as an inducement to the accomplishment
of enterprises of a
quasi-public character through
undeveloped public domain should receive a more liberal
construction than is given to an ordinary private grant.
Page 150 U. S. 2
It is not decided that the Act of March 3, 1875, gave a right to
take timber from the public domain for making rolling stock, nor
what structure, if any, not enumerated in that act would constitute
necessary, essential, or constituent parts of a railroad.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The record in this case presents for our consideration and
determination the following questions: First. Is the defendant,
Page 150 U. S. 3
a railway company, duly chartered and organized in 1870 under
the laws of the Territory of Colorado, for the purpose of locating,
constructing, and operating an extensive system of railway and
telegraph lines, entitled to the benefits of the Act of Congress
approved March 3, 1875, 18 Stat. 482, c. 152, entitled "An act
granting to railroads the right of way through the public lands of
the United States?" And, second, if so entitled, is the defendant
authorized or permitted, under a proper construction of said act,
to take from the public lands adjacent to the line of the railroad
timber or other material necessary for the construction of its
roadway, station buildings, depots, machine shops, side tracks,
turnouts, water stations, etc., and use the same on portions of its
line remote from the place from which such timber or material may
be taken, or does the act limit the railroad company to timber or
other material found in the vicinity of the place where the work of
construction is going on?
These questions constituting the matters in controversy between
the parties arise in this way: the plaintiffs in error, who were
the plaintiffs below, brought their suit against the defendant in
the District Court of the United States for the District of
Colorado to recover the value of timber alleged to have been taken
by the defendant from the public domain between October 1, 1882,
and November 1, 1883. The defendant, by its answer, interposed a
general denial of the allegations of the complaint, and for a
further defense justified the taking of the timber under the
Special Act of Congress approved June 8, 1872, 17 Stat. 339, c.
354, and under the General Act of March 3, 1875. The case was tried
upon the following agreed statement of facts:
"1. That the timber sued for in said action was cut by William
A. Eckerly & Company, as agents for the Denver and Rio Grande
Railway Company, and delivered to said railway company."
"2. That the attached statement correctly shows the kinds and
amounts of timber so cut and delivered, and also shows the time of
cutting, the purposes for which it was cut and used, and the prices
paid for cutting and delivering the same. "
Page 150 U. S. 4
"3. The said timber was cut in Montrose County, Colorado, and
near the Town of Montrose, and upon public, unoccupied, and
unentered lands of the United States."
"4. That the lands from which the timber was cut were along and
near and adjacent to the line of railway of said company."
"5. That the portion of the line of railway through said County
of Montrose and in the vicinity of said Town of Montrose was not
constructed or completed until after June 8, 1882, and that on June
8, 1882, said line of railway was only constructed and completed as
far westward as Cebolla, in Gunnison County, Colorado."
"6. That said company had not completed its line of railway to
Santa Fe on June 8, 1882, nor has it ever so completed it."
"7. That of the timber cut as aforesaid a part was used on
portions of the line of railway out to Grand Junction, constructed
and completed after June 8, 1882, and for the purposes of
construction of railway, erection of section and depot houses, snow
sheds, fences, etc."
"And a part was shipped by the Denver and Rio Grande Railway for
similar purposes to the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railway, to
be used in the Territory of Utah, as shown in the attached
statement, and $1,000 worth was used for repairs on portions of
road completed prior to June 8, 1882."
"8. That as to all of its line of railway constructed after June
8, 1882, the said company strictly complied with all the
requirements of the Act of Congress approved March 3, 1875,
entitled, 'An act granting railroads the right of way through the
public lands of the United States.'"
On this agreed statement of facts, there were submitted to the
court for decision several legal propositions and questions, which
were not, however, separately considered and passed upon, and need
not be here specially noticed. The case made by the facts agreed
upon was intended to be a test case to obtain a definite and
positive adjudication by the court of the rights of the railway
company with regard to cutting timber
Page 150 U. S. 5
from public lands under the provisions of the two acts which
have been referred to.
The district court entered judgment for the plaintiffs for
$24,926.25, the agreed value of the timber taken. From this
judgment the defendant took its writ of error to the Circuit Court
of the United States for the District of Colorado, which modified
the judgment of the district court by charging the defendant first
with the sum of $1,000 as the value of the timber used for repairs
on that portion of the road east of Cebolla, Colorado, which had
been completed prior to June 8, 1882, and for the further sum of
$1,229.45 as the value of the timber shipped by the defendant to
the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railway Company to be used in the
Territory of Utah; but as to the rest of the timber used on
portions of the road west of Montrose, out to Grand Junction, for
the purpose of constructing the defendant's railway, erecting
bridges, section houses, depots, bunkhouses, stockyards, water
tanks, etc., held that the defendant was not liable therefor, and
to that extent reversed the judgment of the district court. The
plaintiffs prosecute the present writ of error to review and
reverse this judgment of the circuit court. The defendant has sued
out no cross writ of error, and concedes its liability for the
timber with which it has been charged by the judgment of the
circuit court.
