The treaty between the United States and Spain, made in 1819,
and ratified in 1821, provided
"the boundary line between the two countries west of the
Mississippi shall begin on the Gulf of Mexico at the mouth of the
River Sabine in the sea, continuing north, along the western bank
of the river to the 32d degree of latitude; thence, by a line due
north, to the degree of latitude where it strikes the Rio Roxo of
Natchitoches, or Red River; then following the course of the Rio
Roxo westward to the degree of longitude 100 west from London and
23 from Washington; then, crossing the said Red River and running
thence, by a line due north to the River Arkansas; thence,
following the course of the southern bank of the Arkansas, to its
source, in latitude 42 north, and thence, by that parallel of
latitude, to the South Sea. The whole being as laid down in
Melish's map of the United States, published at Philadelphia,
improved to the first of January, 1818."
Held:
(1) That the intention of the two governments, as gathered from
the words of the treaty, must control, and that the map to which
the contracting parties referred is to be given the same effect as
if it had been expressly made a part of the treaty.
(2) But, looking at the entire instrument, it is clear that,
while the parties took the Melish map, improved to 1818, as a basis
for the final settlement of the question of boundary, they
contemplated, as shown by the fourth article of the treaty, that
the line was subsequently
Page 162 U. S. 2
to be fixed with more precision by commissioners and surveyors
representing the respective countries.
(3) That the reference in the treaty to the 100th meridian was
to that meridian astronomically located, and not necessarily to the
100th meridian as located on the Melish map.
(4) That the Melish map located the 100th meridian far east of
where the true 100th meridian is when properly delineated.
(5) That the Compromise Act of September 9, 1850, and the
acceptance of its provisions by Texas, together with the action of
the two governments, require that, in the determination of the
present question of boundary between the United States and Texas,
the direction in the treaty, "following the course of the Rio Roxo
westward to the degree of longitude 100 west from London," must be
interpreted as referring to the true 100th meridian, and
consequently the line "westward" must go to that meridian, and not
stop at the Melish 100th meridian.
(6) That Prairie Dog Town Fork of Red River is the continuation,
going from east to west, of the Red River of the treaty, and the
line, going from east to west, extends up Red River and along the
Prairie Dog Town Fork of Red River to the 100th meridian, and not
up the North Fork of Red River.
(7) That the act of Congress of February 24, 1879, c. 97,
creating the Northern Judicial District of Texas, is to be
construed as placing Greer County in that district for judicial
purposes only, and not as ceding to Texas the territory embraced by
that county.
The territory east of the 100th meridian of longitude, west and
south of the river now known as the North Fork of Red River, and
north of a line following westward, as prescribed by the treaty of
1819 between the United States and Spain, the course, and along the
south bank, both of Red River and the river now known as the
Prairie Dog Town Fork or South Fork of Red River until such line
meets the 100th meridian of longitude, which territory is sometimes
called Greer County-constitutes no part of the territory properly
included within or rightfully belonging to Texas at the time of the
admission of that state into the Union, and is not within the
limits nor under the jurisdiction of that state, but is subject to
the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States of America.
Each party will pay its own costs.
By the Act of May 2, 1890, c. 182, § 25, 26 Stat. 81, 92,
the
Attorney General of the United States was
"directed to commence in the name and on behalf of the United
States, and prosecute to a final determination, a proper suit in
equity in the Supreme Court of the United States against the State
of Texas, setting forth the title and claim of the United
States
Page 162 U. S. 3
to the tract of land lying between the North and South Forks of
the Red River where the Indian Territory and the State of Texas
adjoin, east of the hundredth degree of longitude, and claimed by
the State of Texas as within its boundary and a part of its land,
and designated on its map as Greer County."
This suit was commenced in compliance with that direction. A
demurrer to the bill was heard and overruled at October Term 1891
(143 U.S. 621), and the case was at this term heard upon its
merits.
Page 162 U. S. 20
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
By the Act of Congress of May 2, 1890, c. 182, establishing a
temporary government for the Territory of Oklahoma and enlarging
the jurisdiction of the United States Court in the Indian
Territory, it was declared that that act should not apply to Greer
County until the title to the same had been adjudicated and
determined to be in the United States. And, that there might be a
speedy judicial determination of that question, the Attorney
General of the United States was directed to institute in this
Court a suit in equity against the State of Texas setting forth the
title and claim of the United States
"to the tract of land lying between the North and South Forks of
the Red River where the Indian Territory and the State of Texas
adjoin, east of the one hundredth degree of longitude, and claimed
by the State of Texas as within its boundary and a part of its
land, and designated on
Page 162 U. S. 21
its map as Greer County,"
the court, on the trial of the case, in its discretion and so
far as the ends of justice would warrant, to consider any evidence
taken and received by the joint boundary commission under the Act
of Congress approved January 31, 1885. 26 Stat. 81, 92, §
25.
In order that the precise locality of this land may be
indicated, and for convenience, we insert immediately after this
paragraph an extract from a map of Texas and of the Indian
Territory, published in 1892. The territory in dispute is marked on
that map with the words "Unassigned Land." It contains about
1,511,576.17 acres, lies east of the 100th meridian of longitude
and west and south of the river marked on that map as the "North
Fork of Red River," and with the words "Boundary Claimed by the
Texas." It is north of the line marked on that map with the words
"Boundary Claimed by U.S." The river on the south side is now
commonly known as "Prairie Dog Town Fork of Red River" (the Indian
name of which is "Ke-che-ah-que-ho-no"), which has its source in
the western part of Texas, and is the same river as the South Fork
of Red River mentioned in the act of 1890.
Page 162 U. S. 22
image:a
The present suit was instituted pursuant to that act. The state
appeared and demurred to the bill upon the following grounds: (1)
the question of boundary raised by the suit was political in its
character, and not susceptible of judicial determination by this
Court in the exercise of any jurisdiction conferred by the
Constitution and laws of the United States; (2) under the
Constitution, it was not competent for the United States to sue, in
its own courts, one of the states composing the Union; (3) this
Court, sitting as a court of equity, could not hear and determine
the present controversy, the right asserted by the United States
being in its nature legal, and not equitable.
Upon full consideration, these several grounds of demurrer were
overruled.
United States v. Texas, 143 U.
S. 621. The reasons given for that conclusion need not
be here repeated.
The state answered the bill, controverting the claim of the
United States and asserting that the lands within the boundary
mentioned in the above act constitute a part of its territory.
Page 162 U. S. 23
The United States filed a replication, and, proofs having been
taken, the case is now before the Court upon its merits.
Both parties assert title under certain articles of the treaty
between the United States and Spain made February 22, 1819, and
ratified February 19, 1821. 8 Stat. 252, 254, 256.
Before examining those articles, it will be useful to refer to
the diplomatic correspondence that preceded the making of the
treaty. That correspondence commenced during the administration of
President Madison and was concluded under that of President Monroe.
It appears that the negotiations upon the subject of the boundaries
between the respective possessions of the two countries was more
than once suspended because certain demands on the part of Spain
were regarded by the United States as wholly inadmissible. 4
American State Papers, Foreign Relations, pp. 425, 430, 438, 439,
452, 464-466, 474. Finally, on the 24th day of October, 1818, the
Spanish minister, "to avoid all cause of dispute in future,"
proposed to Mr. Adams, Secretary of State, that the limits of the
possessions of the two governments west of the Mississippi should
be designated by a line beginning
"on the Gulf of Mexico, between the Rivers Mermento and
Calcasia, following the Arroyo Hondo, between the Adaes and
Natchitoches, crossing the Rio or Red River at the thirty-second
degree of latitude and ninety-third of longitude from London,
according to Melish's map, and thence running directly north,
crossing the Arkansas, the White, and the Osage rivers, till it
strikes the Missouri, and then following the middle of that river
to its source, so that the territory on the right bank of the said
river will belong to Spain and that on the left bank to the United
States. The navigation as well of the Missouri as of the
Mississippi and Mermento shall remain free to the subjects of both
parties."
He also proposed that, in order "to fix this line with more
precision, and to place the landmarks which shall designate exactly
the limits of both nations," each of the contracting parties should
appoint a commissioner and surveyor, who should run and mark the
line, and make out plans, and keep journals of
Page 162 U. S. 24
their proceedings, the result agreed upon by them to be
considered part of the treaty and have the same effect as if
inserted in it. Annals of Congress, 15th Cong., 2d Sess. 1819,
1890, 1900.
To this proposition Mr. Adams, under date of October 31, 1818,
replied:
"Instead of it, I am authorized to propose to you the following,
and to assure you that it is to be considered as the final offer on
the part of the United States: beginning at the mouth of the River
Sabine, on the Gulf of Mexico, following the course of said river
to the thirty-second degree of latitude; the eastern bank and all
the islands in the said rive to belong to the United States, and
the western bank to Spain; thence due north to the northernmost
part of the thirty-third degree of north latitude, and until it
strikes the Rio Roxo, or Red River; thence, following the course of
the said river,
to its source, touching the chain of the Snow
Mountains in latitude 37�25' north, longitude
106�15' west, or there-abouts, as marked on Melish's map;
thence to the summit of the said mountains, and following the chain
of the same to the forty-first parallel of latitude; thence,
following the said parallel of latitude, 41�, to the South
Sea. The northern bank of the said Red River, and all the islands
therein, to belong to the United States, and the southern bank of
the same to Spain."
"It is believed," Mr. Adams said,
"that this line will render the appointment of commissioners for
fixing it more precisely unnecessary, unless it be for the purpose
of ascertaining the spot where the River Sabine falls upon latitude
32� north, and the line thence due north to the Red River,
and the point of latitude 41� north on the ridge of the Snow
Mountains."
Annals of Congress, 15th Cong., 2d Sess. 1903, 1904.
This proposition was rejected by the Spanish minister, and in
his letter of November 16, 1818, he said:
"I will undertake to admit the River Sabine, instead of the
Mermento, as the boundary between the two powers from the Gulf of
Mexico on condition that the same line proposed by you shall run
due north from the point where it crosses the river Roxo (Red
River) until it strikes the Mississippi, and extend thence
along
Page 162 U. S. 25
the middle of the latter to its source, leaving to Spain the
territory lying to the right and to the United States the territory
lying to the left of the same."
To this Mr. Adams replied under date of November 30, 1818:
"As you have now declared that you are not authorized to agree
either to the course of the Red River (Rio Roxo) for the boundary
or to the forty-first parallel of latitude, from the Snow Mountains
to the Pacific Ocean, the President deems it useless to pursue any
further the attempt at an adjustment of this object by the present
negotiation. I am therefore directed to state to you that the offer
of a line for the western boundary made to you in my last letter is
no longer obligatory upon this government. Reserving, then, all the
rights of the United States to the ancient western boundary of the
colony of Louisiana by the course of the Rio Bravo del Norte, I
am,"
etc. Annals of Congress, 15th Cong., 2d Sess., 1908, 1942.
