Under the operation of the act of the Legislature of Illinois of
February 27, 1833, for the making and recording of town plats, the
interest in and control of the United States over the streets,
alleys, and commons in the Fort Dearborn addition to Chicago ceased
with the record of the plat thereof and the sale of the adjoining
lots.
When a resort is made by individuals or by the government of the
United States to the mode provided by the statute of a state where
real property is situated, for the transfer of its title, the
effect and conditions prescribed by the statute will apply, and
such operation will be given to the instrument of conveyance as is
there designated.
This was an appeal from a decree of the circuit court sustaining
a demurrer on the part of the Illinois Central and the Michigan
Central Railroad to an information filed by the United States and
dismissing the information as to all the appellees. The information
sought to restrain the appellees from diverting the public ground
marked on the plat of the Fort Dearborn addition to the City of
Chicago from the easements to which it was dedicated. On this
branch of the case, the information proceeded upon the theory that,
the United States being the owners of the land in question, and
having dedicated it to certain public purposes, were entitled to
enjoin its diversion from those public purposes to private uses.
The bill alleged:
That before and on the 7th day of June, A.D. 1839, the United
States possessed and owned in fee simple the southwest fractional
quarter of section 10, the same being a reservation out of the
public domain called the Fort Dearborn reservation, and the then
Secretary of War having directed that reservation to be sold, the
same was thereupon by this authority laid off into blocks, lots,
streets, alleys, and the public ground as an addition to the
municipality aforesaid, called the Fort Dearborn
Page 154 U. S. 226
addition to Chicago, and on the day last above mentioned, a plat
thereof was made and acknowledged by one Matthew Birchard as agent
and attorney of the said Secretary of War, and was thereupon duly
recorded in the recorder's office of the said County of Cook, on
which plat a part of the ground therein comprised, being all that
part between Lake Michigan, on the east, and blocks 12 and 15 (as
shown by the plat) on the west, was designated as "public ground,
forever to remain vacant of buildings," and there was a further
declaration that "the public ground between Randolph and Madison
Streets and fronting upon Lake Michigan was not to be occupied with
buildings of any description," as by a plat therewith filed more
fully and distinctly appeared. And afterward, the several lots
designated and shown on that plat were sold and conveyed by the
United States to divers persons by and according to the plat and
with reference to the same, but the United States never parted with
the title to the streets, alleys, and public ground in the said
plat designated and marked, and still owns the same in fee simple,
with the rights and privileges, riparian and otherwise, pertaining
to such ownership, subject to the use and enjoyment of the same by
the public.
The bill further alleged a grant of right of way to the Illinois
Central Railroad under an Act of the State of Illinois approved
February 10, 1851, which provided, however, that nothing in that
act contained should authorize the said corporation to make
location of its tracks within any city without the consent of the
common council of such city.
The bill further alleged that the Common Council of the City of
Chicago, by an ordinance dated June 14, 1852, gave the Illinois
Central Railroad Company the right to enter upon and use for the
purpose of its said railroad and works a space 300 feet wide for
the whole length of the public ground shown in the plat of the Fort
Dearborn addition, and that the railroad company, having accepted
said act of the legislature and said ordinance, by virtue and under
color of the same proceeded to and did build its said railroad and
extend and complete the same from the southward into said city on
the course indicated in the said ordinance, to
Page 154 U. S. 227
a terminus near the Chicago River aforesaid, and the said
company has ever since maintained and operated its said railroad,
and continues so to do. And the said district attorney for the
United States says that no authority or license was ever given by
the United States for building or maintaining or operating its said
railroad upon or along said public ground shown on said plat of
Fort Dearborn addition or any part of those tracts of ground; that
the General Assembly of the State of Illinois passed an act on
April 16, 1869, whereby it assumed and attempted, among other
things, to grant in fee to the said Illinois Central Railroad
Company, etc., all the right and title of the State of Illinois in
an to the lands, submerged or otherwise, lying north of the south
line of Monroe Street and south of the south line of Randolph
Street and between the east line of Michigan Avenue and the track
and way of the said Illinois Central Railroad, and said pretended
act purporting to grant the said grounds for a passenger station
and other railroad purposes, and providing that the said railroad
companies named as grantees should pay to the City of Chicago the
sum of $800,000; that the said Illinois Central Railroad Company,
etc., now give out and claim that the said pretended act was and is
a legal and binding act, and passed to them respectively a valid
title to the property in and by the same attempted to be granted,
and the same companies now claim the right and threaten to take
possession and exclusive control of the property so in and by the
said pretended act attempted to be granted to them
respectively.