If the defendant is not entitled to the benefits of the Act of
March 3, 1875, or if that act, properly construed, does not permit
or allow the defendant to use timber taken from adjacent lands
except for the construction of adjacent portions of its line of
road and structures connected therewith, then the judgment of the
circuit court is erroneous. If, however, the defendant can
rightfully claim the benefits of the Act of March 3, 1875, and if
that act authorizes it to take from the public lands adjacent to
its line of road timber necessary for the construction of its
railway, and use the same at points distant from the place at which
the timber was taken, then the judgment below should be
affirmed.
By the act of Congress approved June 8, 1872,
"the right of way over the public domain, one hundred feet in
width on
Page 150 U. S. 6
each side of the track, together with such public lands adjacent
thereto as may be needed for depots, shops, and other buildings for
railway purposes, and for yard room and side tracks, not exceeding
twenty acres at any one station, and not more than one station in
every ten miles of the road, and the right to take from the public
lands adjacent thereto stone, timber, earth, water, and other
material required for the construction and repair of its railway
and telegraphic lines,"
was granted and confirmed unto the defendant in error, its
successors, and assigns. Attached to this grant was a proviso
"that said company shall complete its railway to a point on the
Rio Grande as far south as Santa Fe within five years of the
passage of this act, and shall complete fifty miles additional
south of said point in each year thereafter, and in default thereof
the rights and privileges herein granted shall be rendered null and
void
so far as respects the unfinished portion of said
road."
By the general act of 1875 it was enacted:
"SEC 1. That the right of way through the public lands of the
United States is hereby granted to any railroad company duly
organized under the laws of any state or territory, except the
District of Columbia, or by the Congress of the United States,
which shall have filed with the Secretary of the Interior a copy of
its articles of incorporation, and due proofs of its organization
under the same, to the extent of one hundred feet on each side of
the central line of said road; also the right to take from the
public lands adjacent to the line of said road material, earth,
stone, and timber necessary for the construction of said railroad;
also ground adjacent to such right of way for station buildings,
depots, machine shops, side tracks, turnouts, and water stations,
not to exceed in amount twenty acres for each station, to the
extent of one station for each ten miles of its road."
By the fourth section of this act it was declared:
"SEC. 4. That any railroad company desiring to secure the
benefits of this act shall within twelve months after the location
of any section of twenty miles of its road, if the same be upon
surveyed land, and if upon unsurveyed lands, within
Page 150 U. S. 7
twelve months after the survey thereof by the United States,
file with the register of the land office for the district where
such land is located a profile of its road, and upon approval
thereof by the Secretary of the Interior the same shall be noted
upon the plats in said office, and thereafter all such lands over
which such right of way shall pass shall be disposed of subject to
such right of way,
provided that if any section of said
road shall not be completed within five years after the location of
said section, the right herein granted shall be forfeited as to any
such uncompleted section of said road."
As shown by the agreed statement of facts, the railway company,
on June 8, 1882, had completed its line westward only as far as
Cebolla, Colorado, and has never completed it to Sante Fe. The
right of the railway company, under the special act of 1872, to
take timber west of Cebolla for the construction of its line
accordingly terminated on June 8, 1882. The timber in controversy
was taken after that date from the vicinity of Montrose, Montrose
County, Colorado, some forty-five miles west of Cebollo, and is
justifiable on the part of the defendant only under the Act of
March 3, 1875, if it is entitled to the benefits of that act.
It is urged on behalf of the plaintiffs in error that the
defendant, having accepted the special grant of a right of way, and
the right to take timber, made to it by the Act of June 8, 1872,
and this being a subsisting grant at the time of the passage of the
Act of March 3, 1875, it cannot rightfully claim the benefits of
the latter act. It is said that the two grants could not properly
coexist, and that the later act should not be construed as
including the defendant railway company, because the special act of
1872 was more beneficial in the fact that it conferred upon the
railway company and its successors the right to take timber both
for construction and repairs, and that the defendant, having
elected to take the benefits of that grant, cannot escape the
conditions attached to it, nor claim the benefits of the act of
1875, passed while the defendant was enjoying the special benefits
conferred upon it by the act of 1872.
