The Court of Claims was not estopped by the recitals in the Act
of January 17, 1887, 24 Stat. 358, c. 21, referring this case to
it, from considering the question of the title of the claimants to
the property whose value is sought to be recovered.
Page 150 U. S. 484
The commissioners appointed by the governments of the United
States and of Russia for the transfer of Alaska under the Treaty of
March 30, 1867, 15 Stat. 539, had no power to vary the language of
the treaty or to determine questions of title or ownership.
The building constructed by the Russian-American Company in 1845
on land belonging to Russia became thereby, so far as disclosed by
the facts in this case, the property of the Russian government,
and, being transferred to the United States by the Treaty of March
30, 1867, no property or ownership in it remained in the
Russian-American Company which it could transfer to a private
person adversely to the United States.
This was a petition by John H. Kinkead and Samuel Sussman,
claiming to be the owners and lawfully possessed of a certain
warehouse in Sitka, Alaska, for the rent of a part of such
warehouse at the rate of $200 per month, from December 15, 1868, to
December 15, 1888, the date of the petition, amounting to $48,000,
and also the further sum of $69,300 for rent of another part of the
same building from September 12, 1869, to December 15, 1888;
together with the further sum of $50,000 for the value of the
building, the aggregate amount of the claim being $167,300.
Petitioners claimed to have purchased the building from the
Russian-American Company through Prince Maksoutoff, chief factor,
for the sum of $3,000 in gold.
A former petition for the same claim had been presented to the
Court of Claims, and dismissed by it for want of jurisdiction upon
the ground that, as the title set up by the claimants depended upon
the construction of the treaty between the United States and the
emperor of Russia, the court was without jurisdiction over the
same. 18 Ct.Cl. 504. Whereupon claimants procured the passage of an
Act of Congress, approved January 17, 1887, referring their claim
to the Court of Claims for adjudication.
The petition under consideration having been heard, the court
made a finding of facts, the substance of which appears in the
opinion of this Court, and entered a judgment dismissing the
petition upon the ground that Kinkead and Sussman had no title to
the property in question. From this judgment, petitioners appealed
to this Court.
Page 150 U. S. 485
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioners' title to the building in question which they claim
to have bought of the Russian-American Company, a Russian
corporation, soon after the cession of Alaska to the United States,
depends upon the construction to be given to the treaty of March
30, 1867, between His Majesty, the Emperor of Russia, and the
United States, 15 Stat. 539, the correspondence and protocol
connected therewith, and the Act of Congress of January 17, 1887,
referring this claim to the Court of Claims for adjudication. Upon
the hearing in the Court of Claims, the court found
"that at the time Alaska was ceded by Russia to the United
States, there was standing on a certain lot adjacent to the public
wharf in the Town of Sitka a building, constructed of hewn logs,
118 feet in length and 50 feet in width. The land upon which this
building stood belonged to Russia, and was thus embraced in the
cession to the United States."
This building was erected in 1845 by the Russian-American
Company at their own expense, and from that time to the date of the
treaty had been used by said company as a warehouse for the storage
of furs and other property, and for trading purposes.
By what authority from Russia this land was built upon and
occupied by said company, further than is shown in finding II
(which relates solely to proceedings taken for the transfer of the
ceded territory) "does not appear."
By the first article of the treaty, the Emperor makes cession
of
"all the territory and dominion now possessed by his said
majesty on the continent of America and in the adjacent islands,
the same being contained in the geographical limits herein set
forth, to-wit: [boundaries]. "
Page 150 U. S. 486
The second article provided that
"in the cession of the territory and dominion made by the
preceding article are included the right of property in all public
lots and squares, vacant lands, and all public buildings,
fortifications, barracks, and other edifices which are not private
individual property."
Article four provides for the appointment of an agent for each
government, for the purpose of making and receiving formal delivery
of the ceded territory, and
"for doing any other act which may be necessary in regard
thereto. . . . But the cession, with the right of immediate
possession, is nevertheless to be deemed complete and absolute on
the exchange of ratifications, without waiting for such formal
delivery."
Article six provides that
"the cession of territory and dominion herein made is hereby
declared to be free and unencumbered by any reservations,
privileges, franchises, grants, or possessions, by any associated
companies, whether corporate or incorporate, Russian or any other,
or by any parties, except merely private individual property
holders."
It should be added in this connection, and as explanatory of the
sixth article of the treaty, that on March 23, 1867, Mr. Seward,
then Secretary of State of the United States, addressed a letter to
the Russian minister, in which he stated:
"I must insist upon that clause in the sixth article of the
draft which declares the cession to be free and unencumbered by any
reservations, privileges, franchises, grants, or possession by any
associated companies, whether corporate or incorporate, Russian or
any other, etc., and must regard it as an ultimatum. With the
President's approval, however, I will add two hundred thousand
dollars to the consideration money on that account."
To this letter the Russian minister made reply that he believed
himself "authorized to accede literally to this request on the
conditions indicated" in the note of the Secretary.
In pursuance of the fourth article of the treaty, the President
appointed General Rousseau commissioner to receive the formal
transfer of the ceded territory, with instructions to
"enter into communication with Captain Pestchouroff, the Russian
commissioner, now here, and arrange with him with
Page 150 U. S. 487
regard to proceeding as soon as may be convenient to the
territory,"
etc.
"Pursuant to the stipulations of the treaty, that transfer will
include all forts and military posts and public buildings, such as
the governor's house, and those used for government purposes,
dockyards, barracks, hospitals, and schools, all public lands, and
all ungranted lots of ground at Sitka and Kodiak. Private dwellings
and warehouses, blacksmiths', joiners', coopers', tanners', and
other similar shops, ice houses, flour and saw mills, and any small
barracks on the island are subject to the control of their owners,
and are not to be included in the transfer to the United
States."
The commissioners were further instructed to draw up and sign
full inventories, distinguishing between the property to be
transferred to the United States and that to be retained by
individuals, and were also instructed to furnish the proprietors of
individual property with a certificate of their right to hold the
same upon production of documentary or other proof of
ownership.