Thus, the information showed that the railroad companies named
claimed title to that portion of the public ground shown on the
plat of the dedication of the Fort Dearborn addition lying east of
Michigan Avenue, and threatened to take possession and exclusive
control thereof for the purpose of appropriating it to a passenger
station and other railroad purposes.
Page 154 U. S. 233
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal on the part of the United States from a decree
of the circuit court sustaining a demurrer to an information or
bill in equity in which they were complainants and the Illinois
Central and other railroad companies were defendants. The
information charges that encroachments are made or threatened upon
property of the United States, and the object of the information,
so far as contended on the present appeal, is to prevent their
continuance in the future as to one particular parcel of property,
and to preserve it open to the uses for which it was dedicated by
the United States. That property consists of land situated on the
shore of Lake Michigan, being part of fractional section ten in
Chicago, lying between Lake Michigan, on the east, and block twelve
of the plat of Fort Dearborn addition to Chicago, on the west.
The several parties named as defendants appeared to the
information, and the Illinois Central Railroad Company and the
Michigan Central Railroad Company demurred to it on the ground that
it does not state such a case as entitles the United States to the
relief prayed, or show any right of interference on their part,
either in law or in equity, respecting the matters referred to, or
allege any violation, contemplated or threatened, of any right,
legal or equitable, of the United States.
Upon the hearing of the several cases known and spoken of
together as the
Lakefront Case before the circuit court of
the United States at Chicago on the 23d of February, 1888, this
demurrer was argued and was sustained
"except as to that part of the information which alleges in
substance that the Illinois Central Railroad Company claims the
absolute ownership of, and threatens to take possession of, use,
and occupy, the outer harbor of Chicago,"
the opinion of the court
Page 154 U. S. 234
being
"that the general government, upon the showing made by it, has
no title to any of the streets or grounds described in said
information, and has no standing in court except so far as it seeks
to protect the said harbor against obstructions that would impair
the public right of navigation or interfere with any plan devised
by the United States for the development or improvement of the
outer harbor."
33 F. 730. Afterwards, on the 23d of August, 1890, the attorney
of the United States was granted leave to amend the information by
striking out whatever related to the outer harbor, and the
encroachments alleged to have been made or threatened in the
navigable waters of the lake, and at the same time an order was
entered by the district judge sustaining the demurrer to the
information, as amended, and directing that it be dismissed,
"without prejudice to the United States, however, to hereafter
institute any appropriate action or proceedings for the purpose of
enforcing any rights they may have in the navigable waters of the
lake or outer harbor of Chicago,"
and thereupon an appeal was prayed and allowed to the supreme
court.
From the decree of the circuit court in the
Lakefront
Case, rendered in February, 1888, appeals were taken to the
Supreme Court of the United States by the Illinois Central Railroad
Company and the City of Chicago, and they were argued and decided
at its October term, 1892.
Illinois Central Railroad v.
Illinois, 146 U. S. 387. The
United States did not appear and participate in the argument on the
appeal. As they were never a party to those suits in the court
below, and never appealed from the decree, they were dropped as a
party in the designation of the title of the case. The questions
involving the title and right of the parties embraced in the cases,
considered under the general designation of the
Illinois
Central Railroad Company v. State of Illinois, to the
navigable waters of the harbor of Chicago, and in the lake front
property, and the encroachments on the harbor by the railroad
company, and the validity of the Act of April 16, 1869, granting
submerged lands in the harbor, were fully considered and settled,
as between the state and the City of
Page 154 U. S. 235
Chicago on the one part and the Illinois Central Railroad
Company on the other.