We cannot accede to the correctness of this proposition.
Page 150 U. S. 8
The general and special acts are in no way inconsistent with
each other. The general nature and purpose of the act of 1875 were
manifestly to promote the building of railroads through the immense
public domain remaining unsettled and undeveloped at the time of
its passage. It was not a mere bounty for the benefit of the
railroads that might accept its provisions, but was legislation
intended to promote the interests of the government in opening to
settlement and in enhancing the value of those public lands through
or near which such railroads might be constructed. To induce the
investment of capital in the construction of railroads through the
public domain, Congress had previously granted special rights, such
as were conferred upon the defendant by the act of 1872; but by
this act of 1875, a general offer was made to any and all railroad
companies of so much of the public domain as might be necessary for
right of way, and ground adjacent thereto for station buildings,
depots, machine shops, side tracks, turnouts, and water stations,
with the right to take timber from the public lands adjacent to
such road for the construction of the railway, provided such
railway company should comply with the provisions of section four
of the act. This general offer was not limited or restricted as to
the time within which the offer should be accepted, nor in respect
to the company or companies who should be entitled to the benefits
thereof upon complying with the provisions of the act. Its terms
are sufficiently broad and general to include the defendant, who,
by the agreed statement of facts, asserted and claimed and benefits
thereof as to all that portion of its line of railway constructed
after June 8, 1882, when its rights under the Act of June 8, 1872,
terminated so far as respected its unfinished line west of Cebolla.
No railway company could claim the benefits of the act of 1875
until it had accepted its provisions and complied with the
conditions required by the fourth section thereof. Upon such
compliance, and not before, the benefits intended to be conferred
by the act would attach. It does not appear from the record or from
the agreed statement of facts at what date the defendant accepted
the provisions of the act of 1875, and complied with the conditions
upon which it was entitled
Page 150 U. S. 9
to the benefits thereof. But whether such compliance on the part
of the railway company was before or after June 8, 1882, it
sufficiently appears that it only claimed and asserted the benefits
under that act after its rights under the act of 1872 had
terminated, so far as concerns the unfinished portion of its line,
for by the eighth paragraph of the agreed statement of facts it is
admitted
"that, as to all of its railway constructed after June 8, 1882,
the said company strictly complied with all the requirements of the
act of Congress approved March 3, 1875, entitled 'An act granting
railroads the right of way through the public lands of the United
States.'"
Now the act of 1875 remaining in force as a general law and as a
general offer to any railway company, the defendant clearly had a
right, after June 8, 1882, if it did not have before, to claim the
benefits of that act. That act was not merely a legislative offer
of benefits, but operated as a law of the government, and remained
in full force and effect not only while the defendant was enjoying
the benefits of the act of 1872, but subsequently, after its rights
under that special act had expired. Under these circumstances, it
cannot be properly said that the railway company is either claiming
or asserting rights conferred by or coexisting under both the
special grant and the general law, for the benefits of the latter,
whether accepted before or after the rights conferred by the
special act of 1872 had ceased or terminated, were not actually
asserted or put in practical use until after June 8, 1882, and then
only in respect to unfinished portions of the line not covered by
the act of 1872.
No reason is perceived why the defendant, after its rights under
the special act had terminated, should not be permitted to take the
benefits of the general law of 1875, so far as it related to the
construction of its line west of Cebolla, and built after June 8,
1882, when its right to take material for construction ceased under
the act of 1872.
Upon what principle does the enjoyment by the defendant of the
rights and benefits conferred by the earlier special act preclude
or estop it from accepting the benefits offered by the later
general act after the special rights and privileges had
Page 150 U. S. 10
terminated? We know of no such principle. There is nothing in
the case of
Railway Co. v. Alling, 99 U. S.
463, cited on behalf of plaintiffs in error,
inconsistent with this view of the subject. In that case, the
Denver Company (the defendant in error here) had in 1871 and 1872
merely made a preliminary survey of its line through the grand
canyon of the Arkansas, but had postponed the actual location and
final appropriation of its roadway through that defile until April,
1878, at which date it was subjects to the provisions of the act of
1875, the second section of which conferred upon other roads the
right, upon certain terms and conditions, to use its track or
roadway through such defiles, for the reason that after the passage
of that act the Denver Company had accepted the benefit of the Act
of March 3, 1877, extending the time for the completion of its road
to Santa Fe, which extension the court assumed would hardly have
been given by Congress except subject to the conditions contained
in the act of 1875. Being subject to the provisions of the law as
contained in the second section of the act of 1875, while in the
exercise of its rights under the act of 1872, as amended by the act
of 1877, in no way prevented the railway company from complying
with its conditions and securing the benefits conferred by the
first section of the act of 1875. We are therefore of opinion that
the defendant in error was clearly entitled, after June 8, 1882, if
not before, to the benefits of the act of 1875, upon complying, as
it did, with the conditions of that act.