The negotiations were resumed in the succeeding year, and the
Spanish minister wrote to Mr. Adams under date of February 1,
1819:
"Having thus declared to you my readiness to meet the views of
the United States in the essential point of their demand, I have to
state to you that this majesty is unable to agree to the admission
of the Red River to its source, as proposed by you.
This river
rises within a few leagues of Santa Fe, the capital of New
Mexico, and, as I flatter myself the United States have no hostile
intentions towards Spain at the moment we are using all our efforts
to strengthen the existing friendship between the two nations, it
must be indifferent to them to accept the Arkansas instead of the
Red River as the boundary. This opinion is strengthened by the well
known fact that the intermediate space between these two rivers is
so much impregnated with nitre as scarcely to be susceptible of
improvement. In consideration of these obvious reasons, I propose
to you that, drawing the boundary line from the Gulf of Mexico, by
the River Sabine, as laid down by you, it shall follow the course
of that river to its source; thence, by the ninety-fourth degree of
longitude, to the Red River of Natchitoches, and along the same to
the ninety-fifth degree, and, crossing it at that point, to run by
a line due north to the Arkansas,
Page 162 U. S. 26
and along it to its source; thence, by a line due west till it
strikes the source of the River San Clemente or Multnomah in
latitude 41�, and along that river to the Pacific Ocean, the
whole agreeably to Melish's map."
Annals of Congress, 15th Cong., 2d Sess., 2111, 2112.
The last proposition made by Mr. Adams to the Spanish minister
contained the following:
"Art. 3. The boundary line between the two countries, west of
the Mississippi, shall begin on the Gulf of Mexico at the mouth of
the River Sabine in the sea; continuing north, along the western
bank of that river, to the thirty-second degree of latitude; thence
by a line due north to the degree of latitude where it strikes the
Rio Roxo of Natchitoches, or Red River; thence following the course
of the Rio Roxo westward, to the degree of longitude one hundred
and two degrees west from London and twenty-five degrees from
Washington; then, crossing the said Red River, and running thence,
by a line due north, to the River Arkansas; thence following the
course of the southern bank of the Arkansas, to its source in
latitude forty-one degrees north, and thence, by the parallel of
latitude, to the South Sea, the whole being as laid down in
Melish's map of the United States, published in Philadelphia,
improved to the 1st of January, 1818. But if the source of the
Arkansas River should be found to fall north or south of latitude
forty-one degrees, then the line shall run from the said source due
south or north, as the case may be, till it meets the said parallel
of latitude forty-one degrees, and thence along the said parallel
to the South Sea, the Sabine and the said Red and Arkansas Rivers,
and all the islands in the same, throughout the course thus
described, to belong to the United States, and the western bank of
the Sabine, and the southern banks of the said Red and Arkansas
Rivers throughout the line thus described to belong to Spain. And
the United States hereby cede to His Catholic Majesty all their
rights, claims, and pretensions to the territories lying west and
south of the above-described line, and His Catholic Majesty cedes
to the said United States all his rights, claims, and pretensions
to any territories east and north of said line, and for himself,
his heirs and successors, renounces
Page 162 U. S. 27
all claims to said territories forever."
The Spanish minister required that "the boundary between the two
countries shall be the middle of the rivers, and that the
navigation of the said rivers shall be common to both countries."
Mr. Adams replied that the United States had always intended that
"the property of the river should belong to them," and he insisted
on that point
"as an essential condition, as the means of avoiding all
collision, and as a principle adopted henceforth by the United
States in its treaties with its neighbors."
He agree, however, "that the navigation of the said rivers to
the sea shall be common to both people." The Spanish minister
assented
"to the 100th degree of longitude, and, to remove all
difficulties, to admit the 42d instead of the 43d degree of
latitude from the Arkansas to the Pacific Ocean."
Annals of Congress Appendix, 15th Cong., 2d Sess. 2120, 2121,
2123.
We have alluded to this diplomatic correspondence to show the
circumstances under which the treaty of 1819 was made and to bring
out distinctly two facts that are of some importance in the present
discussion: 1. that the negotiators had access to the map of
Melish, improved to 1818, and published at Philadelphia; (2)that
the river referred to in the correspondence as "Red River" was
believed by the negotiators to have its source near Santa Fe and
the Snow Mountains.
This brings us to the treaty itself. Its third and fourth
articles are in these words:
"Art. 3. The boundary line between the two countries west of the
Mississippi shall begin on the Gulf of Mexico at the mouth of the
River Sabine in the sea, continuing north along the western bank of
the river to the 32d degree of latitude; thence by line due north,
to the degree of latitude where it strikes the Rio Roxo of
Natchitoches, or
Red River; then following the course of the
Rio Roxo, westward, to the degree of longitude 100 west from London
and 23 from Washington; then, crossing the said Red River, and
running thence, by a line due north, to the River Arkansas; thence,
following the course of the southern bank of the Arkansas, to its
source, in latitude 42 north, and thence by that parallel of
latitude, to the South Sea, the whole being as laid down in
Melish's
Page 162 U. S. 28
map of the United States, published at Philadelphia, improved to
the first of January, 1818. But if the source of the Arkansas River
shall be found to fall north or south of latitude 42�, then
the line shall run from the said source due south or north, as the
case may be, till it meets the said parallel of latitude 42, and
thence, along the said parallel, to the South Sea, all the islands
in the Sabine, and the said Red and Arkansas Rivers, throughout the
course thus described, to belong to the United States, but the use
of the waters, and the navigation of the Sabine to the sea, and of
the said rivers Roxo and Arkansas, throughout the extent of the
said boundary, on their respective banks, shall be common to the
respective inhabitants of both nations."
"The two high contracting parties agree to cede and renounce all
their rights, claims, and pretensions to the territories described
by the said line -- that is to say, the United States hereby cede
to His Catholic Majesty, and renounce forever all their rights,
claims, and pretensions to the territories lying west and south of
the above-described line and in like manner His Catholic Majesty
cedes to the said United States all his rights, claims and
pretensions to any territories east and north of the said line, and
for himself, his heirs, and successors, renounces all claim to the
said territories forever."
"Art. 4. To fix this line with more precision, and to place the
landmarks which shall designate exactly the limits of both nations,
each of the contracting parties shall appoint a commissioner and a
surveyor, who shall meet before the termination of one year, from
the date of the ratification of this treaty at Natchitoches, on the
Red River, and proceed to run and mark the said line, from the
mouth of the Sabine to the Red River, and from the Red River to the
River Arkansas, and to ascertain the latitude of the source of the
said River Arkansas, in conformity to what is above agreed upon and
stipulated, and the line of latitude 42, to the South Sea; they
shall make out plans and keep journals of their proceedings, and
the result agreed upon by them shall be considered as part of this
treaty, and shall have the same force as if it were inserted
therein. The two governments will amicably agree
Page 162 U. S. 29
respecting the necessary articles to be furnished to those
persons, and also as to their respective escorts, should such be
deemed necessary."
8 Stat. 252, 254, 256.
So much of the Melish map of 1818 as is necessary to show its
bearing on the present inquiry is reproduced below:
image:b
image:c
It may be observed here that the 100th meridian of longitude is
inaccurately located on this map. That meridian, astronomically
located, is more than one hundred miles further west than is
indicated by the Melish map. This fact is clearly shown by the
record, and is not seriously questioned.
By the treaty of 1828 between the United States of America and
the United Mexican states, concluded January 12, 1828, the dividing
limits of the respective countries were declared to be the same as
those fixed by the treaty of 1819. 8 Stat. 372.
The Republic of Texas, by an Act passed December 19, 1836,
declared that the civil and political jurisdiction of that republic
extended to the following boundaries, to-wit:
"Beginning at the mouth of the Sabine River and running west
along the Gulf of Mexico three leagues from land to the mouth of
the Rio Grande, thence up the principal stream of said river to its
source, thence due north to the forty-second degree of north
latitude, thence along the boundary line, as defined in the treaty
between the United States and Spain, to the beginning, and that the
President be, and is hereby, authorized and required to open a
negotiation with the government of the United States of America so
soon as, in his opinion, the public interest requires it to
ascertain and define the boundary line as agreed upon in said
treaty."
1 Sayles' Early Laws of Texas, Art. 257.
On the 25th of April, 1838, a convention was concluded between
the United States and the Republic of Texas for marking the
boundary referred to in the above treaty of 1828, as follows:
"Whereas the treaty of limits made and concluded on the 12th day
of January, 1828, between the United States of America of the one
part and the United Mexican states on
Page 162 U. S. 32
the other, is binding upon the Republic of Texas, the same
having been entered into at a time when Texas formed a part of the
United Mexican States, and whereas it is deemed proper, in order to
avoid future disputes and collisions between the United States and
Texas in regard to the boundary as designated by said treaty, that
a portion of the same should be run and marked without unnecessary
delay:"
"Article I. Each of the contracting parties shall appoint a
commissioner and surveyor, who shall meet before the expiration of
twelve months from the exchange of the ratification of the
convention at New Orleans and proceed to run and mark that portion
of the said boundary which extends from the mouth of the Sabine,
where that river enters the Gulf of Mexico, to the Red River. They
shall make out plans and keep journals of their proceedings, and
the result agreed upon by them shall be considered as part of this
convention, and shall have the same force as if it were inserted
therein."
"Art. 2. And it is agreed that until this line is marked out, as
is provided for in the foregoing article, each of the contracting
parties shall continue to exercise jurisdiction in all territory
over which its jurisdiction has hitherto been exercised, and that
the remaining portion of the said boundary line shall be run and
marked at such time hereafter as may suit the convenience of both
the contracting parties, until which time each of the said parties
shall exercise, without the interference of the other within the
Territory of which the boundary shall not have been so marked and
run, jurisdiction to the same extent to which it has been
heretofore usually exercised."
Treaties and Conventions 1079. By the Act of Congress of January
11, 1839, c. 2, provision was made for carrying this convention
into effect. 5 Stat. 312. It does not appear that anything of
importance was accomplished under that act
Page 162 U. S. 33
By a joint resolution passed March 1, 1845, Congress consented
that "the territory properly included within and rightfully
belonging to the Republic of Texas" might be erected into a state
to be admitted into the Union, one of the conditions of such
consent being that the new state be formed, subject to the
adjustment by the United States of all questions of boundary that
might arise with other governments. 5 Stat. 797. The conditions
prescribed were accepted by Texas. 1 Sayles' Early Laws Texas, Art.