The appeal now before the Court is the one taken by the United
States from the decree of the circuit court rendered on the 23d of
August, 1890, sustaining the demurrer to the information. The
amendment allowed to the information consisted in striking out that
part to which the demurrer was not sustained, and was made in order
that the demurrer might go to the entire information. The only
contention now urged by the Solicitor General on behalf of the
appellants is that the information is good to the extent that it
seeks to restrain the appellees from diverting the public ground,
designated as such, on the plat of the Fort Dearborn addition to
the City of Chicago, from the supposed public easement to which it
was dedicated. The Solicitor General states that on this branch of
the case, the information proceeds upon the theory that the United
States, being the owners of the land in question, and having
dedicated it to a public purpose, are entitled to enjoin its
diversion from that public purpose to private uses. It will
therefore be unnecessary, for the disposition of the appeal, to
consider any other position originally taken by the United States
in the information.
As early as 1804, a military post was established by the United
States south of Chicago River upon the southwest fractional quarter
of section ten, and was subsequently occupied by troops until its
sale many years afterwards. In 1819, Congress passed an act
authorizing the sale by the Secretary of War, under the direction
of the President, of such military sites belonging to the United
States as may have been found or had become useless for military
purposes, and the Secretary of War was authorized, on the payment
of the consideration agreed upon into the Treasury of the United
States, to execute and deliver all needful instruments conveying
the same in fee. And the act declared that the jurisdiction which
had been specially ceded to the United States for military purposes
by a state over such site or sites should thereafter cease. 3 Stat.
520. Subsequently, in 1824, upon the request of the Secretary of
War, the southwest
Page 154 U. S. 236
quarter of this fractional section ten, containing about
fifty-seven acres, and on which Fort Dearborn was situated, was
reserved from sale for military purposes by the Commissioner of the
General Land Office. The land thus reserved continued to be used
for military purposes until 1837. In that year, under the direction
of the Secretary of War, it was laid off, by his authority, into
blocks, lots, streets, alleys, and public ground, as an addition to
the municipality of Chicago, and called the "Fort Dearborn Addition
to Chicago," and in June, 1839, a plat thereof was made and
acknowledged by his agent and attorney and recorded in the
recorder's office of the County of Cook. On that plat, a part of
the ground situated between Lake Michigan, on the east, and block
twelve, on the west, is designated as "Public ground, forever to
remain vacant of buildings." [146 U.S.
146 U. S. 392,
Map A.] It bears also a further declaration, in these words,
viz., "The public ground between Randolph and Madison
Streets, and fronting upon Lake Michigan, is not to be occupied
with buildings of any description." Subsequently, and for some
years, several lots designated and shown on the plat were reserved
from sale, and remained in the military occupation of the
government; but eventually, in 1845 or soon afterwards, all of them
were sold and conveyed by the United States to divers persons, "by
and according to said plat, and with reference to the same."
The statute of Illinois of February 27, 1833, then in force, for
the making and recording of town plats (Rev.Stat. Ill. 1833, p.
599), provided that every donation or grant to the public, marked
or noted as such on the plat, should be deemed in law a sufficient
conveyance to vest the fee simple title, and that
"the land intended to be for streets, alleys, ways, commons, or
other public uses in any town or city or addition thereto shall be
held in the corporate name thereof in trust to and for the uses and
purposes set forth and expressed or intended."
The plat in such cases had all the force of an express grant,
and operated to convey all the title and interest of the United
States in the property for the uses and purposes intended.
Zinc
Company v. La Salle, 117 Ill. 411, 414-415;
Chicago v.
Rumsey, 87 Ill 348;
Gebhardt v.
Page 154 U. S. 237
Reeves, 75 Ill. 301;
Canal Trustees v. Haven,
11 Ill. 554.
It is stated in the information that the United States never
parted with the title to the streets, alleys, and public grounds
designated and marked on the plat, and that they still own the same
in fee simple, "with the rights and privileges, riparian and
otherwise, pertaining to such ownership, subject to the use and
enjoyment of the same by the public."