But it is urged that even if the defendant is entitled to the
benefits of the act of 1875, it is not permitted to take timber
from the public domain and ship it for use in the construction of
its railroad at points distant from the place at which the timber
was taken, but is limited to the taking and use of timber in the
vicinity or adjacent to the place where the work of construction is
going on, and that it is not entitled to take timber for the
erection of depots, section houses, bunkhouses, stockyards, water
tanks, etc. This presents the question as to where, or at what
place and for what purposes, the railway company may rightfully use
timber or other material taken from the public lands adjacent to
the line of
Page 150 U. S. 11
its road. By the express terms of the act, the timber or other
material which it is entitled to take must be taken from public
lands "adjacent" to the line of the road, and must not be merely
suitable, but "necessary, for the construction of the railroad." By
the agreed statement of facts, it is admitted that the timber in
question was taken from the public, unoccupied, unentered lands of
the United States which were located along, near, and adjacent to
the line of the defendant's road. No question therefore can be
raised as to the proper locality from which it was taken. Was the
defendant, under a proper construction of the act, limited and
restricted in the use of such timber for purposes of construction
to points or places on the line of the road adjacent to the
locality from which the timber was taken? While the act does limit
the railway company in respect to the place or locality from which
timber or other material may be taken by confining the right to
public lands
adjacent to the line of the road, it does
not, by either express terms or by any fair or necessary
implication, place any limitation as to the place at which such
timber may be used. The license to take timber is not, by the
language of the act, limited to what is necessary for the
construction of such portion of the road as is adjacent to the
place from which the timber is taken, but extends to the
construction of the entire "railroad." The right is given to use
the material "necessary for the construction of said railroad."
This language treats the railroad as an entirety, in the
construction of which it was the purpose of Congress to aid by
conferring upon any railway company entitled to the benefits of the
act the right to take timber necessary for such construction from
the public lands adjacent to the line of the road. This intention
would be narrowed, if not defeated, if it were held that the timber
which the railway company had the right to take for use in the
construction of its line could be rightfully used only upon such
portions of the line as might be contiguous to the place from which
the timber was taken. If Congress had intended to impose any such
restriction upon the use of timber or other material taken from
adjacent public lands, it should have been so expressed. No rule of
interpretation requires
Page 150 U. S. 12
this Court to so construe the act as to confine the use of
timber that may be taken from a proper place for the purpose of
construction to any particular or defined portion of the railroad.
To do this would require the Court to read into the statute the
same language, as to the place of use, which is found in the
statute as to the place of taking. In other words, it would require
the Court to interpolate into the statute the provision that the
place at which the timber shall be used shall be "contiguous,
adjoining, or adjacent" to the place from which it is taken. The
place of
use is not, by the language of the statute,
qualified, restricted, or defined except to the extent of the
construction of the railroad as such, and it is not to be inferred
from the restriction or limitation imposed as to the
place
from which it may be rightfully taken that it is to be used only
adjacent to such place.
As to the purposes for which the material may be used, it must
be borne in mind that the benefits intended to be conferred by the
act are not confined or limited to the roadbed or roadway, as the
foundation upon which the superstructure is to rest, but are
extended to the "railroad" as a completed or perfected
structure.
In addition to the right of way and the right to take timber for
the purposes of this completed or entire structure called the
"railroad," there is granted by the act
"also ground adjacent to such right of way for station
buildings, depots, machine shops, side tracks, turnouts, and water
tanks, not to exceed in amount twenty acres for each station, to
the extent of one station for each ten miles of its road."
By this provision, these structures, which are necessary
appurtenances to all railroads, may fairly be regarded as parts or
portions of the
railroad, whose construction it was the
purpose of Congress to aid. In its ordinary acceptation and
enlarged sense the term
railroad fairly includes all
structures which are necessary and essential to its operation. As
already stated, it was not the intention of Congress to aid in the
mere construction of the roadbed or roadway, but to aid in the
construction of the railroad as such, which term had a far more
extended signification than the mere track or roadway. If the
language of the act
Page 150 U. S. 13
had shown an intention to aid merely in the construction of the
roadbed or roadway, it is clear that such structures as
stationhouses, etc., would not have been included; but when the
ground is given on which to erect such structures, in and by the
same act which confers the right of way, and also gives the right
to take from adjacent public lands timber necessary for the
construction of the
railroad as such, it may be reasonably
claimed that timber necessary for that construction may be used or
applied in the erection of the structures constituting an essential
part of portion of the
railroad. It is no forced
interpretation to hold that the right to take timber was intended
to aid in the erection of structures without which the railroad
would have been practically useless.