"As it is understood that the Russian-American Company possess
in that quarter large stores of furs, provisions, and other goods
now at Sitka, Kodiak, and elsewhere on the main land and on the
island, it is proper that that company should have a reasonable
time to collect, sell, or export that property. For that purpose,
the company may leave in the territory an agent or agents for the
purpose of closing their business."
In his report of his proceedings, General Rousseau stated:
"I found that by the charter of the Russian-American Company, it
had authority to vest in its employees, occupants of land in the
territory, the title thereto. This was on condition, however, that
the possessions of the Indians should not be interfered with."
"Acting under this charter, the company from the first caused
dwellings to be erected for the use of its employees on lots of
ground set apart for the purpose. The title in fee to such premises
was often vested in the employee in possession when he had
faithfully served out his term in the company, or, having died
before it ended, and having a widow or
Page 150 U. S. 488
children in the territory, the title was frequently vested in
them."
"Finding in its charter this authority of the company to vest
title to land in its employees, and that very many of the dwellings
erected by the company were occupied by employees or their widows
and children, who claimed the property in fee, the commissioners
called on the Governor, Prince Maksoutoff, to define and certify to
the interest of each individual thus occupying such dwellings and
lots, in order that we might distinguish between those who owned
the property in fee and those who claimed a less interest, and in
compliance with your instructions give certificates to the
claimants accordingly."
"The inventories, respectively marked 'C' and 'D' (forming part
of the protocol) which are forwarded with this report will show in
part the action of the Governor in the premises. For the rest, he
gave a certificate stating the interest of each occupant in the
premises occupied, on the back of which the commissioners placed
their approval, and it was left to be delivered to the
occupant."
"In order to be accurate, and prevent disputes hereafter about
the title to houses and lots, we made a map of New Archangel
(forwarded with this report) on which every house and dwelling in
the town is located and numbered, and, as between the claimant and
the United States, the title defined to it and settled in the
inventories. This was thought necessary in order to give, in
accordance with your instructions, to each man of property who
desired to dispose of it a certificate of title."
"The Town of New Archangel [now Sitka] was built in the main by
the Russian-American Company, and, except the dwellings transferred
by them to their employees, and the public buildings transferred to
the United States, is owned by that company still. Yet it has but a
possessory interest in the land, as it only had permission to erect
buildings upon it, for although it had authority to vest the title
of lands in its employees, it had no power to vest such title in
itself. The commissioners left the matter as they found it, and the
company in possession of its buildings. "
Page 150 U. S. 489
"All the buildings in any wise used for public purposes were
delivered to the United States commissioner, taken possession of,
and turned over to General Davis, as were also the public archives
of the territory, and in a spirit of liberality the wharf and
several valuable warehouses belonging to the Russian-American
Company were included in the transfer by the Russian commissioner.
Both the wharf and the warehouses were very much needed by our
people."
In a joint report of the commissioners termed a "protocol," it
was stated that there had been delivered to General Rousseau
"the forts and public buildings, including the governor's house,
dockyards, blockhouses, barracks, batteries, hospitals, wharves,
and schools in the Town of New Archangel, an inventory of which,
marked 'A,' was attached. We gave certificates of ownership to the
individual owners of private houses and of lots in fee simple in
the Town of New Archangel, as directed, a list of whose names in
presented in inventory marked 'C,' attached to and made part
hereof. In inventory marked 'D,' attached to and made part hereof,
are shown the house and buildings owned by private individuals in
New Archangel, the owners thereof having no title in fee to the
lands on which they are situated."
The Court of Claims found that
"the property in dispute in this suit is not included in
inventory C, where are found the names of owners to whom the
commissioners gave certificates of title, but in inventory D, which
is a list of buildings, the owners of which have no title in fee to
the land on which they are situated."
No owner of this building was named.
The court further found that after the transfer,
"William S. Dodge was appointed collector of customs at Sitka,
and in June or July, 1868, he was in possession and occupancy of
the northern part of the building described in the claimants'
petition, which he used as a custom warehouse. At the same time and
afterwards, the claimant Sussman was in the occupancy of another
part of the building."
This occupancy was continued by Dodge and his successors in the
office of collector of customs.
In 1869, it having been reported to the War Department
Page 150 U. S. 490
that a very large part of the property which belonged to the
Russian Fur Company was enjoyed by persons claiming title by
purchase from that company after the cession of the territory, the
Secretary of War directed the military commander of the Department
of Alaska to take possession of and retain in his charge all posts,
buildings, etc., which were not in fact entitled to be considered
individual property. In pursuance of this order, the commanding
general took possession of the entire building in question, which
has since been claimed and occupied by the government.
Claimant Kinkead protested against this seizure, claiming that
the building had been designated as private property, that it had
been purchased of the Russian-American Company, and that the title
acquired was good, valid, and legal.
It further appeared that in December, 1868, Mr. Ketchum, then
collector of customs, assumed to lease from Sussman, as agent for
Louis Sloss, to whom the Russian Company had given a deed, part of
the warehouse in question at a monthly rental of $200. This lease,
however, was promptly disapproved by the Secretary of the Treasury,
who advised him that no building could be hired by him for any
purpose without the previous assent of the department.
It appeared that the Territory of Alaska had, prior to its
cession to the United States, been occupied by a Russian
corporation known as the Russian-American Company, a corporation
largely engaged in fur trading. This company had the privilege of
making use of the public lands and erecting buildings thereon. It
had no right, however, of becoming the owner of such lands, but did
have the privilege of conveying parcels of it in fee simple to its
employees. Pursuant to this privilege, it had made conveyance of
certain of these lands to its employees, upon which had been
constructed the dwellings erected by the company, and occupied by
such employees, their widows or children. Apparently, however, it
had no right to acquire for itself any title to the soil, and
enjoyed nothing more than the use of the land upon which its
buildings were situated, the dominion or right of property therein
remaining in the Russian government. The company appears to
have
Page 150 U. S. 491
possessed not only the ordinary powers of a trading corporation,
but certain governmental powers, which it exercised arbitrarily, if
not despotically, over the entire territory. It had a monopoly of
the trade of the territory, and appears to have been in fact a
provincial government of the Russian empire.