But we do not think this position is tenable. A title to some of
the streets may have continued in the government so long as the
title to any of the adjoining lots remained with it, but not
afterwards, without disregard of the statutory regulations of the
state, and its provisions for the transfer of the title. When a
resort is made by individuals or the government to the mode
provided by the statute of a state where real property is situated,
for the transfer of its title, the effect and conditions prescribed
by the statute will apply, and such operation given to the
instrument of conveyance as is there designated. The language of
the statute is clear,
"that the land intended for streets, alleys, ways, commons, or
other public uses in any town or city or addition thereto shall be
held in the corporate name thereof, in trust to and for the uses
and purposes set forth and expressed or intended."
The interest in and control of the United States over the
streets, alleys, and commons ceased with the record of the plat,
and the sale of the adjoining lots. Their proprietary interest
passed, in the lots sold, to the respective vendees, subject to the
jurisdiction of the local government, and the control over the
streets, alleys, and grounds passed, by express designation of the
state law, to the corporate authorities of the city.
In 1854, the validity of the survey and plat made of Fort
Dearborn reservation was recognized by Congress in an act for the
relief of one John Baptiste Beaubien, Act of August 11, 1854, c.
172, 10 Stat. 805, by which the Commissioner of the General Land
Office was authorized to issue a patent or patents to Beaubien for
certain lots designated and numbered on the survey and plat of the
Fort Dearborn addition to Chicago,
Page 154 U. S. 238
made under the order of the Secretary of War, and it is averred,
as already stated, in the information that all the lots were sold
and conveyed by the United States to divers persons "by and
according to the said plat, and with reference to the same."
It was the intention of the government to have a plat made
conformably to the provisions of the statute, and it is plain from
its inspection that all the essential requisites were followed. Nor
is any reason suggested why a different effect should be given to
the plat and its record, in this case, from that of similar plats
made and recorded by other land proprietors. And if, as we have
already said, the government, charged with the duty of disposing of
a tract of public land within a state, chooses to proceed under the
provisions of a particular statute of that state, it is clear that
the same legal effect should be given to its proceeding as in case
of an individual proprietor. The effect of the recording of the
plat in this case was therefore to vest in the City of Chicago the
legal title to the streets, alleys, and public ground in Fort
Dearborn addition, and after its execution and record, and sale of
the abutting property, the United States retained no interest in
them, legal or equitable. That interest was as completely
extinguished as if made by an unconditional conveyance in the
ordinary form.
Again, the sale of the lots was in law an effectual dedication
of the streets and public grounds for municipal uses, and, as
observed by counsel, the purchasers of the lots acquired a special
interest in the streets and public grounds on which their lots
abutted, and the United States could make no disposition of them
after the sale inconsistent with the use to which they had been
dedicated.
The only parties interested in the public use for which the
ground was dedicated are the owners of lots abutting on the ground
dedicated and the public in general. The owners of abutting lots
may be presumed to have purchased in part consideration of the
enhanced value of the property from the dedication, and it may be
conceded they have a right to invoke, through the proper public
authorities, the protection
Page 154 U. S. 239
of the property in the use for which it was dedicated. The only
party interested, outside of abutting owners, is the general
public, and the enforcement of any rights which such public may
have is vested only in the parties clothed with the execution of
such trust, who are in this case the corporate authorities of the
city, as a subordinate agency of the state, and not the United
States.
The United States possess no jurisdiction to control or regulate
within a state the execution of trusts or uses created for the
benefit of the public or of particular communities or bodies
therein. The jurisdiction in such cases is with the state or its
subordinate agencies. The case of
New
Orleans v. United States, 10 Pet. 662, furnishes an
illustration of this doctrine. In that case, the United States
filed a bill in the district court for an injunction to restrain
the City of New Orleans from selling a portion of the public quay
or levee lying on the bank of the Mississippi River in front of the
city, or of doing any other act which would invade the rightful
dominion of the United States over the land or their possession of
it. The United States acquired title to the land by the French
treaty of 1803. By it, Louisiana was ceded to the United States,
and it was shown that the land had been appropriated to public uses
ever since the occupation of the province by France. It was
contended that the title to the land, as well as the domain over
it, during the French and Spanish governments were vested in the
sovereign, and that the United States, by the treaty of cession of
the province of Louisiana, had succeeded to the previous rights of
France and Spain. The land and buildings thereon had been used by
both governments for various public purposes. The United States had
erected a building on it for a customhouse, in which also their
courts were held.