It could hardly be questioned that a grant of power to construct
a railroad would include the right to erect necessary structures,
such as stationhouses, water tanks, etc., as essential and
constituent parts thereof. This being so, it is difficult to
understand why the grant of a right to take timber for the
construction of a railroad should not equally extend to and include
the same structures, constituting, as they do, necessary and
indispensable appendages thereto.
Again, exemption from taxation is construed with greater
strictness in favor of the state than grants of public properly or
rights, for the reason that taxation is more essential to the
existence of government than ownership and possession of public
property. Yet it has been held in several well considered cases
that where a railroad is exempt from taxation, such exemption
extends to structures like those in question. Thus, in the case of
the
Lehigh Coal & Navigation Co. v. Northampton
County, 8 W. & S. 334, it was held that, as an
incorporated canal was not taxable, not only the bed, berm-bank,
and towpath of the canal, but the lock houses and
collectors� houses were also exempt, these being considered
constituent parts of the canal or necessarily incident thereto. So,
in
Railroad Co. v. Berks County, 6 Penn.St. 70, it was
held that, as the railroad was exempt from taxation, water stations
and depots, including the offices and places to hold cars, etc.,
being necessary and indispensable to the construction and use of
the road, were
Page 150 U. S. 14
within the exemption, while warehouses and coal lots, intended
for the mere convenience of the road, were not so exempt. The
principle of these cases is followed and illustrated in the case of
State v. Commissioners of Mansfield, 23 N.J.Law 510, and
in the case of
Worcester v. Western Railroad, 4 Met.
(Mass.) 564.
It is undoubtedly, as urged by the plaintiffs in error, the well
settled rule of this Court that public grants are construed
strictly against the grantees, but they are not to be so construed
as to defeat the intent of the legislature or to withhold what is
given, either expressly or by necessary or fair implication. In
Winona & St. Peter Railroad v. Barney, 113 U.
S. 618,
113 U. S. 625,
MR. JUSTICE FIELD, speaking for the Court, thus states the rule
upon this subject:
"The acts making the grants are to receive such a construction
as will carry out the intent of Congress, however difficult it
might be to give full effect to the language used if the grants
were by instruments of private conveyance. To ascertain that
intent, we must look to the condition of the country when the acts
were passed, as well as to the purposes declared on their face, and
read all parts of them together."
Looking to the condition of the country and the purposes
intended to be accomplished by the act, this language of the court
furnishes the proper rule of construction of the act of 1875. When
an act, operating as a general law and manifesting clearly the
intention of Congress to secure public advantages or to subserve
the public interests and welfare by means of benefits more or less
valuable, offers to individuals or to corporations, as an
inducement to undertake and accomplish great and expensive
enterprises or works of a
quasi-public character in or
through an immense and undeveloped public domain, such legislation
stands upon a somewhat different footing from merely a private
grant, and should receive at the hands of the court a more liberal
construction in favor of the purposes for which it was enacted.
Bradley v. New York & New Haven Railroad, 21 Conn.
294; Pierce on Railroads 491.
This is the rule, we think, properly applicable to the
construction
Page 150 U. S. 15
of the act of 1875, rather than the more strict rule of
construction adopted in the case of purely private grants, and in
view of this character of the act, we are of opinion that the
benefits intended for the construction of the railroad in
permitting the use of timber or other material should be extended
to and include the structures mentioned in the act as a part of
such railroad.
It appears from the certificate attached to the agreed statement
of facts that a small portion of the timber taken by the defendant,
amounting to $150.15, was used in or about "cars." The defendant
was not charged by the judgment of the court below with this item,
for the reason, as we assume, that these cars were not employed in
the transportation of traffic, but were of such character as hand
cars employed in the work of construction. In affirming the
judgment of the court below as to this item, this Court does not
mean to be understood as holding that the defendant, under the act
of 1875, has the right to use timber taken from the public lands
for the purpose of constructing rolling stock or equipment employed
in its transportation business. Neither are we called upon in this
case to determine what other structures, if any, besides those
enumerated in the first section of the act of 1875 would constitute
necessary, essential, or constituent parts of the railroad.
Our conclusion is that there is no error in the judgment below,
and that it should be
Affirmed.