1531. And by the joint resolution of Congress approved December 29,
1845, Texas was admitted as one of the states of the Union on an
equal footing in all respects with the original states. 9 Stat.
108.
Then came the Act of Congress approved September 9, 1850, c. 49,
entitled
"An act proposing to the State of Texas the establishment of her
northern and western boundaries, the relinquishment by the said
State of all territory claimed by her exterior to said boundaries,
and of all her claims upon the United States, and to establish a
territorial government for New Mexico."
By that act, certain propositions were made to the State of
Texas which, being accepted, were to be binding upon the United
States and the state. Among them were the following:
"First. The State of Texas will agree that her boundary
on
the north shall commence at the point
at which the
meridian of one hundred degrees west from Greenwich is
intersected by the parallel of thirty-six degrees thirty minutes
north latitude, and shall run from said point due west to the
meridian of one hundred and three degrees west from Greenwich;
thence her boundary shall run due south to the thirty-second degree
of north latitude; thence on the said parallel of thirty-two
degrees of north latitude to the Rio Bravo del Norte, and thence
with the channel of said river to the Gulf of Mexico. Second. The
State of Texas cedes to the United States all her claim to
territory exterior to the limits and boundaries which she
agrees to establish by the first article of this
agreement. Third. The State of Texas relinquishes all claim upon
the United States for liability of the debts of Texas, and for
compensation of indemnity for the surrender
Page 162 U. S. 34
to the United States of her ships, ports, arsenals, custom house
revenues, arms and munitions of war, and public buildings, with
their sites, which became the property of the United States at the
time of the annexation. Fourth. The United States, in consideration
of said establishment of boundaries, cession of claim to territory
and relinquishment of claims, will pay to the State of Texas the
sum of ten millions of dollars in a stock bearing five percent
interest, and redeemable at the end of fourteen years, the interest
payable half-yearly at the Treasury of the United States,"
and agreed to "be bound by the terms thereof, according to their
import and meaning." 9 Stat. 446, 447.
The state accepted these propositions by an act approved
November 25, 1850, and agreed to "be bound by the terms thereof
according to their import and meaning." 2 Sayles' Early Laws of
Texas, Art. 2127.
In the light of these general facts, we recur to the treaty of
1819, from which it will be seen that the line agreed upon --
starting from the point where the line due north from the Sabine
River at the 32d degree of latitude, strikes the Rio Roxo of
Natchitoches, or Red River -- followed "the course of the Rio Roxo
westward to the degree of longitude 100 west from London
and 23 from Washington."
The contention of the United States is that this requirement
cannot be met except by going westward along and up the Prairie Dog
Town Fork of Red River to the point where (as shown on the first of
the above maps) that river intersects the 100th meridian, the
government claiming that that river, and not the North Fork of Red
River, is a continuation or the principal fork of the Red River of
the treaty.
The state insists that even if the treaty be interpreted as
referring to the true 100th meridian of longitude, and not to that
meridian as located on the Melish map of 1818, "the course of the
Rio Roxo westward" from the intersection of the line extending
north from Sabine River to Red River takes the line not westwardly
along the Prairie Dog Town Fork of Red River, but northwardly and
northwestwardly up the North Fork of the Red River (from its
intersection
Page 162 U. S. 35
with Red River) to the point where the latter fork crosses the
true 100th meridian between the 35th and 36th degrees of
latitude.
But at the outset of the discussion, the state propounds this
proposition: that, the treaty of 1819 having declared that the
boundary lines between the United States and Spain should be as
laid down on Melish's map of 1818, it is immaterial whether the
location of the 100th meridian of longitude on that map was
astronomically correct or not, or whether the one or the other fork
of Red River was or is the continuation of the main river; that the
map of Melish having fixed the 100th degree of longitude west from
Greenwich below and east of the mouth of the North Fork of Red
River, as now known, is conclusive upon both governments, their
privies, and successors. If this position be sound, the case is for
the state, for it is conceded that the entire territory in dispute
is
west of the 100th meridian
as that meridian appears
on the Melish map of 1818, although it is, beyond all
question, east of the true 100th meridian, astronomically located,
and as long recognized both by the United States and Texas.
The state's answer thus presents this issue:
"That the line of said 100th meridian of longitude west from
London, as laid down in said map of Melish, intersects the Rio Roxo
or Red River a distance of many miles east of what is claimed by
the complainant to be the true line of said meridian, and many
miles east of the point where the Ke-che-ah-que-ho-no [Prairie Dog
Town Fork of Red River] empties its waters into the Rio Roxo of the
treaty, and said meridian, so laid down an Melish's map and
extended north to the 42d parallel of north latitude, includes,
as territory properly belonging to and conceded to Spain
under the terms of the treaty
and belonging of right to
Texas by virtue of the establishment of her independence, a
large part of the lands
now belonging to the Chickasaw and
other tribes of Indians, under concessions by treaty, as well as a
portion of the present states of Kansas and of Colorado and a part
of the Territory of New Mexico. Defendant shows that long
before and after the date of said treaty of 1819, the King of Spain
claimed all this territory
Page 162 U. S. 36
lying west of said 100th meridian of longitude and south of said
42d parallel of latitude, as laid down upon Melish's map, and in
effectuation of such claim exercised repeated acts of ownership and
dominion over the same without question, and, after securing her
independence and establishment as an independent nation, the United
Mexican states likewise asserted their dominion and authority over
said territory, and Texas, both as a separate republic and as a
state of the Union, has claimed and exercised complete ownership
and dominion over said territory, including the territory now in
controversy, by occupation of said territory by her armies, and by
extending the operations of her laws over the same, and by various
other acts and declarations, until the happening of the matters and
things now here to be shown and set forth."
Referring to the pleadings and to the Act of Congress of January
31, 1885, in which the terms of the treaty are recited, and which
directs the commissioners appointed under it to "mark the point
where the 100th meridian of longitude crosses Red River in
accordance with the terms of the treaty," the counsel for the state
says:
"But it the intersection of the 100th meridian of longitude with
the parallel 36�30' north latitude, constituting the
beginning of the north boundary line of Texas under the act of
1850, 9 Stat. 446, c. 49, shall be held to mean the actual, and not
the Melish, intersection, it does not follow that the actual, and
not the Melish, 100th meridian constitutes the eastern boundary
line of the state. . . . Nor is the situation altered by the fact
that this construction will leave
for future determination
the ownership of a portion of the northeastern territory."
If, as asserted by the state, this case should be determined
upon the basis that the 100th meridian is where the Melish map
located it, and not where it is in fact, this Court may well
decline to recognize a claim attended with such grave consequences
as those suggested by the answer unless it be clearly
established.
Undoubtedly the intention of the two governments, as gathered
from the words of the treaty, must control, and the entire
instrument must be examined in order that the real intention
Page 162 U. S. 37
of the contracting parties may be ascertained. 1 Kent Com. 174.
For that purpose, the map to which the contracting parties referred
is to be given the same effect as if it had been expressly made a
part of the treaty.
McIver's Lessee v.
Walker, 9 Cranch 173;
17 U.
S. Walker,
4 Wheat. 444; 67 U.
S. Lee, 2 Black 499;
Cragin v. Powell,
128 U. S. 691,
128 U. S. 696;
Jefferis v. Land Co., 134 U. S. 178,
134 U. S. 194.
But are we justified, upon any fair interpretation of the treaty,
in assuming that the parties regarded that map as absolutely
correct in all respects, and not to be departed from in any
particular, or under any circumstances? Did the contracting parties
intend the words of the treaty should be literally followed if by
so doing the real object they had in mind would be defeated? The
boundary line was to begin at the mouth of the River Sabine and
continue north along the western bank of that river to the 32d
degree of latitude. Was it intended that the Melish map should
control in fixing the point where the Sabine River met that degree
of latitude? Was the line due north from Sabine River to Red River
to begin at the intersection of Sabine River with the true 32d
degree of latitude, or where Melish's map indicated the place of
such intersection? The two governments certainly intended that the
line should be run from the Gulf along the western bank of the
Sabine River, and, after it reached Red River, that it should
follow the course of that river, leaving both rivers within the
United States. But it cannot be supposed that they had in view the
intersection of Sabine River with any degree of latitude other than
the true 32d degree of latitude, nor the crossing of the line
extending along the Red River westward with any meridian of
longitude other than the true 100th meridian. The fourth article of
the treaty shows that the contracting parties contemplated that the
line should be fixed with more precision than it was then possible
to do, and to that end provision was made for the appointment of
commissioners and surveyors who should run and mark it, and
designate exactly the limits of both nations -- the results of such
proceedings, it was declared, to be considered part of the treaty,
having the same force as if
Page 162 U. S. 38
inserted therein. Melish's map of 1818 was taken as a general
basis for the adjustment of boundaries, but the rights of the two
nations were made subject to the location of the lines, with more
precision at a subsequent time, by commissioners and surveyors
appointed by the respective governments. So far as is disclosed by
the diplomatic correspondence that preceded the treaty, the
negotiators assumed, for the purposes of a settlement of their
controversy, that Melish's map was in the main correct. But they
did not and could not know that it was accurate in all respects.
Hence they were willing to take it as the basis of a final
settlement, the fixing of the line with more precision and the
designating of the limits of the two nations with more exactness to
be the work of commissioners and surveyors who were to meet at a
named time, and the result of whose work should become a part of
the treaty. While the line agreed upon was, speaking generally, to
be as laid down on Melish's map, it was to be fixed with more
precision and designated with more exactness by representatives of
the two nations.
But there is another and perhaps stronger view of this question,
and which is equally conclusive even if the 100th meridian
originally contemplated by the treaty of 1819 were assumed to have
been the erroneous meridian line of Melish's map. This view rests
upon the official acts of the general government and of Texas, and
requires that the present controversy shall be determined upon the
basis that the line, which by the treaty was to follow "the course
of the Rio Roxo westward," extends to the true 100th meridian,
thence by a line due north.