As no question is made but that the land upon which this
building is situated belonged to the Russian government, and that
the building was erected in 1845, by permission of the Emperor, for
the use of this company in the storage and sale of its furs, and
for other trading purposes, and was so constructed of heavy, hewn
logs as to be incapable of removal, no good reason is apparent for
excepting it from the ordinary rule which attaches such buildings
to the realty. The presumption is that buildings belong to the
owner of the land on which they stand as a part of the realty.
Quicquid plantatur solo, solo cedit.
"If one erects a permanent building, like a dwelling house, upon
the land of another voluntarily, and without any contract with the
owner, it becomes a part of the realty, and belongs to the owner of
the soil."
Madigan v. McCarthy, 108 Mass. 376; Taylor on on Land.
& Ten. § 544.
It is true there is abundant authority for holding that
buildings may, by agreement of parties, be erected upon land
without becoming affixed thereto, and that neither the mode of
annexation nor the use thereof is conclusive as to the intention of
the parties, although the presumption is that the building so
erected becomes a part of the freehold.
Wood v. Hewitt, 8
Q.B. 913;
Crippen v. Morrison, 13 Mich. 23;
Mott v.
Palmer, 1 N.Y. 564;
Sudbury v. Jones, 8 Cush. 184;
Howard v. Fessenden, 14 Allen 124.
The extrinsic evidence, however, in this case, so far from
showing an intention on the part of the Russian government that
this building should not pass under the treaty, evinces a
determination on the part of both governments that it should so
pass. Not only did the land belong to the Russian government, but
the building was of a size and construction such as to render it
practically impossible of removal. The correspondence between the
Secretary of State and the Russian
Page 150 U. S. 492
minister with reference to the sixth article contemplates that
there were "
reservations" and "
possessions" owned
by
associated companies, Russian or other, which were to
pass under the treaty, and the sum of $200,000 was added to the
consideration money to cover the cession of such properties. More
explicit words than those used in article six to distinguish
between the property of associated companies, "corporate or
incorporate, Russian or any other," and merely "private individual
property holders" could scarcely be chosen to express the
determination of both countries that the cession should be free,
and unencumbered by any reservations, privileges, franchises,
grants, or possessions of incorporated companies. The private
property of individual holders was evidently exempted from the
cession for the reason that, while the Russian-American Company
could not acquire title to the real estate occupied by itself, it
could confer such title upon those of its employees who desired to
make homes for themselves in that territory. There can be no good
reason to doubt that it was intended by this designation of private
individual property to include as within the cession not only all
real property belonging to the government, but all buildings
erected by its permission upon such property except such as
belonged to individuals. Whether the Russian government had the
right to make this disposition of the property of the
Russian-American Company involves questions of Russian law which we
are not compelled to pass upon. It is enough that the Emperor
assumed to deal in this way with the property of his subjects.
Inasmuch, however, as $200,000 were added to the price originally
agreed upon in consideration of the cession of the property of
associated companies specified under the sixth article, and as the
Russian-American Company appears to have been the only corporation
existing in the territory to which the terms of this cession could
apply, we may safely assume that this amount was intended to
compensate it for its interest in the buildings erected by it. Its
charter had already expired in 1862, and had not been renewed at
the time of the cession. Its franchises had therefore been
extinguished, and it can hardly be
Page 150 U. S. 493
assumed that the letter of Mr. Seward was intended to be
confined to such franchises.
It may be remarked in this connection that there is a manifest
inconsistency in the positions assumed by the petitioners. Their
only right in this building is derived from a deed of the land
which confessedly belonged to the Russian government. Yet the whole
theory of the petitioners' case rests upon the assumption that the
building was erected under such circumstances that it was not
intended to become a part of the freehold. Consistency, then, would
seem to require that the deed should be of the building alone,
whereas it is in fact a deed of the land, and can only pass the
building upon the theory that the building was affixed to the land,
a theory quite inconsistent with the petitioners' contention. If
the building were so constructed as to be removable, there would be
some reason for saying that it was not contemplated that it should
become a fixture, but the difficulty with petitioners' claim is
that they cannot assert title to the building without also
asserting title to the land.
It is insisted, however, that the contemporaneous construction
of the treaty by those who were authorized to carry it into effect
was such as to indicate that the property of the Russian-American
Company was not intended to pass. The instructions of the
government to General Rousseau were that
"the transfer will include the forts and military posts and
public buildings, etc., all public lands, and all ungranted lots of
land, etc., while private dwellings and warehouses are subject to
the control of their owners, and are not included in the transfer.
. . . In order, however, that the said individual proprietors may
retain their property as aforesaid,"
he was authorized to give them a certificate of their right to
hold the same. The words "private dwellings" and "individual
proprietors," used in these instructions, should be construed in
connection with the treaty, which reserved only "private individual
property." Obviously it was beyond the power even of the Russian
government itself, without a gross violation of the treaty, to
enlarge the exception of private individual property so as to
include all private property, whether owned by corporations
Page 150 U. S. 494
or individuals. In his report of his proceedings, General
Rousseau stated that the town was built mainly by the
Russian-American Company, and
"except the dwellings transferred by them to their employees,
and the public buildings transferred to the United States, is owned
by that company still;"
that "although it had authority to invest the title to land in
its employees, it had no authority to invest such title in itself;"
that
"all the buildings in any wise used for public purposes were
delivered to the United States commissioner, . . . and in a spirit
of liberality the wharf and several valuable warehouses, belonging
to the Russian-American Company, were included in the
transfer."