It was argued on behalf of the city that the sovereignty of
France and Spain over the property before the cession existed
solely for the purpose of enforcing the uses to which it was
appropriated, and that this right and obligation vested in the
State of Louisiana, and did not continue in
Page 154 U. S. 240
the United States after the state was formed. It was therefore
contended that the United States could neither take the property
nor dispose of it or enforce the public use to which it had been
appropriated. A decree was rendered in the district court in favor
of the United States, and an injunction granted as prayed, but on
appeal to the supreme court, it was reversed, and it was held that
the bill could not be maintained by the United States, because they
had no interest in the property. Upon the question whether any
interest in the property passed to the United States under the
treaty of cession, the Court said, speaking through Mr. Justice
McLean:
"In the second article of the treaty, 'all public lots and
squares, vacant lands, and all public buildings, fortifications,
barracks, and other edifices, which are not private property' were
ceded, and it is contended, as the language of this article clearly
includes the ground in controversy, whether it be considered a
public square or vacant land, the entire right of the sovereign of
Spain passed to the United States."
"The government of the United States, as was well observed in
the argument, is one of limited powers. It can exercise authority
over no subjects except those which have been delegated to it.
Congress cannot by legislation enlarge the federal jurisdiction,
nor can it be enlarged under the treatymaking power."
"If the common in contest, under the Spanish crown, formed a
part of the public domain, or the crown lands, and the King had
power to alien it, as other lands, there can be no doubt that it
passed under the treaty to the United States, and they have a right
to dispose of it the same as other public lands. But if the King of
Spain held the land in trust for the use of the city, or only
possessed a limited jurisdiction over it, principally, if not
exclusively, for police purposes, was this right passed to the
United States under the treaty?"
"That this common, having been dedicated to the public use, was
withdrawn from commerce and from the power of the King rightfully
to alien it has already been shown, and also that he had a limited
power over it for certain purposes. Can the federal government
exercise this power? If it can, this Court has the power to
interpose an injunction or interdict
Page 154 U. S. 241
to the sale of any part of the common by the city if they shall
think that the facts authorize such an interposition."
"It is insisted that the federal government may exercise this
authority under the power to regulate commerce."
"It is very clear that as the treaty cannot give this power to
the federal government, we must look for it in the Constitution,
and that the same power must authorize a similar exercise of
jurisdiction over every other quay in the United States. A
statement of the case is a sufficient refutation of the
argument."
"Special provision is made in the Constitution for the cession
of jurisdiction from the states over places where the federal
government shall establish forts or other military works, and it is
only in these places, or in the territories of the United States,
where it can exercise a general jurisdiction."
"The State of Louisiana was admitted into the Union on the same
footing as the original states. Her rights of sovereignty are the
same, and, by consequence, no jurisdiction of the federal
government, either for purposes of police or otherwise, can be
exercised over this public ground, which is not common to the
United States. It belongs to the local authority to enforce the
trust and prevent what they shall deem a violation of it by the
city authorities."
"All powers which properly appertain to sovereignty, which have
not been delegated to the federal government, belong to the states
and the people."
The decree of the district court was accordingly ordered to be
reversed and annulled.
This doctrine of the Supreme Court in the
New Orleans
case is decisive of the question pending before us in the present
case, and must control the decision.
It was also held in the
Lakefront Case that the
ownership in fee of the streets, alleys, ways, commons, and other
public ground on the east front of the city bordering upon Lake
Michigan, in fractional section ten, was a good title, the reason
assigned being that by the statute of Illinois, the making,
acknowledging, and recording
Page 154 U. S. 242
of plats operated to vest the title in the city in trust for the
public uses to which the grounds were applicable.
146 U. S. 146 U.S.
387,
146 U. S.
462.
It follows from these views that the United States have no just
claim to maintain their contention to control or interfere with any
portion of the public ground designated in the plat of the Fort
Dearborn reservation. The decree dismissing the information will
therefore be
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE BROWN,
dissenting.