As heretofore stated, the Republic of Texas, by an act passed
December 19, 1836, declared that its civil and political
jurisdiction extended to the following boundaries: beginning at the
mouth of the Sabine River and running along the Gulf of Mexico
three leagues from the land to the mouth of the Rio Grande; thence
up the principal stream of the latter river to its source; thence
due north to the 42d degree of north latitude; thence, "along the
boundary line as defined in the treaty between the United States
and Spain, to
Page 162 U. S. 39
the beginning." The President of that republic was authorized
and required by the same act to open a negotiation with the United
States to ascertain and define the boundary as agreed upon in that
treaty. 1 Sayles' Early Laws of Texas, Art. 257. This boundary had
not been defined when Texas was admitted as a state into the Union,
with the territory "properly included within and rightfully
belonging to the Republic of Texas." The settlement of that
question, together with certain claims made by Texas against the
United States, were among the subjects that engaged the attention
of Congress during the consideration of the various measures
constituting the compromises of 1850. The result was the passage of
the above Act of September 9, 1850, c. 49, the provisions of which
were promptly accepted by the State of Texas. This legislation of
the two governments constituted a convention or contract in respect
of all matters embraced by it. The settlement of 1850 fixed the
boundary of Texas "on the north" to commence at the point at which
the 100th meridian intersects the parallel of
36�30' north latitude, and from that point the northern line
ran due west to the 103d meridian, thence due south to the 32d
degree of north latitude, thence on that parallel to the Rio Bravo
del Norte, and thence with the channel of that river to the Gulf of
Mexico. Texas, in the same settlement, ceded its claim to territory
exterior to the limits and boundaries so established, and
relinquished all claims upon the United States for liability for
its debts, and for compensation or indemnity for the surrender to
the United States of its ships, ports, arsenals, customhouse
revenues, arms and munitions of war, and public buildings, with
their sites, which became the property of the United States at the
time of the admission of the state into the Union. In consideration
of that establishment of boundaries, cession of claim to territory,
and relinquishment of claims, the United States agreed to pay and
has paid to Texas the sum of $10,000,000. 9 Stat. 446.
The words "the meridian of one hundred degrees west from
Greenwich" in the act of 1850 manifestly refer to the true 100th
meridian, and not to the 100th meridian as located
Page 162 U. S. 40
on the Melish map of 1818. The precise location of that meridian
has not been left in doubt by the two governments. The United
States has erected a monument at the point where the 100th meridian
is intersected by the parallel of 36� 30' north latitude.
This was done many years ago, upon actual survey, and Texas has by
its legislation often recognized the true 100th meridian to be as
located by the United States. Looking at the above map of 1892, it
will be seen that the Counties of Lipscomb, Hemphill, Wheeler,
Collingsworth, and Childress are all immediately west of the 100th
meridian. These counties were established in 1876. 3 Sayles' Early
Laws of Texas, Art. 4285. The boundaries of each, as defined in the
legislative enactments of Texas, are given in the margin.{1} It
will be seen that the eastern boundary of each county is the 100th
meridian. By the act creating Lipscomb County, its boundary
immediately south of the parallel of 36� 30' north latitude
begins "at a monument on the intersection of the 100th meridian and
the thirty-six and a half degrees of latitude." That monument is
the one established by the United States after the settlement of
1850. Peculiarly significant is the boundary of Childress County,
one of the lines of which runs up Prairie Dog Town River -- which
river, the United States insists, constitutes the southern boundary
of
Page 162 U. S. 41
the territory in dispute -- "to the initial monument on the
100th meridian." The "initial monument" here referred to was
erected in 1857 under the authority of the United States to mark
the place where, as its representatives then and have ever since
claimed, the line, "following the course of the Rio Roxo westward,"
crossed the 100th meridian.
It thus appears that the two governments, with knowledge that
the treaty of 1819 referred to Melish's map of 1818, have, by
official action, declared that the 100th meridian is located on the
line that marks the eastern boundaries of the Counties of Lipscomb,
Hemphill, Wheeler, and Collingsworth in the State of Texas.
Besides, the proof in the cause leaves no room to doubt that the
true 100th meridian is, as shown by the above map of 1892,
immediately east of those counties. The acts of the two governments
and the evidence therefore concur in showing that the 100th
meridian is not correctly delineated on the Melish map of 1818. And
in the above settlement of a part of the boundary lines between the
United States and Texas, the two governments have accepted the true
100th meridian and discarded the Melish 100th meridian. Giving
effect to the Compromise Act of 1850, the suggestion that the 100th
meridian must be taken, in the present controversy, to be as
located on the Melish map of 1818, is wholly inadmissible. It
cannot be supposed that the United States
Page 162 U. S. 42
would have agreed to pay $10,000,000 to the State of Texas, as
provided in the act of 1850, if it had been suggested that any
dispute in respect of boundary not covered by that act, and so far
as such dispute depended upon degrees of longitude, was to be
determined otherwise than by reference to the true 100th meridian.
Assuming that the two governments did not intend by the settlement
of 1850 to fix the point where the line, "following the course of
the Rio Roxo, westward," crossed the 100th meridian, nevertheless
it is inconceivable that the two governments intended that in
establishing the boundary of Texas "on the north," the 100th
meridian mentioned in the enactment of 1850 should be the true
100th meridian, but that the state should be at liberty to insist,
in respect of its boundary
along Red River, that the 100th
meridian be taken to be as delineated on the Melish map, and
thereby obtain all the land within the limits of Indian Territory
between the true 100th meridian and the Melish 100th meridian.
We have said that the treaty itself, upon a reasonable
interpretation of its provisions, left it open to the contracting
parties, through commissioners and surveyors, to fix the lines with
precision, and therefore to show by competent evidence where the
true 100th meridian was located. But if this were not so, we should
feel obliged to hold that the convention or contract between the
United States and Texas, as embraced in their respective enactments
of 1850, together with the subsequent acts of the two governments,
require, in the determination of the present controversy, that the
100th meridian mentioned in the treaty of 1819 be taken to be the
true 100th meridian, and consequently that the line, "following the
course of the Rio Roxo westward to the degree of longitude 100 west
from London," must go, and was intended to go, to the true or
actual 100th meridian, and not stop at the Melish 100th
meridian.
So that the real question for solution is whether, as contended
by the United States, the line "following the course of the Rio
Roxo
westward to the degree of longitude 100 west from
London" meets the 100th meridian at the point where
Page 162 U. S. 43
Prairie Dog Town Fork of Red River crosses that meridian, or
whether, as contended by the state, it goes northwestwardly up the
North Fork of Red River until that river crosses the 100th meridian
many miles due north of the initial monument established by the
United States in 1857.
Upon this point the evidence is very voluminous. Much of it, we
feel constrained to say, is of little value, and tends only to
confuse the mind in its efforts to ascertain what was within the
contemplation of the negotiators of 1819.
It is a matter of regret that the question now presented,
involving interests of great magnitude, should not have been
determined in some satisfactory mode before or shortly after Texas
was admitted as one of the states of the Union. It has remained
unsettled for so long a time that it is not now so easy of solution
as it would have been when the facts were fresh in the minds of
living witnesses who had more intimate knowledge of the
circumstances than anyone can now possibly have upon the most
thorough investigation.
Before looking at the Melish map of 1818, it will be proper to
inquire as to the general course of Red River, so far as any
information had been given to the public prior to the making of
that map. Probably the most trustworthy publication on the subject
is Pike's
"Account of Expeditions to the Sources of the Mississippi, and
through the Western Parts of Louisiana to the Source of the
Arkansas, Kansas, La Platte, and Pierre Juan Rivers, Performed by
Order of the government of the United States during the Years 1805,
1806, and 1807, and a Tour through the Interior Parts of New Spain,
when Conducted through These Provinces, by Order of the Captain
General, in the Year 1807."
This work was copyrighted in 1808, and published at Philadelphia
in 1810. It was illustrated by numerous charts, copies of which
follow -- one of them being "A Chart of the Internal Part of
Louisiana," the other, "A Map of the Internal Provinces of New
Spain."
image:d
image:e
image:f
image:g
Those charts show a large river, called "Red River," extending
from a point near Santa Fe, between latitude 37� and
38�, across what is now the State of Texas, passing
Natchitoches, Louisiana. Both show a chain of mountains
Page 162 U. S. 48
running north and south, marked on one chart as "White,
snow-capped mountains, very high."
These are undoubtedly the Snow Mountains referred to in the
letter of Mr. Adams to the Spanish minister of October 31, 1818, in
which, as we have seen, the former proposed that the line from east
to west should follow the course of Red River "to its source,
touching the chain of the Snow Mountains, in latitude 37�
25' north, longitude 106�15� west, or thereabouts."
East of the Snow Mountains, as delineated on these charts, are two
prongs or small streams, "Rio Rojo" and "Rio Moro," the source of
the former being northeast, and the latter nearly east, of Santa
Fe. The Rio Rojo rises between the 37th and 38th, and the Rio Moro
between the 36th and 37th, degrees of latitude, both near the 106th
degree of longitude. Between those prongs on one of the charts are
the words, "Source of Red River of the Mississippi." The prongs or
streams Rio Rojo and Rio Moro unite at about the 37th degree of
latitude, and form one stream, marked on one chart as "Red River,"
and on the other as "Rio Colorado [Red River] of Natchitoches." The
stream thus formed runs for a short distance eastwardly, then
southeastwardly until it reaches a point a little west of the 100th
meridian, then eastwardly, then a little northeastwardly, then
southeastwardly, passing Natchitoches, to a junction with the
Wichita River near the Mississippi River. It should also be stated
that on these charts is marked a road or line extending from Taos
(which is north of Santa Fe) through a gap of the Snow Mountains,
and thence along the north side of Red River. That line is
described as
"the route pursued by the Spanish cavalry when going out from
Santa Fe in search of the American exploring parties commanded by
Major Sparks and Captain Pike in the year 1806."
These charts or maps, in connection with the chart of the lower
part of Red River, not here reproduced, also show throughout the
entire distance from Natchitoches to the source of Red River, near
the Snow Mountains, small streams emptying into the main river from
the north and northwest, none of which, however, is marked with
names, and that north of Red River, as delineated by
Page 162 U. S. 49
Pike, and east of the 100th meridian of longitude, is an unnamed
stream, not of great length but having the same general course as
the stream now known as the "North Fork of Red River."
That prior to Melish's map of 1818 it was believed that the Red
River that passed Natchitoches had its source in the mountains near
Santa Fe is manifest from Melish's own publications. In 1816, he
published at Philadelphia a small book, with the title, "A
Geographical Description of the United States, with the Contiguous
British and Spanish Possessions." It accompanied his map of those
countries. In that work it appears that he used Humboldt's map of
1804, and Pike's Travels. He said:
"The Red River rises in the mountains to the eastward of Santa
Fe, between north latitude 37� and 38�, and, pursuing
a general southeast course, makes several remarkable bends, as
exhibited on the map, but it receives no very considerable streams
until it forms a junction with the Wachitta, and its great mass of
waters, a few miles before it reaches the Mississippi."
Pages 13 and 39.
See also the third edition of his
work, published in 1818, pp. 14 and 42.