Whether this was one of the warehouses included in the transfer
does not clearly appear, though it was contained in inventory D,
which showed the houses and buildings owned by private individuals,
the owners having no title to the fee in the land. It is quite
clear, however, that it was never intended to invest the
commissioners with judicial power to determine the title to
property in Sitka or to pass finally upon the question whether a
particular building passed under the treaty or not. If, for
instance, the commissioners had inventoried a certain house as the
property of A. when in fact it was the property of B., no one would
seriously claim that such act would transfer the property from B.
to A., or, if they had assumed to list the property of an
individual landowner as the property of the government, or the
Russian-American Company, that it would in any manner change the
title to such property or estop the real owner to assert his title
thereto in a court of justice. So if they assumed to list the
property of the Russian-American Company as "private individual
property" within the language of the treaty, it certainly would not
operate to vest a good title in any one who might see fit to
purchase such property from the Russian-American Company, even if
he purchased upon the faith of such inventory, as Sloss appears to
have done in this case. The truth is the powers of the
commissioners were simply ministerial, and the making of
inventories simply a matter of convenience and a method of
determining
prima facie what property the government
should appropriate to
Page 150 U. S. 495
itself for the time being, and what should be left to the
individual proprietors. To treat this inventory as binding either
upon the government or individuals would be to acknowledge that the
commissioners were invested with judicial powers to determine the
title to property. Clearly they had no power to depart from the
plain language of the treaty and no power to bind the government by
an assumption that government property was private property, and
thus settle questions of title or ownership. The weight that has
been given to contemporaneous construction has never gone to the
extent of holding that the title or ownership of property may be
changed by the action of executive officers appointed to carry a
statute or treaty into effect.
The case of
Comegys v.
Vasse, 1 Pet. 195, relied upon by the petitioners,
is readily distinguishable from the case under consideration. In
the treaty with Spain for the cession of Florida, the United States
undertook to make satisfaction of certain claims of Spanish
subjects; and, by article 11, to ascertain the full amount and
validity of those claims, a commission, to consist of three
commissioners, was to be appointed "to receive, examine, and decide
upon the amount and validity of all claims," etc. Such
commissioners were to act under oath for the faithful discharge of
their duties, and were authorized to hear and examine witnesses
upon oath and to receive all suitable testimony. In other words,
they were invested with judicial power to pass upon these claims,
and their decision, within the scope of this authority, was held to
be conclusive and final. Said Mr. Justice Story (p.
26 U. S. 212):
"The parties must abide by it as the decree of a competent tribunal
of exclusive jurisdiction." But even in this case it was held that
their authority did not extend to the adjustment of all conflicting
rights of different citizens to the fund so awarded. The rights of
the several claimants to the fund were left to the ordinary course
of judicial proceedings in the established courts of justice. The
powers of the commissioners in this case were evidently of a very
different character from those delegated to General Rousseau.
It is further contended that the Court of Claims was
estopped
Page 150 U. S. 496
to consider the question of title by the recitals in the Act of
Congress of January 17, 1887, 24 Stat. 358, c. 21, referring this
claim to that court, in which the building in question is
recognized as having been the property of the Russian-American
Company. The act recites that: "Whereas John H. Kinkead, of Nevada,
and Samuel Sussman, of California, did . . . purchase a certain
building situated," etc.,
"from the Russian-American Company, the owner of said building,
and"
"Whereas said building had been declared by the protocol of the
transfer of Russian America to the United States to be private
property; and"
"Whereas thereafter the collector of customs of the United
States did take from said Kinkead and Sussman a lease of a portion
of said building, and entered thereupon; and"
"Whereas afterwards General Jefferson C. Davis did seize the
whole of said building, on the ground that the same was the
property of the United States, notwithstanding the commissioner
appointed to ascertain private property had certified the same to
be private property: . . ."
"Therefore be it enacted, . . . that jurisdiction be, and is
hereby, conferred on the Court of Claims to hear the claims,"
etc.,
"for the rent and value of certain buildings . . . alleged by
them to have been acquired by virtue of purchase from the
Russian-American Company, upon the evidence already filed in said
court, and such additional legal evidence as may be hereafter
presented on either side, and if said court shall find that said
parties acquired a valid title to said buildings respectively
alleged to have been purchased by them, said court shall award said
parties a fair and reasonable rent,"
etc.
In other words, the Court of Claims is required to find first
whether the petitioners acquired a valid title; second, what shall
be deemed a fair and reasonable rent; third, a suitable indemnity
for the buildings themselves. Now as the question whether the
petitioners had a valid title to these buildings depended not upon
the fact of purchase from the Russian-American Company, which was
admitted in the first recital of
Page 150 U. S. 497
the statute, and never denied by anyone, but upon the title of
the Russian-American Company, and its right to convey, which had
been called in question by the refusal of the Secretary of the
Treasury to allow the petitioners' claim for rent, it is impossible
that Congress could have intended by the recital to estop the Court
of Claims from passing upon the very question referred to it for
judicial determination. Petitioners assert that the whole object of
the act was to permit the Court of Claims to pass upon the
reasonableness of the rent and the value of the building. This
theory, however, is not only wholly inconsistent with the enacting
words, but with the position assumed by the officers of the
government prior to the enactment in question. Indeed, there had
been no dispute between the parties as to the amount of the rent,
but there had been a seizure of the property by a military officer
of the United States under express directions of the Secretary of
War, and a total repudiation by the Secretary of the Treasury of
the act of Ketchum, collector of customs, in assuming to lease this
building, and a denial of any claim for rent. In the face of these
proceedings, it is wholly improbable that Congress should have
admitted the ownership of the Russian-American Company, which was
the question upon which the liability of the government wholly
depended. Petitioners insist that the Court of Claims should have
accepted the preamble as a correct recital of the fact, and should
have determined first whether the petitioners had acquired the
building in controversy by virtue of purchase from the
Russian-American Company, and second whether the petitioners had
acquired a valid title to said building. The fact that Kinkead and
Sussman had purchased the building was as distinctly set forth in
the first recital as that the Russian-American Company was the
owner, and if it were unnecessary for it to determine one question,
it was equally so to determine the other.