I am unable to concur in the views expressed by the Court in
this case. I agree that the United States have no governmental
interest or control over the premises in question; that as a
sovereign they have no right to maintain this suit; that by the act
of dedication they parted with the title, and that, in accordance
with the statute of the state in respect to dedication, the fee
passed to the City of Chicago, to "be held in the corporate name
thereof, in trust to and for the uses and purposes set forth and
expressed or intended." I agree that the only rights which the
United States have are those which any other owner of real estate
would have under a like dedication, but I think the law is that he
who grants property to a trustee, to be held in trust for a
specific purpose, retains such an interest as gives him a right to
invoke the interposition of a court of equity to prevent the use of
that property for any other purpose. Can it be that if the
government, believing that the congressional library has become too
large for convenient use in this city, donates half of it to the
City of Chicago, to be kept and maintained as a public library,
that city can, after accepting the donation for the purposes named,
give away the books to the various lawyers for their private
libraries, and the government be powerless to restrain such
disposition? Do the donors of libraries, or the grantors of real
estate in trust for specific purposes, though parting with the
title, lose all right to invoke the aid of a court of equity to
Page 154 U. S. 243
compel the use of their donations and grants for the purposes
expressed in the gift or deed? I approve the opinion of the Supreme
Court of Iowa in the case of
Warren v. Mayor of Lyons
City, 22 Ia. 351, 355, 357. In that case, the plaintiffs had,
years before, platted certain land as a site for a city, and on the
plat filed by them there was a dedication of a piece of ground as a
"public square." After the city had been built up on that site, the
authorities, for the purposes of gain, and under the pretended
authority of an act of the legislature, attempted to subdivide the
public square into lots, and to lease them to individuals for
private uses. A bill was filed by the dedicators to restrain such
diversion of the use, and a decree in their favor was affirmed by
the supreme court. I quote from the opinion:
"Nothing can be clearer than that if a grant is made for a
specific, limited, and defined purpose, the subject of the grant
cannot be used for another, and that the grantor retains still such
an interest therein as entitles him, in a court of equity, to
insist upon the execution of the trust as originally declared and
accepted.
Williams v. First Presbyterian Society, 1 Ohio
St. 478;
Barclay v. Howell, 6
Pet. 499;
Webb v. Moler, 8 Ohio, 548;
Brown v.
Manning, 6 Ohio, 298."
And again, after picturing the injustice which in many cases
would result by permitting such a diversion, the court adds:
"Such a doctrine would enable the state, at pleasure, to trifle
with the rights of individuals, and we can scarcely conceive of a
doctrine which would more effectually check every disposition to
give for public or charitable purposes. No, it must be that if the
right vested in the city for a particular purpose, the legislature
cannot vest it for another; that when the dedicator declared his
purpose by the plat, the land cannot be sold or used for another
and different one; that while the corporation took the premises as
trustee, it took them with the obligations attached, as well as the
rights conferred; that while the legislature might give the control
and management of these squares and parks to the several municipal
corporations, it cannot authorize their sale and use for a purpose
foreign to the object of the grant. "
Page 154 U. S. 244
"Without quoting, we cite the following cases:
Trustees of
Watertown v. Cowen, 4 Paige 510;
Lade v. Shepherd, 2
Stra. 1004;
Commonwealth v. Alberger, 1 Whart. 469;
Pomeroy v. Mills, 3 Vt. 279;
Abbott v. Same, 3
Vt. 521;
Adams v. S. & W. R. Co., 11 Barb. 414;
Fletcher
v. Peck, 6 Cranch 87;
Godfrey v. City of
Alton, 12 Ill. 29; Sedgwick's Constitutional and Statute Law
343, 344;
Haight v. City of Keokuk, 4 Ia. 199;
Grant
v. City of Davenport, 18 Ia. 179;
Le Clercq v. Trustees of
Gallipolis, 7 Ohio 217;
Common Council of Indianapolis v.
Cross, 7 Ind. 9;
Rowans, Executor v. Town of
Portland, 8 B. Mon. 232;
Augusta v. Perkins, 3 B.
Mon. 437."
I do not care to add more, but for these reasons withhold my
assent to the opinion.
I am authorized to say that MR. JUSTICE BROWN concurs in this
dissent.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE, having been of counsel in the court below,
took no part in the consideration and decision of this case on
appeal.