On Darby's map of the United States, including Louisiana,
published in 1818 and prefixed to his "Emigrant's Guide," appears
the "Red River of Natchitoches," formed by two prongs, and
extending southeastwardly from a point near the intersection of the
107th degree of longitude and the 40th degree of latitude to its
junction with waters near the Mississippi. East of the 100th
meridian are two unnamed streams coming from the northwest, each
much shorter than the main Red River as delineated on that map. It
is stated in this work that the Red River
"rises near Santa Fe, in N. lat. 37�30', and 29�
west of Washington, runs nearly parallel to the Arkansas, joins the
Mississippi at 31� N. lat. after a comparative course of
1,100 miles."
P. 50.
In view of the facts stated, particularly in view of Melish's
knowledge of Pike's publication and the statements in his own work,
it cannot be doubted that when the Melish map of 1818 was
published, it was believed that there was a Red River that
continued without break from its source, near Santa Fe or the
Page 162 U. S. 50
Snow Mountains, until it joined other waters east and southeast
of Natchitoches, near the Mississippi.
Following the course of Red River as laid down on the Melish map
of 1818, it is impossible to doubt that, in the mind of Melish, the
Red River was the stream represented by Pike as having two prongs,
Rio Rojo and Rio Moro, near Santa Fe, and as running without break
first easterly, then southeastwardly, then eastwardly for a
comparatively short distance, and then southeastwardly to its mouth
near the Mississippi River. On the north and east of Red River, as
thus marked, there was no stream connected with it that was marked
by any name. There was an unnamed stream on the north side of the
main river which emptied into the latter between the 101st and 102d
degrees of west longitude as defined on that map. If regard be had
alone to the map of 1818, it is more than probable that the river
marked on it as having near its source two prongs, Rio Rojo and Rio
Moro, and which formed one stream that continued without break
southeastwardly, and into which, between the 101st and 102d degrees
of longitude as marked on that map, came from the northwest an
unnamed stream, was the river designated on Pike's chart as "Red
River," and was the Red River of the treaty of 1819. The suggestion
that the river marked on the Melish map as having the two prongs,
Rio Rojo and Rio Moro, and running southeastwardly was the river
now known as the "North Fork of the Red River," is without any
substantial foundation upon which to rest. If the latter river is
delineated at all on the Melish map, it is the unnamed stream that
entered the main river from the northwest, between the 101st and
102d meridians as located on that map.
There is a large amount of evidence of a documentary character
showing that this interpretation of the Melish map is correct. We
have before us "A Map of the United States, with the Contiguous
British and Spanish Possessions, Compiled from the Latest and Best
Authorities by John Melish." It was copyrighted June 16, 1820, and
published at Philadelphia by Finlayson, the successor of Melish. A
part of that map is reproduced below. It is spoken of as "Melish's
Map of 1823," because that is the year to which it was
improved.
image:h
image:i
Page 162 U. S. 51
From that map it appears that a line up the Rio Roxo, or Red
River, from the northeastern corner of Texas to the 100th meridian
is substantially an east and west line, and that west of the 100th
meridian it is westward and northwestwardly
to a point near
Santa Fe and the Snow Mountains.
If the case depended upon that map, it could not be doubted that
the territory in dispute is outside of the limits of Texas. The
direction of the treaty is to run
westward, not
northwestwardly, on Red River,
to the 100th meridian.
According to the view pressed by the state, the true line extends,
from the junction of the North Fork of Red River with Red River,
northwardly, then easterly, then northwestwardly
up that
fork, although at such junction there is another wide stream,
coming almost directly from the west, and which fully meets the
requirement of the treaty to follow the course of the Red River
westwardly to the 100th meridian. We do not feel
authorized to assent to this view. In our judgment, the direction
in the treaty to follow the course of the Red River
westward to the 100th meridian takes the line not up the
North Fork, but westwardly with the river now known as the "Prairie
Dog Town Fork," or "South Fork of Red River," until it reaches that
meridian; thence due north to the point where Texas agreed that its
line "on the north" should commence.
This conclusion is strongly fortified by an inspection of the
numerous maps placed before us, and which were made prior to
February 8, 1860, on which day the Legislature of Texas, with
knowledge that the territory in dispute was claimed by the United
States, passed an act creating the County of Greer, and thereby
assumed that it was part of the territory properly and rightfully
belonging to that state at the time its independence was achieved,
as well as when it was admitted into the Union. 2 Sayles' Early
Laws of Texas, Art. 2886. Every map before us, published after the
treaty of 1819 and prior to 1860, beginning with the Melish map of
1823, shows that the line, going from east to west, followed the
course of Red River westward until it crossed the true 100th
meridian at or near the southwest corner of the territory
designated as "Unassigned Land." Upon each and all of these maps
appear
Page 162 U. S. 54
streams coming from the northwest, having a northwest and
southeast course, that empty into the main river. But none of those
streams is marked as a part of the line established by the treaty
of 1819.
Among the maps to which we refer are the following: (1) "A Map
of Mexico, Louisiana, and the Missouri Territory, Including the
states of Mississippi, Alabama Territory, East and West Florida,
Georgia, South Carolina, and Part of the Island of Cuba," by John
H. Robinson, M.D., copyrighted in 1819 and published at
Philadelphia. The author is, no doubt, the gentleman of the same
name who accompanied Maj. Pike in his expeditions, and is spoken of
by that officer as a man of enterprise and science. The river
marked on that map as "Red River" east of the 100th meridian has
its source in the region of Santa Fe, and corresponds with the Red
River, or the Rio Colorado, of Natchitoches, as delineated on
Pike's map. (2) Morse's map of the United States, published in
1822, and which accompanied an official report made by him in that
year to the Secretary of War, of the conditions of the various
Indian tribes of the country. On this map appears Red River, with
its source not far from Santa Fe, and running southeastwardly to a
short distance west of the 100th meridian, from which point it
extends eastwardly all along the southern line of Indian Territory,
thence southeastwardly to the Mississippi. (3) Carey and Lea's
Atlas of 1822. On this map appears Red River having a
westward course the entire distance from about the 94th to
the 102d degree of longitude, between the 33d and 34th degrees of
latitude, and constituting the southern line of the Indian
Territory. Red River on this map has its source near the Snow
Mountains. (4) The map of Maj. Long, of the topographical
engineers, inscribed to Mr. Calhoun, Secretary of War and published
in 1822. On this map appears a river with its source near the
mountains of Santa Fe and running southeastwardly, then eastwardly
to the 100th meridian, and continuing then eastwardly along the
entire line between Indian Territory and Texas. As delineated on
Long's map, between the 103d and 101st meridians, that river is
marked "Rio Roxo, or Red River," and near the
Page 162 U. S. 55
95th meridian it is marked "Red River." (5) Tanner's map of
North America, 1822. (6) Tanner's map of North America (1823) shows
a river on the south border of what is now Indian Territory, marked
"Red River." On each side of it, after it passes the 100th
meridian, there are prongs or streams north and south, and the
river, near its and, after it has passed 25� west from
Washington, is marked "Red River." Going off from the Red River at
about 20� longitude west from Washington is the river marked
False Washitta, which comes from the northwest. Red River, as
marked on that map, extends nearer to Santa Fe than the False
Washitta. (7) Finley's American Atlas (1826) shows Red River on the
south boundary of Arkansas, whose course, going from the east, is
westward until about the 100th meridian is reached, and west of the
100th meridian it is marked "R. Roxo, or Red R." At longitude
20� west from Washington, a river comes from the northwest
marked "False Washitta." The extension marked as above is much
longer than any stream emptying into Red River from the north or
the northwest. (8) "A Complete Historical, Chronological, and
Geographical American Atlas," published by Carey & Lea at
Philadelphia, in 1826, on which will be found marked "Red River,"
whose course, going from east to west, is westwardly past the 100th
meridian, and then northwestwardly in the direction of Santa Fe. At
about the 98th meridian, a much shorter stream comes into it from
the northwest, and is unmarked. (9) A German atlas of America,
published at Leipsig in 1830, contains a map which shows the
boundary established in 1819 on the west side of Louisiana, and
shows Red River along the whole southern line of the Indian
Territory. Coming into that river from the northwest at 99�
longitude, is an unmarked stream, and coming from the northwest,
and emptying into Red River at about 97� longitude, is
another stream marked "Falsche Washitta." (10) Young's New Map of
Texas, published at Philadelphia in 1835 by Mitchell, and a copy of
part of which follows is inserted below.
image:j
image:k
On this map appears Red River, with its source a short distance
from Santa Fe, and marked, east of the 100th meridian, as "Rio
Roxo, or Red River, of Louisiana,"
Page 162 U. S. 58
running first southeastwardly, then eastwardly along the
southern boundary of Indian Territory. (11) Maillard's map of
Texas, published in 1841, showing Red River as forming the line
between the Indian Territory and Texas from about the 94th degree
of longitude to the 100th meridian, having a course westward and
eastward between those meridians, and marked on the map, east of
the 100th meridian, as "Rio Roxo or Red River, of Louisiana." (12)
A map compiled for the department of state, under the direction of
Colonel Abert and Lieutenant Emory and published by the War
Department in 1844. On this map appears Red River, whose course,
going from east to west from a point near the 94th degree of
longitude, is substantially westward along the whole line between
the Indian Territory and Texas. After passing the 100th meridian,
its course is westwardly and northwestwardly in the direction of
Santa Fe. (13) Tanner's map of the United States and Mexico,
published in 1846. That map shows Red River having an eastward and
westward course just south of the 34th degree of latitude and
marking the southern line of Indian Territory. (14) Colton's map of
the United States, published in 1848, shows Red River forking near
the 98th meridian, one fork extending westwardly and
northwestwardly towards Santa Fe, marked "Rio Roxo, or Red River,"
between 100� and 102�, and "Red River" between
102� and 104�. (15) Cordova's Map of the State of
Texas, "compiled from the records of the General Land Office of the
state by Robert Creuzbaur" and published in 1849. Creuzbaur entered
the land office in Texas before the admission of that state into
the Union, and remained there for many years. While there, he never
heard of any claim by Texas to the territory now called "Greer
County." Upon the original of this map is a certificate by Thomas
W. Ward, commissioner of the land office of Texas from January 5,
1841, to March 20, 1848, and also a certificate by his successor,
George W. Smyth. Ward certified that the map had been compiled by
Creuzbaur from the records of the General Land Office of Texas, and
that it was the most correct representation of the state he had
seen or which had come to his knowledge; "the meanders of
Page 162 U. S. 59
the rivers are all correctly represented, being made from actual
survey." Smyth certified that he
"has no hesitancy in declaring it as his firm conviction that
this map is a very correct representation of the state,
representing all returns up to date, having been compiled with
great care from the records of the General Land Office."