It is well settled, however, that a mere recital in an act,
whether of fact or of law, is not conclusive unless it be clear
that the legislature intended that the recital should be accepted
as a fact in the case. Endlich on Statutes § 375. It was
Page 150 U. S. 489
stated by the court in
Branson v.
Wirth, 17 Wall. 32,
84
U. S. 44, that
"whilst the recital of public acts are regarded as evidence of
the facts recited, it is otherwise, as we have seen, with reference
to private acts. They are not evidence except against the party who
procured them."
We are referred, however, to the case of
United States v.
Jordan, 113 U. S. 418, as
sustaining a contrary doctrine. In this case, an act of Congress
provided
"that the Secretary of the Treasury be, and he is hereby,
authorized and directed to remit, refund, and pay back, out of any
moneys in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, to the following
named citizens of Tennessee . . . the amount of taxes assessed upon
and collected from the said named persons, contrary to the
provisions of the regulations issued by the Secretary of the
Treasury,"
etc. Jordan was one of the parties named in the act. The
Secretary of the Treasury having construed the act to mean only
that such sums should be refunded as were collected from the
persons named contrary to the provisions of the regulations issued
by the Secretary of the Treasury, this Court held that the statute
did not admit of that interpretation, nor leave open any question
for the court or for the accounting officers of the Treasury except
the identity of the claimants with the persons named in it.
"Although the act," said MR. JUSTICE Blatchford,
"speaks of the sums as being 'the amount of taxes assessed upon
and collected from the said named persons contrary to the
provisions of the regulations' named, there is no indication of any
intention to submit to any one the determination of the question
whether the taxes in any case were collected contrary to the
provisions of such regulations, or of the question how those
provisions are to be construed."
It needs no argument to show that there is a wide distinction
between an act directing a particular thing to be done and an act
reciting the existence of certain facts which had long been a
matter of dispute, and which the Court of Claims was authorized by
the act to pass upon and determine.
Counsel have also seen fit to lay before us the report of a
Senate committee accompanying the bill, which afterwards
Page 150 U. S. 499
became the Act of January 17, 1887, which report was in favor of
the justice of the claim. In accordance with this report the
committee submitted a bill conferring jurisdiction upon the Court
of Claims to hear this claim upon the evidence already filed and
such additional legal evidence as might be presented, and directing
said court to award a fair and reasonable rent, etc. The bill,
however, was amended upon the floor of the Senate by inserting the
words, "if said court shall find that said parties acquired a valid
title to said buildings, respectively, alleged to have been
purchased by them," thus evincing a clear intention on the part of
the Senate to require the petitioners to satisfy the court of the
validity of their title to the building. We think it clear there is
nothing in the recital of the act which even throws a doubt upon
the intention of Congress to require the court to be satisfied of
this fact.
The truth is that the whole case of the claimants depends upon
the question whether the government was bound by the proceedings of
the commissioners in the execution of the treaty. As we have
already expressed the opinion that they possessed no power to vary
the language of the treaty or to determine questions of title or
ownership, it results that their action was not binding upon the
government.
The judgment of the court below is therefore
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE FIELD,
dissenting.
In the case of
United States v.
Percheman, 7 Pet. 51,
32 U. S. 86,
Chief Justice Marshall said:
"It may not be unworthy of remark that it is very unusual, even
in cases of conquest, for the conqueror to do more than to displace
the sovereign and assume dominion over the country. The modern
usage of nations, which has become law, would be violated; that
sense of justice and of right which is acknowledged and felt by the
whole civilized world would be outraged, if private property should
be generally confiscated
Page 150 U. S. 500
and private rights annulled. The people change their allegiance;
their relation to their ancient sovereign is dissolved, but their
relations to each other and their rights of property remain
undisturbed. If this be the modern rule even in cases of conquest,
who can doubt its application to the case of an amicable cession of
territory?"
Upon this view of the subject it might be justly expected that
when, in 1867, a treaty for the cession of the dominions of Russia
in America was concluded between the United States and the Emperor
of Russia, the rights of private property would remain undisturbed.
Nor would that just expectation be disappointed, for, on reading
the treaty, we find explicit provisions preserving and excluding
from the operation of the cession private property. It, however,
appears that portions of the ceded territory had been occupied by
an association or company known as the Russian-American Company,
and which seems to have claimed and exercised an almost despotic
control over the sparse population, whether native or Russian, and
also to have been possessed, by grant from the Russian government,
of certain franchises and privileges the precise nature and extent
of which are not disclosed. Aware of the existence of this company,
and apparently fearful lest troublesome contentions as to such
special privileges and franchises might afterwards arise, the
government of the United States insisted on the insertion in the
treaty of an explicit article providing that the cession of
territory and dominion should be declared to be free and
unencumbered by any reservations, privileges, franchises, grants,
or possessions by any associated companies, whether corporate or
incorporate, Russian or any other, or by any parties except merely
private individual property holders.
The fourth article of the treaty provided that the Emperor of
Russia should appoint an agent or agents for the purpose of
formally delivering to a similar agent or agents, appointed on
behalf of the United States, the territory, dominion, property,
dependencies, and appurtenances which were ceded, and for doing any
other act which might be necessary in regard thereto.
Page 150 U. S. 501
Subsequently, and in pursuance of the fourth article of the
treaty, the Russian government appointed Alexis Pestchouroff, and
the United States appointed General Lovell H. Rousseau, as their
respective commissioners, and these commissioners proceeded to
fulfill the duties of their appointment under instructions from
their respective governments. The instructions from the government
of the United States were as follows:
"Pursuant to the stipulations of the treaty, that transfer will
include all forts and military posts and public buildings, such as
the Governor's house, and those used for governmental purpose,
dockyards, barracks, hospitals, and schools; all public lands, and
all ungranted lots of land at Sitka and Kodiak. Private dwellings
and warehouses, blacksmiths', joiners', coopers', tanners', and
other similar shops, ice houses, flour and saw mills, and any small
barracks on the islands, are subject to the control of their
owners, and are not to be included in the transfer to the United
States."