On this map is also the certificate of the Governor and
Secretary of State as to the official character of Ward and Smyth.
It is further attested, under date of August 12, 1848, by Senators
Rusk and Houston and by Representatives Kauffman and Pilsbury, as
follows:
"We, the undersigned senators and representatives from the State
of Texas, do hereby certify that we have carefully examined J. de
Cordova's map of the State of Texas, compiled by R. Creuzbaur from
the records of the General Land Office of Texas, and have no
hesitation in saying that no map could surpass this in accuracy and
fidelity. It has delineated upon it every county in the state, its
towns, rivers, and streams, and we cordially recommend it to every
person who desires correct geographical information of our state.
To the persons desirous of visiting Texas it would be
invaluable."
(16) Mitchell's New Atlas of North and South America, published
by Thomas Cowperthwaite & Co., Philadelphia (1851), shows on
the map of Texas a river marked "Red River," whose course, after
the latitude midway between 33� and 34� is reached,
is westward, It continues in a westerly direction, without scarcely
any change, until it reaches the 102d meridian, and then turns
northwestwardly in the direction of Santa Fe.
All of these maps place the territory in dispute east of the
100th meridian and
north of the southern line of the
Indian Territory,
as that line is claimed by the United
States. They are all inaccurate if any part of that territory
is within the limits of Texas. No one of them so locates Red River
that its course, going westward (from the point where the line
between Texas and Louisiana intersects the Red River) to the 100th
meridian, would take the line of the treaty of 1819 up the North
Fork of Red River until it intersected that meridian near the 35th
degree of latitude.
The conclusion to be drawn from the maps to which we
Page 162 U. S. 60
have referred is sustained by other maps, namely: (1) A map of
the State of Texas purporting to have been compiled by Stephen F.
Austin and published at Philadelphia by H. S. Tanner in 1837. The
original is in the General Land Office of Texas, and upon it is the
certificate of the commissioner of such land office, dated March
13, 1882, showing that it was temporarily deposited in that office.
(2) A map of Texas, purporting to have been compiled from surveys
on record in the General Land Office of the Republic of Texas in
the year 1839 by Richard S. Hunt and Jesse F. Randel. Upon this map
is a certificate of the secretary of State of Texas approving the
map and stating that it had been compiled "from the best and most
recent authorities." This certificate is followed by one from the
Commissioner of the General Land Office of the Republic of Texas
dated April 25, 1839, stating that "the compiler of this map has
had access to the records of this office, and that the map was
compiled from them." (3) Disturnel's map of the United States of
Mexico, published in 1847 and used at the making of the treaty of
Guadaloupe Hidalgo. (4) A map prepared for the President of the
United States under the direction of the commissioner of the land
office in 1849. (5) "A Travelers' Map of the Texas,"
"compiled from the records of the General Land Office, the maps
of the coast survey, the reports of the boundary commission, and
various other military surveys and reconnoissances, by Charles W.
Pressler."
This map was published in 1867. The author held a position in
the land office of Texas for more than thirty years.
But it is said that the United States has in many ways, and
during a very long period, recognized the claim of Texas to the
territory in dispute, and, upon principles of justice and equity,
should not be heard at this late day to question the title of the
state.
Is there any basis for the suggestion that the United States has
ever acquiesced in the claim of the state that the treaty line
westward along Red River to the 100th meridian follows the
course of the North Fork from its mouth northwardly and
northwestwardly until that meridian is reached at a point
Page 162 U. S. 61
north of the 35th degree of latitude? This question deserves the
most careful examination, for long acquiescence by the general
government in the claim of Texas would be entitled to great
weight.
In support of the suggestion that the United States has
recognized the claim of Texas, reference is made to the fact that
in 1843, some Texan troops under the command of Colonel Snively
went into the territory here in dispute and were arrested and
disarmed by Captain Cooke of the United States army, who had been
specially assigned to the duty of protecting caravans of Santa Fe
traders through the territories of the United States to the Texan
frontier. Of his conduct, the Republic of Texas complained.
Connected with that matter was an alleged forcible entry into the
customhouse at Bryarly's Landing, on Red River, by certain citizens
of the United States, and the taking therefrom of goods that had
been seized as forfeited under the laws of Texas. The settlement of
that dispute between the two governments is now relied on as
showing a recognition by the United States of the claim of Texas to
the territory here in controversy. We have been unable to find
anything in the history of those proceedings to justify this
contention of the state. From the letter of Mr. Calhoun, Secretary
of State, to Mr. Van Zandt,
charge d'affaires of the
Republic of Texas, of date August 14, 1844, it appears that Captain
Cooke's conduct in this matter was made the subject of a court of
inquiry. Mr. Calhoun said:
"The court was ordered at the request of my immediate
predecessor, in conformity to the intimation contained in his
communication to Mr. Van Zandt of the 19th of January last, in
order to ascertain more fully, and in the most authentic form, the
circumstances and facts connected with the proceedings of Captain
Cooke and his command in the disarming of the Texan force under the
command of Colonel Snively. Mr. Van Zandt will find on recurring to
the extract that the opinion of the court is that the place where
the Texan force was disarmed was
within the Territory of the
United States, that there was nothing in the conduct of
Captain Cooke which was harsh or unbecoming, and that he did not
exceed the
Page 162 U. S. 62
authority derived from the orders under which he acted. It is
proper to add that the court consisted of three officers of
experience and high standing, that the case was fully laid before
it, and that its opinion
appears to be fully sustained by the
evidence. There seems to be no doubt that Captain Cooke was
sincerely of the opinion that the Texan force was within the
Territory of the United States, and that the fulfillment of his
orders to protect the trade made it his duty, under such
circumstances, to disarm them. It is readily conceded that the
commander of the Texan forces, with equal sincerity, believed the
place he occupied was within the Territory of Texas. Which was
right or which wrong can be ascertained with certainty only by an
actual survey and demarcation of the line dividing the two
countries between the Red and Arkansas Rivers."
After observing that it was neither necessary nor advisable to
renew between the two governments the discussion on the question
whether the Texan force was or was not within the limits of the
United States, Mr. Calhoun proceeded:
"In the hope, therefore, of closing the discussion and putting
an end to this exciting subject, the undersigned renews the offer
of his predecessor contained in the communication above referred
to, 'to restore the arms taken from the Texan force, or to make
compensation for them,' and his assurance, given at the same time
that"
"his government never meditated and will not sanction any
indignity towards the government of Texas, nor any wrong towards
her people, and will repair any injury of either kind which may be
made to appear."
This offer was accepted by the government of Texas, its
charge d'affaires saying: "As it is not probable that the
arms could be returned in the order in which they were taken,
compensation will be received for them." House Ex.Doc. 28th Congr.
2d Sess. Vol. 1, pp. 12, 109-110. This was followed by an
appropriation by Congress, by the Act of March 30, 1847, c. 47, of
a sum of not exceeding $30,000,
"for settling the claims of the late Republic of Texas,
according to principles of justice and equity, for disarming a body
of Texan troops under the command of Colonel Snively, and for
entering the customs house at Bryarly's Landing, and taking
Page 162 U. S. 63
certain goods therefrom."
9 Stat. 155, 168. It seems to the Court too clear to require
discussion that while, during the above controversy, the United
States and Texas asserted their authority, respectively, over the
place where the Texan troops were disarmed, the determination of
the question of territorial boundary was expressly waived, and a
settlement was reached upon the basis indicated in the diplomatic
correspondence and in the act of Congress, solely (to use the words
of Mr. Calhoun) to allay "irritated feelings between two countries
whose interest it is to be on the most friendly terms."
Proceeding with the inquiry whether the United States has
recognized the claim of Texas to own the territory in dispute, we
find that by the treaty of June 22, 1855, between the United States
and the Choctaw and Chickasaw Indians, the boundary of the Choctaw
and Chickasaw country was thus defined:
"Beginning at a point on the Arkansas River one hundred paces
east of old Fort Smith, where the western boundary line of the
State of Arkansas crosses the said river, and running thence due
south to Red River, thence up Red River to the point
where the
meridian of one hundred degrees west longitude crosses the
same, thence north along said meridian to the main Canadian
River, thence down said river to its junction with the Arkansas
River, thence down said river to the place of beginning."
11 Stat. 611, 612. It may be here stated that the Kiowas,
Comanches, and Apaches were settled in the Choctaw and Chickasaw
country, as originally defined, in virtue of the treaty of 1867. 15
Stat. 581, 582. In execution of the treaty of 1855, the
Commissioner of Indian Affairs made a contract with A. H. Jones and
H. M. C. Brown for a survey of some of the boundaries of the
original Choctaw and Chickasaw country. From the field notes of
those surveyors, which were duly reported to the proper office and
certified to be correct by the astronomer and examiner of the
Indian boundary survey, we make these extracts:
"The initial monument for the 100th meridian west longitude
boundary line between the State of Texas and the Choctaw and
Chickasaw countries is established 30 chs. dist. from the north
bank of Red River, on an elevation near 50 ft. above the bed of the
same. The situation
Page 162 U. S. 64
was selected with a view to protect the monument so as never to
be destroyed by high water. . . . The river due south from the
monument is 76 chs. and 85 lks. wide from high water mark to high
water mark. Course N., 85� E. It will be sufficient to say
to those interested that there can be no doubt as to the fact of
its being the main branch of Red River, as was doubted by some
persons with whom we had conversed relative to the matter before
seeing it, for the reason the channel is larger than all the rest
of the tributaries combined, besides affording its equal share of
water, though, like the other branches, in many places the water is
swallowed up by its broad and extensive sand beds; but water can at
any season of the year be obtained, from one to three feet, in main
bed of stream."
We come now to the Act of June 5, 1858, c. 92, by which, in
harmony with the Act of the Legislature of Texas of February 11,
1854 (2 Sayles' Early Laws of Texas, Art. 2412), it was
provided:
"§ 1. That the President of the United States be, and he
hereby is, authorized and empowered to appoint a suitable person or
persons who, in conjunction with such person or persons as may be
appointed by and on behalf of the State of Texas for the same
purpose, shall run and mark the boundary lines between the
territories of the United States and the State of Texas: beginning
at the point where the one hundredth degree of longitude west from
Greenwich crosses Red River, and running thence north to the point
where said one hundredth degree of longitude intersects the
parallel of thirty-six degrees thirty minutes north latitude, and
thence west with the said parallel of thirty-six degrees and thirty
minutes north latitude to the point where it intersects the one
hundred and third degree of longitude west from Greenwich, and
thence south with the said one hundred and third degree of
longitude to the thirty-second parallel of north latitude, and
thence west with the said thirty-second degree of north latitude to
the Rio Grande."