The instructions to Capt. Pestchouroff from the Russian
government were as follows:
"3. All the forts and military posts will be delivered at once
to the American military forces that may follow the United States
commissioner. . . ."
"4. The public buildings, such as the Governor's house, the
buildings used for government purposes, dockyards, barracks,
hospitals, schools, public grounds, and all free lots at Sitka and
Kodiak, will be delivered by Captain Pestchouroff to the American
commissioner as soon as practicable."
"5. All the houses and stores forming private property will
remain, to be disposed of by their proprietors. To this same
category belong smiths', joiners', coopers', tanners', and other
similar shops, as well as ice houses, saw and flour mills, and any
small barracks that may exist on the islands. . . ."
H.R.Ex.Doc. No. 177, 40th Cong., 2d Sess. p. 19.
The commissioners proceeded to fulfill the duties imposed upon
them, and on October 26, 1867, signed a protocol or statement of
their action. It thereby appears that there was delivered to
General Rousseau, for the United States, the government archives,
papers, and documents relating to the territory
Page 150 U. S. 502
and dominion therein named; also the forts and public buildings,
including the Governor's house, dockyards, blockhouses, barracks,
batteries, hospital, wharves, and schools in the Town of New
Archangel, an inventory whereof, marked "A," was attached to the
protocol. It further appears that an inventory, marked "B," was
attached, describing the church buildings, etc., left in the hands
of the Greco-Russian Church, and that an inventory, marked "C," was
attached, giving a list of certain lots and houses held in fee
simple by persons named, and an inventory, marked "D," was likewise
attached, showing the houses and buildings owned by private
individuals in New Archangel, the owners thereof having no title in
fee to the land on which the buildings were situated.
The building in question in this case was specified in inventory
"D" as private property.
Subsequently, on October 28, 1868, the Russian-American Company,
by Prince Maksoutoff, its chief administrator, who had assisted the
Russian commissioner in making the delivery and inventory of the
property under the treaty, sold and conveyed the property in
question to Louis Sloss, describing it as
"that piece or parcel of land situate near and adjoining to the
public wharf of said city, upon which is erected building No. 1,
and described as a warehouse in the map and inventory 'D,' attached
to and made a part of the protocol of the transfer of said
territory to the United States by Russia, and therein declared to
be private property."
The title of Louis Sloss, by deed of October 28, 1887, was
declared to have been taken and held by him for and on account of
John H. Kinkead and Samuel Sussman.
After the transfer, William S. Dodge was appointed collector of
customs at Sitka, and in June or July, 1868, he was in the
possession and occupancy of the northern part of the building
described in the claimants' petition, which he used as a customs
warehouse. At the same time and afterwards, the claimant Sussman
was in the occupancy of another part of the building. Dodge
continued so to occupy the northern part of the building until
about the 1st of December, 1868, when he turned it over to Hiram
Ketchum, Jr., his successor in the office of collector,
Page 150 U. S. 503
who continued in the same occupancy till March 4, 1869, when he
resigned the office and turned the warehouse over to Samuel
Falconer, the deputy collector of the port.
Before and after the last-named date, General Jefferson C.
Davis, United States army, was at Sitka, in command of the
Department of Alaska.
On the 26th of February, 1869, there was sent to him from the
War Department the following order:
"It having been reported to this department that a very large
portion of the property which belonged to the Russian Fur Company
in Alaska is now enjoyed by persons claiming title under a purchase
from Prince Maksoutoff since the cession of that territory to the
United States, the Secretary of War directs that you take
possession of and retain in your charge all posts, buildings, etc.,
which are not in fact entitled to be considered individual
property."
In pursuance of this order, General Davis, on the second of
June, 1869, authorized Falconer to take possession of and use the
whole building for government purposes pertaining to the Treasury
Department, except the three lower rooms of it, situated on the
southeast side of the lower passageway, which rooms were reserved
by General Davis for the storage of army stores, and were, in the
month of September following, placed under the control of the
Quartermaster's Department of the Army.
From that time to the present, the whole building has remained
in the possession and use of the government, Falconer continuing in
the occupancy of the part of it so assigned to him until August,
1869, when he turned it over to William Kapus, who had been
appointed collector of the port.
On June 2, 1869, the claimants protested in writing to General
Davis against his action in taking possession of said building,
alleging that the building had been designated as private property
by the commissioners appointed by the governments of Russia and the
United States; that it had been purchased of Prince Maksoutoff,
chief factor of the Russian-American Company, and that the title
acquired through that purchase was good, valid, and legal.
Page 150 U. S. 504
Failing to get redress from the agents and officers of the
United States, Kinkead and Sussman brought an action in the Court
of Claims for use and occupation of the premises, which suit was by
that court dismissed for a supposed want of jurisdiction.
Kinkead v. United States, 18 Ct.Cl. 504.
Thereafter Congress passed the following act:
"An act referring to the Court of Claims for adjudication the
claims of John H. Kinkead, Samuel Sussman, and Charles O.
Wood."
"Whereas John H. Kinkead, of Nevada, and Samuel Sussman, of
California, did, on the twenty-eighth day of October, eighteen
hundred and sixty-eight, purchase a certain building situate on lot
known as number one on the official plat of the Town of Sitka, in
the Territory of Alaska, from the Russian-American Company, the
owner of said building; and"
"Whereas said building had been declared by the protocol of the
transfer of Russian America to the United States to be private
property; and"
"Whereas thereafter the collector of customs of the United
States did take from said Kinkead and Sussman a lease of a portion
of said building and entered thereupon; and"
"Whereas afterwards, General Jefferson C. Davis did seize the
whole of said building on the ground that the same was the property
of the United States, notwithstanding the commissioners appointed
to ascertain private property had certified the same to be private
property; and"
"Whereas afterwards, said Kinkead and Sussman did present their
petition to the United States Court of Claims claiming rent for the
said building; and"
"Whereas said court did, on the eleventh day of June, eighteen
hundred and eighty-three, dismiss said claim for want of
jurisdiction only; and"
"Whereas Charles O. Wood, of Ohio, did in like manner purchase a
certain other building situate on lot known as number twenty-four
from said Russian-American Company,
Page 150 U. S. 505
and did in like manner present his petition to the Court of
Claims for rent of the same, the same having been in like manner
seized for the use of the United States, notwithstanding the same
had been certified to be private property; and"
"Whereas said Court of Claims did in like manner dismiss the
claim of said Wood for want of jurisdiction only, therefore"
"
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
the United States of America in Congress assembled, that
jurisdiction be, and is hereby, conferred on the Court of Claims to
hear the claims of John H. Kinkead and Samuel Sussman and Charles
O. Wood for the rent and value of certain buildings in the Town of
Sitka, in the Territory of Alaska, alleged by them to have been
acquired by virtue of purchase from the Russian-American Company,
upon the evidence already filed in said court and such additional
legal evidence as may be hereafter presented on either side, and if
said court shall find that said parties acquired a valid title to
said buildings respectively alleged to have been purchased by them,
said court shall award to said parties a fair and reasonable rent
for the use of the said buildings for the time (if any) the same
have been occupied by the United States, and also a suitable
indemnity for said buildings themselves, and the receipt of such
rent and indemnity shall thereafter bar any further claim by said
parties for the use of said buildings or for the value thereof, and
before receiving the same all of said parties shall execute a
release to the United States for all right, title and interest
whatsoever in and to the said property, and any defense, setoff, or
counterclaim may be pleaded by the United States as defendants as
in cases within the general jurisdiction of the court, and either
party shall have the same right of appeal as in such cases."
"Approved January 17, 1887."
The claimants thereupon filed in the Court of Claims their
petition claiming, under the terms of the special act,
"a fair and reasonable rent for the use of said buildings for
the time,
Page 150 U. S. 506
if any, the same had been occupied by the United States, and
also a suitable indemnity for the buildings themselves."
That court, on May 13, 1889, decreed that the claimants'
petition should be dismissed, and from that judgment the appeal
before us was brought.
It was contended in the court below on behalf of the claimants
that under the terms of the act, it was not open for the court to
determine whether the claimants were precluded by the treaty from
maintaining their claim, but that as the act in its recitals
declared that the Russian-American Company was the owner of said
building, the court's inquiry was restricted to finding whether the
claimants had acquired a valid title to the buildings alleged to
have been purchased by them, and to fixing a fair and reasonable
rent for the time the same had been occupied by the United States,
and also a suitable indemnity for the buildings themselves, and it
was also contended that even if the act of Congress allowed the
Court of Claims to inquire into the meaning and effect of the
treaty, yet that the claimants were, taking into view the treaty,
the protocol, and the act of Congress, entitled to recover.
The Court of Claims decided both contentions against the
claimants. It held that notwithstanding the terms of the act, the
court had a right to interpret the terms of the treaty, and having
found, as it did, that under the terms of the treaty, the building
in question had become the property of the United States, it
further held that there was nothing in the acts of the
commissioners characterizing the building as private property, or
in the act of Congress, referring the matter to this Court, which
created or conferred any right or title in the building to the
claimants.
To sustain their contention that the act of Congress, referring
their claim to the Court of Claims, did not leave any question for
the court as to the meaning and effect of the treaty, the claimants
cite the case of
United States v. Jordan, 113 U.
S. 418,
113 U. S. 422.
There, an act of Congress provided for the refunding to persons
named therein of the amount of taxes assessed upon and collected
from them contrary to the provisions
Page 150 U. S. 507
of the regulations therein mentioned, and it was held that there
was no discretion vested in the Court of Claims to determine
whether the sum awarded to the suitor was or was not the amount of
a tax assessed contrary to the provisions of such regulations. This
Court said, through Mr. Justice Blatchford:
"The Court of Claims held that the statute did not leave open
any question for the court except the identity of the claimants
with the persons named in it, and that its language, taken
together, was too clear to admit of doubt that Congress undertook,
as it had a right to do, to determine not only what particular
persons by name should have relief, but also the exact amount which
should be paid to each one of them. We concur in this view. . . .
Although the act speaks of the sums as being the amount of taxes
assessed upon and collected from the said named persons contrary to
the provisions of the regulations, there is no indication of any
intention to submit to any one the determination of the question
whether the taxes in any case were collected contrary to the
provisions of such regulations, or of the question how those
provisions are to be construed. On the contrary, the clear import
of the statute is that Congress itself determines that the amounts
named were collected contrary to the provisions of the
regulations."
Claimants likewise cite the case of
Dahlgren v. United
States, 16 Ct.Cl. 30, where the Court of Claims, through Judge
J. C. B. Davis, construing an act of Congress which had referred a
claim to that court, said that
"where the government has a special defense to a claim, and the
facts constituting the defense are well known to Congress, it is
unreasonable to suppose that Congress would refer the claim to this
Court with the intent that the special defense should be set up and
the claim defeated thereby."
It is to be observed that in the case of the act which was the
subject of construction in
United States v. Jordan, the
decisive language was in the enacting part of the statute, whereas
in the statute now before us, it is in the preamble. Still it must
be conceded that the language relied upon, although in the
preamble, is in absolute, and not in conditional, terms. The
Page 150 U. S. 508
Russian-American Company is spoken of as "the owner of said
building." The only uncertainty or contingency appears in the
language of the enacting clause, wherein it is provided that, "if
the court shall find that said parties acquired a valid title to
said building
alleged to have been purchased by them, the
court shall award," etc. It was further contended on behalf of the
complainants that the action of the international commissioners in
distinguishing between public property which should pass to the
United States and private property which should not be disturbed is
to be regarded as an act of a diplomatic and political character,
and which it was not competent for Congress to refer to the Court
of Claims for review or reexamination. To sustain the proposition
that the decisions of international commissions, rendered within
the scope of their authority, are final and conclusive, a number of
authorities are cited in the brief for the appellants, among
others, the leading case of
Comegys v.