"§ 2. That such landmarks shall be established at the said
point of beginning on Red River, and at the other corners, and on
the said several lines of said boundary, as may be agreed on by the
President of the United States, or
Page 162 U. S. 65
those acting under his authority, and the said State of Texas,
or those acting under its authority."
11 Stat. 310.
This act was passed before Jones and Brown had completed and
reported the survey made by them. Pursuant to this act of 1858, a
commissioner was appointed on behalf of the United States. The
Secretary of the Interior, in his letter of instructions to that
commissioner, said, among other things:
"After surveying and marking that portion of the boundary
defined by the parallel of 36�30' north latitude, and which
is known to you to present no obstacle to a rapid survey and
demarcation, to prevent delay and expense, you will take the 100th
meridian of west longitude as laid down on the map of the southern
boundary of Kansas, or as determined and marked upon the surface of
the earth by Messrs. Jones and Brown, surveyors of the Chickasaw
and Choctaw boundaries, from observations made by Daniel G. Major,
astronomer on the part of the United States at its intersection
with the Northern Creek boundary, about midway between the North
Fork of the Canadian and the Canadian River, or by independent
observations, whichever, in your judgment from comparison, may be
found to be the most correct method. Having connected with, or
observed for, the 100th meridian at its intersection with the Creek
boundary, as determined by the parties above mentioned, you will
proceed as rapidly as possible over the remaining portion of this
meridian to Red River, the termination of your field work, making
such observations and measurements as you may deem sufficient to
verify it."
The governor of Texas having insisted upon the work of the
survey being commenced on Red River, rather than on the north line,
the Secretary of the Interior, after saying that that course would
involve a serious delay in fixing the initial point of the 100th
meridian, which could only be done after several months of careful
astronomical observations and an exchange of observations with some
fixed observatory, said:
"And besides, by the time the commissioners of the respective
governments are prepared to commence their labors at that point,
that line will probably have been determined and marked by the
United States surveyors, Messrs. Jones and Brown, who
Page 162 U. S. 66
are now engaged upon the surveys of certain boundaries in the
Choctaw and Chickasaw country, under the provisions of the treaty
of January 22, 1855. . . . The above-named surveyors are provided
with a competent astronomer and excellent instruments, and their
line will probably require but simple verification on the part of
the joint commission; and, for all purposes appertaining to the
interests of the citizens of Texas along and adjacent to the
proposed boundary line north of the Red River, Brown and Jones'
survey must prove sufficient and satisfactory."
For reasons that need not be here detailed, the commissioners of
the two governments separated before their joint work was
concluded. The commissioner of the United States, in a preliminary
report, November 14, 1860, to the Secretary of the Interior, stated
that he commenced his survey by tracing the 100th meridian from its
intersection with the Canadian River northward to its intersection
with the parallel 36�30', forming the northeast corner of
the boundary. Having traced and marked that parallel to the
northwest corner, he returned along the bed of the Canadian River
and came again to the 100th meridian, when he turned southward and
followed that meridian "to its intersection with the south [Prairie
Dog Town] or main branch of Red River." In a subsequent report to
the commissioner of the land office under date of September 30,
1861, he said: "That part of the 100th meridian lying between the
main branch of Red River" -- by which was meant Prairie Dog Town
Fork or South Fork --
"and the southern boundary of the Cherokee country had been
determined, run, and marked by Messrs. Jones and Brown in 1859,
under the direction of the Indian bureau as constituting the
boundary between Texas and a part of the Indian Territory. So much
of the boundary line as was thus established, Hon. Jacob Thompson,
then Secretary of the Interior, directed me to adopt, and in
pursuance of this instruction, I simply retraced the meridian up to
where the work of Messrs. Jones and Brown ended. Thence I prolonged
it up to its intersection with the parallel of 36�30'."
It should be here stated that the Governor of Texas, under
Page 162 U. S. 67
date of April 28, 1860, instructed the commissioner appointed by
him to "insist upon the North Fork as the main Rio Roxo, or Red
River, and as the true boundary line, as described in the treaty of
1819." And just before that date, namely, on the 8th day of
February, 1860, when there was no reason to suppose that the United
States acquiesced in the claim of Texas, the legislature of that
state passed the act heretofore referred to, creating the County of
Greer, with the following boundary:
"Beginning at the confluence of Red River and Prairie Dog River,
thence running up Red River, passing the mouth of South Fork and
following Main or North Red River to its intersection with the 23d
degree of west longitude; thence due south across Salt Fork and to
Prairie Dog River, and thence following that river to the place of
beginning."
2 Sayles' Early Laws of Texas, Art. 2886. Of course, the purpose
of that enactment was to assert in solemn form the claim of the
state to the territory in dispute.
During the Civil War and for many years thereafter, this vexed
question did not receive any attention from either government. The
reason for this will be understood by everyone.
But the fact upon which the state seems to lay most stress is
that on the 24th day of February, 1879, Congress passed an act
entitled
"An act to create the Northern Judicial District of the State of
Texas, and to change the Eastern and Western Judicial Districts of
said state, and to fix the time and place of holding courts in said
districts."
20 Stat. 318, c. 97. By the first section of that act it was
provided
"that a Judicial District is hereby created in the State of
Texas, to be called the Northern Judicial District of said state,
and the territory embraced in the following-named counties, as now
constituted, shall compose said district, namely, . . ."
Here follows a list of one hundred and ten counties, including
all the recognized counties of Texas (except Red River and Bowie)
that are immediately south of the line between the Indian Territory
and Texas as that line is defined on the above map of 1892, and
midway in this long list appears the word "Greer."
The learned counsel representing the state insist with
confidence
Page 162 U. S. 68
that this act of Congress should be regarded as an expression of
a purpose by the United States to surrender its claim to the
territory in dispute, and as a recognition that that territory was
a part of Texas. But we cannot so construe it without doing
violence to the strong conviction we have that Congress did not for
a moment intend by this legislation to part with the extensive
territorial possessions which the general government had during a
long period claimed to be under its exclusive jurisdiction, and
outside of the jurisdiction of any state. We have been unable to
find in the history of the act of 1879 any intimation or suggestion
that the placing of the territory in dispute in the Northern
Judicial District of Texas was made for the purpose of finally
determining the controversy as to boundary that had long existed
between the United States and Texas. It was entirely competent for
Congress, for judicial purposes, to have included the whole or any
part of the Indian Territory within a Judicial District established
in an adjoining state. If Congress was aware of the state enactment
of 1860, the County of Greer might well have been referred to as a
county then "constituted," and to be placed, for judicial purposes,
within the Northern Judicial District of the State of Texas. Thus
the act of 1879 may not unreasonably be interpreted, and we think
that any other construction of its provisions would impute an
intention to Congress to dispose of an important part of the
Territory of the United States without disclosing such intention,
either by the title of the act passed or by any words in its body
indicating a purpose to settle a disputed question of boundary. The
respect due to a coordinate department of the government forbids
this Court from taking any view of its action that would imply a
willingness to accomplish by indirection, or by the use of vague
forms of expression, what perhaps could not have been accomplished
in an open manner or by employing such clear, distinct language as
the occasion and the interests involved alike demanded.
We are the more inclined to take this view because it is
manifest that, prior to the present litigation, the State of Texas
never regarded the act of 1879 as recognizing its
Page 162 U. S. 69
jurisdiction over the territory in question, nor supposed that
that act placed Greer County, so called, in the Northern Judicial
District of Texas for any except judicial purposes.
In the early part of the year 1882, Senator Maxey of Texas, at
the instance of the governor of that state (and in anticipation of
like action by the Texas legislature), introduced into the Senate
of the United States a bill providing for the appointment of a
commission to consider the unsettled boundary dispute between the
United States and Texas. There was no pretense that the matter had
been disposed of by the act of 1879. That bill passed the Senate,
but did not pass the House of Representatives. In the latter body,
a bill was introduced by a representative from Texas which defined
the boundary between the Indian Territory and Texas as follows:
"Beginning at the southeast corner of said Indian Territory, in
the middle of Red River; thence up said river to the junction of
the Prairie Dog Town and North Forks of said river; thence up the
middle of said North Fork to the 100th meridian west from London;
thence crossing said North Fork by a line due north to the
northeast corner of said State of Texas, as now established."
The judiciary committee reported adversely to this bill, and, as
a substitute for it, reported a joint resolution providing for the
appointment of a joint commission to ascertain and mark the point
where the 100th meridian crosses Red River, in accordance with the
treaty of 1819. House Report No. 1,282, 47th Cong. 1st Sess. The
report of that committee will be found in the margin.{2} It
contains
Page 162 U. S. 70
a full statement of the views entertained by that committee in
opposition to the claim of the state.
In the same year, the State of Texas, by an act approved
Page 162 U. S. 71
May 2, 1882, authorized and empowered its governor
"to appoint a suitable person or persons, who, in conjunction
with such person or persons as may be appointed by or on
Page 162 U. S. 72
behalf of the United States for the same purpose, shall run and
mark the boundary line between the territories of the United States
and the State of Texas as follows: beginning at a point where a
line drawn north from the intersection of the thirty-second degree
of north latitude with the western bank of the Sabine River crosses
Red River, and thence following the course of said river westwardly
to the degree of longitude one hundred west from London, and
twenty-three degrees west from Washington, as said line was laid
down in Melish's map of the United States, published at
Philadelphia, improved to the first of January, 1818, and
designated
Page 162 U. S. 73
in the treaty between the United States and Spain, made February
22, 1819."
"§ 2. Said joint commission will report their survey, made
in accordance with the foregoing section of this act, together with
all necessary notes, maps, and other papers, in order that in
fixing that part of the boundary between the territories of the
United States and the State of Texas, the question may be
definitely settled as to the true location of the one hundredth
degree of longitude west from London, and whether the North Fork of
Red River, or the Prairie Dog Fork of said river, is the true Red
River designated in the treaty between the United States and
Spain
Page 162 U. S. 74
made February 22, 1819, and in locating said line, said
commissioners shall be guided by actual surveys and measurements,
together with such well established marks, natural and artificial,
as may be found and such well authenticated maps as may throw light
upon the subject."
"§ 3. Such commissioner or commissioners, on the part of
Texas, shall attempt to have said survey, herein provided for by
the joint commission, made and performed between the first day of
July and the first day of October of the year in which said survey
is made, when the ordinary stage of water in each fork of said Red
River may be observed, and when the main or principal Red River is
ascertained as agreed upon in said treaty of 1819, and the point is
fully designated where the one hundredth degree of longitude west
from London, and twenty-third degree of longitude west from
Washington, crosses said Red River, the same shall be plainly
marked and defined as a corner in said boundary, and said
commissioner shall establish such other permanent monuments as may
be necessary to mark their work."