Vasse, 1 Pet. 193. That case arose out of the
treaty whereby Spain ceded Florida to the United States, and
wherein commissioners were invested with power and authority to
receive, examine, and decide upon the amount and validity of
asserted claims upon Spain for damages and injuries. This Court
held, per Story, J., that the decision of the commissioners within
the scope of their authority was final and conclusive; that the
parties must abide by it as the decree of a competent tribunal of
exclusive jurisdiction. The Court held likewise that though the
finding of the amount and right to receive was final, yet the
jurisdiction of the commissioners did not extend to determining any
disputes that might arise as to the subsequent ownership of such
claims.
"The validity and amount of the claim being once ascertained by
their award, the fund might well be permitted to pass into the
hands of any claimant, and his own rights, as well as those of all
others who asserted a title to the fund, be left to the ordinary
course of judicial proceedings in the established courts, where
redress could be administered according to the nature and extent of
the rights or equities of all the parties."
Applying the reasoning of that and of kindred cases to the
Page 150 U. S. 509
present, it is argued that the finding of the commissioners of
Russia and the United States was final as to the status of the
properties passed upon by them as public or private, that being the
purpose for which they were appointed; that it was competent for
Congress to refer the dispute that subsequently arose between the
United States and the claimants to the Court of Claims; but that
the court, in passing upon the case, could not go back of the
action of the commissioners and retry the question under what
category, public or private, the property in question was to be
regarded.
The court below did not accept the claimants' propositions, but
held that it was open to it, under the terms of the act referring
the claim to it, to disregard the preamble of the act itself, to go
back of the action of the international commissioners, and to
decide for itself the meaning and effect of the treaty.
These rulings of the court cannot, in my opinion, be sustained.
In the first place, as it seems to me, we must get at the intention
of Congress in passing the act referring the claim to the Court of
Claims by bringing into view the history of the claim. In a general
way, it certainly cannot be denied that the treaty, in its terms,
preserved private property rights. Nor can it be denied that the
commissioners were appointed to distinguish public from private
property and to make a finding thereof. It is also indisputable
that the commissioners excluded the building in dispute out of the
class of public property, and included it in the class of private
property. And it is admitted that Congress, having been made aware
that the claimants had been turned out of the court on an alleged
want of jurisdiction, removed that obstacle, and directed the court
to hear the claims of Kinkead and Sussman, and, if it should find
that they had acquired a valid title to said building, alleged to
have been purchased by them, then to award a fair and reasonable
rent for its use, and a suitable indemnity for the building itself.
I do not feel constrained to hold that the mere recital in the act
that the Russian-American Company were the owners of the building
at the time the claimants purchased it from them of itself
concludes
Page 150 U. S. 510
the court from finding otherwise. But I think that, reading the
statute in the light of all the facts in the case, it is highly
improbable that Congress intended to supersede the action of the
international commission and to submit the treaty to the court for
its construction, and I think that the language of the preamble is
entitled to be considered, in connection with the other facts of
the case, to enable us to give a fair and reasonable construction
to this remedial statute.
The conclusion, then, in my judgment, is that Congress intended
that the Court of Claims should inquire whether these claimants had
validly derived their title from the Russian-American Company, and
if so, what was a fair rent for the use of the building, and what a
suitable indemnity for the building itself.
But in the second place, if I am wrong in this view and if the
Court of Claims had a right to go back of the language of the
statute and of the action of the international commissioners, I
think the court erred in their interpretation of the treaty.
In the first article, the treaty provided that the Emperor of
Russia should cede to the United States "all the territory and
dominion now possessed by his majesty on the continent of America."
The second article provides that
"in the cession of territory and dominion made by the preceding
article are included the right of property in all public lots and
squares, vacant lands, and all public buildings, fortifications,
barracks, and other edifices which are not private individual
property."
The view of the court below was that by the terms "private
individual property" was meant property owned by an individual, as
distinguished from a company or corporation, and the court thought
that it was aided in this view by the provisions of the sixth
article, which declared that
"the cession of territory and dominion herein made is hereby
declared to be free and unencumbered by any reservations,
privileges, franchises, grants, or possessions by any associated
companies, whether corporate or incorporate, Russian or any other,
or by any parties except merely private individual property
holders."
The origin of this sixth article was in the claims and
pretenses
Page 150 U. S. 511
of the Russian-American Company which had exercised a despotic
control over these dominions, and the evident purpose of the sixth
article, as is plain from the communication of Secretary Seward to
the Russian minister, was to prevent any territorial or political
or corporate privileges from being subsequently asserted. It was
clearly not intended to include or affect private property as
such.
If this were a controversy between private parties in a court
where only municipal law is administered, like a court of common
pleas, it may be that the narrow view put on this treaty by the
court below might properly prevail; but when we consider that we
are dealing with an international instrument conferring territorial
dominion from one sovereign to another, a broader and more liberal
construction should be put on the language used.
Haguenstein v.
Lynham, 100 U. S. 483;
Head Money Cases, 112 U. S. 580.
Viewed in this light, I think that the treaty meant to distinguish
public property of the various kinds enumerated from property held
by individual persons or by companies composed of individuals for
private uses and purposes. Such was the view taken by the
commissioners, and, as I think, by Congress, and their
interpretation ought to be respected and adopted by the courts.
Even when corporations are dissolved by writs of
scire
facias or decrees in equity at the suit of the sovereign,
their moneys and property not essential to the exercise of their
franchises are not forfeited, but are left to the ownership of the
stockholders. In construing the treaty as a mere municipal
regulation and as an act of forfeiture, I think the court below
grievously erred.
Upon the whole, I am of opinion that the judgment of the court
below was erroneous, and should be reversed, and that the record
should be remanded with directions to proceed, under the provisions
of the Act of January 17, 1887, to examine whether the claimants
have lawfully derived title from the Russian-American Company, and,
if so, to award them a fair rent for the use and suitable indemnity
for the loss of the building owned by them.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD concurs in this dissent.