General Laws Texas 1882, p. 5.
In the year 1884, the attention of the Secretary of the Interior
was called to the attempted occupation of a part of the territory
in dispute by white settlers, who assumed that it was a part of the
State of Texas. That officer called the attention of the Secretary
of War to the subject, and suggested that as this territory had
been included within the limits of the Indian Territory and treated
as part thereof for many years, the military should protect the
interests of the United States. President Arthur issued his
proclamation, warning all persons from obtruding upon the lands
embraced within the limits of the Indian Territory. At the request
of the authorities of Texas, action was suspended to await the
determination of the disputed question of boundary between that
state and the United States.
At the next session of Congress, the joint resolutions reported
at the previous session were embodied in the Act of January 31,
1885, c. 47. That act provided:
"Whereas the treaty between the United States and Spain executed
February twenty-second, eighteen hundred and nineteen
Page 162 U. S. 75
fixed the boundary line between the two countries west of the
Mississippi River as follows: Beginning on the Gulf of Mexico at
the mouth of the Sabine River in the sea and continuing north along
the western bank of that river to the thirty-second degree of
latitude; thence by a line due north to the degree of latitude
where it strikes the Rio Roxo of Natchitoches or Red River; thence
following the course of the Rio Roxo westward to the one hundredth
degree of longitude west from London, and the twenty-third from
Washington; thence crossing the said Red River and running thence
by a line due north to the River Arkansas; thence following the
course of the southern bank of the Arkansas to its source in
latitude forty-two degrees north, and thence by that parallel of
latitude to the South Sea, the whole being as laid down in Melish's
map of the United States, published at Philadelphia, improved to
the first of January, eighteen hundred and eighteen, and whereas a
controversy exists between the United States and Texas as to the
point where the one hundredth degree of longitude crosses the Red
River, as described in the treaty, and whereas the point of
crossing has never been ascertained and fixed by any authority
competent to bind the United States and Texas, and whereas it is
desirable that a settlement of this controversy should be had, to
the end that the question of boundary now in dispute because of a
difference of opinion as to said crossing, may also be settled;
therefore,"
"
Be it enacted, etc., that the President of the United
States be, and he is hereby, authorized to detail one or more
officers of the army who, in conjunction with such person or
persons as may be appointed by the State of Texas, shall ascertain
and mark the point where the one hundredth meridian of longitude
crosses Red River, in accordance with the terms of the treaty
aforesaid, and the person or persons appointed by virtue of this
act shall make report of his or their action in the premises to the
Secretary of the Interior, who shall transmit the same to Congress
at the next session thereof after such report may be made, for
action by Congress."
23 Stat. 296, 297
Page 162 U. S. 76
Under the act of Texas of 1882 and the act of Congress of 1885,
the two governments appointed commissioners, but they were unable
to agree upon the vital point as to whether the line, which by the
treaty was to follow the course of Red River westward to the 100th
meridian, went up the North Fork of Red River until that meridian
was reached or went westward along the Prairie Dog Town Fork to the
point designated by the survey of Jones and Brown.
On the 30th day of December, 1887, President Cleveland issued a
proclamation asserting that title in, and jurisdiction over, all
the territory lying between the North and South Forks of the Red
River and the 100th meridian, as part of the Indian Territory, was
vested in the United States. The proclamation recites the fact that
the commissioners appointed on the part of the United States, under
the Act of January 31, 1885, authorizing the appointment of a
commission to run and mark the boundary lines between a portion of
the Indian Territory and the State of Texas, in connection with a
similar commission to be appointed by the State of Texas, had, by
their report, determined that the South or Prairie Dog Town Fork
was the true Red River designated in the treaty, the commissioners
appointed on the part of said state refusing to concur in that
report. The President admonished and warned all persons, whether
claiming to act as officers of the County of Greer, in the State of
Texas, or otherwise against selling or disposing of, or attempting
to sell or dispose of, any of said lands, or from exercising, or
attempting to exercise, any authority over said lands or purchasing
any part of said territory from any person or persons
whatsoever.
We have referred with perhaps more fullness than was necessary
to the action, legislative and otherwise, of the two governments
after the passage of the act of 1879, for the purpose of showing
that, notwithstanding the passage of that act, the United States
continuously asserted its rightful jurisdiction over the territory
in dispute as a part of what is commonly called the "Indian
Territory," and that finally, as the only peaceful method of ending
the dispute, Congress passed the act of 1890, under the authority
of which the present suit was instituted.
Page 162 U. S. 77
In addition to what has been stated, we may add that the
Governor of Texas, in his message to the legislature of January 10,
1883, enforced the claim of his state by an exhaustive argument,
covering the whole field of controversy, but without intimating
that the United States, by the act of 1879, creating the Northern
Judicial District of Texas, had admitted that Greer County was
rightfully a part of Texas and subject to its jurisdiction. No one
can read that message without perceiving that the author was
familiar with every phase of this question of boundary. It did not
occur to him that the question had been concluded by the act of
Congress establishing a judicial district in the State of Texas. If
he had so interpreted that act, a reference to it would have been
made in the course of his presentation of the matter on behalf of
his state.
In our judgment, the act of Congress of 1879, establishing the
Northern Judicial District in Texas, must be interpreted as meaning
that the territory in dispute was placed in that district only for
such judicial purposes as were competent to the courts of the
United States holden in that district, and that Texas can take
nothing in the present controversy by reason of its provisions.
In support of the contention that the United States is estopped
by its action to claim the territory in dispute, the answer alleges
that
"the executive department of the government of the United States
has established and maintained post offices and post roads in said
county, has advertised publicly for bids for carrying the United
States mails over the routes in said county, designating, as
defendant is advised, said post office and post roads as lying in
Greer County, Texas, and not lying in the territory allotted to the
Indians."
In the amended bill filed by the United States, it is alleged
that, in 1886, after the passage of the act of 1885 providing for a
commissioner to ascertain the line between Texas and the United
States as established by the treaty of 1819, and while the
commissioners appointed under that act were actually engaged in
their duties, certain residents of the disputed territory,
describing themselves as "Residents of Greer County,
Page 162 U. S. 78
Texas," petitioned the Post Office Department of the United
States for the establishment of post offices, respectively at
Mangum and Frazier, in Greer County, Texas, that in that year, the
prayers of the petitions were granted; that, acting upon the
designation of locality as set forth in such petitions, such post
offices were established and designated as in Greer County, Texas,
but
"during the same year, 1886, and on the 27th day of December in
said year, it was discovered by the authorities of the Post Office
Department that said post offices were located in the territory in
dispute; that said territory was claimed by the United States; that
it was designated and outlined on the maps of the General Land
Office and of the Post Office Department as not within the limits
of the State of Texas, but a part of the Indian Territory of the
United States; that thereupon, on the last-mentioned day, in order
to correct the error, the designations of those post offices were
changed so as to locate them within the Indian Territory, and they
have been from that date, and are still, only known, recognized,
and described in orders and official acts of the Post Office
Department as located in the Indian Territory, and that all other
post offices established within that territory since December,
1886, have been established, recognized, and described, and are
still so described and recognized, as within the Indian
Territory."
In is quite sufficient to say in respect to this point that the
evidence fully sustains the allegations of the amended bill, and
therefore the designation, for a short time, of the post office
referred to as being in Greer County, in the State of Texas,
cannot, under the circumstances, be deemed of any weight in our
determination of the main issue.
There is another view of the case upon which the state relies to
which much of the argument of counsel was directed. It is indicated
in the following clauses of the answer filed by the state:
"That in accordance with their usual custom, the Spanish
conquerors, upon taking possession of Natchitoches and the
territory lying on or adjacent to 'Rio Roxo,' established and laid
out a road or route between Santa Fe, in New Mexico, and
Natchitoches, now in the State of Louisiana, for
Page 162 U. S. 79
the uses of commerce between said places, which road or route
traversed the country west and northwest of Natchitoches, along the
south bank of said 'Rio Roxo,' to point now in _____ County, Texas,
then crossed said stream to its north bank, and thence along said
north bank to the source of what complainant now styles the 'North
Fork of Red River,' and thence to Santa Fe. That this road was for
many years frequently traveled by merchants, traders, trappers,
explorers, and other persons trading or traveling between said
points of Santa Fe and Natchitoches, and at the date of said treaty
of 1819, 'Rio Roxo of Natchitoches,' from its mouth to its source,
was well known to the Spaniards, as well as to the Indians and
trappers of that region of country, as the stream now called 'Red
River,' having its source near the source of the Canadian River,
southeast of an near to Santa Fe, in the now Territory of New
Mexico; thence running in an eastern or southeastern direction,
receiving in its course at intervals, the waters of the False
Wachita River, the Ke-che-ah-que-ho-no or Prairie Dog Town River,
Pease River, Little and Big Wichita Rivers, and divers other
streams, and emptying its waters into the Mississippi River above
New Orleans in the State of Louisiana. At the date of said treaty
of 1819, there was only one 'Rio Roxo of Natchitoches' known to
geographers or to the people who inhabited the locality of the
territory in controversy, and that was the river above
described."
In a former part of this opinion, we endeavored to show from
early maps and printed publications that at the date of the treaty
of 1819, it was believed that the Rio Roxo of Natchitoches, or Red
River, extended without any break from its source, not far distant
from Santa Fe, first southeasterly, then eastwardly, and then
southeastwardly to a point near the Mississippi River. We have
here, in the answer filed by the state, an admission that such was
the fact; its position, as we have seen, being that the river that
connected the country near Santa Fe with the country bordering on
the Mississippi was what is now called the "North Fork of Red
River." This contention, the state insists, is supported by
evidence of the existence of a road or route established in early
times between
Page 162 U. S. 80
Natchitoches a & Santa Fe, and which passed along that
fork.
It is to be observed that this road or trail is not marked upon
what is called the "Treaty Map of 1818" nor upon any map that
preceded it. Looking at the diplomatic correspondence that resulted
in the treaty of 1819, and at the map which was before the
negotiators, we find nothing to show that the existence or
nonexistence of a road or trail between Natchitoches and Santa Fe
was an important factor in determining the boundary between the
United States and Spain. So far as the record discloses, the
negotiators had no knowledge of such a road or trail, and there is
no substantial ground upon which to rest even a conjecture that the
line was fixed with any reference to routes or trails traversed by
traders and trappers. The negotiators had in mind rivers and
degrees of latitude and longitude, and that fact appears on the
face of the treaty. It cannot be known that they were controlled in
any degree by information as to routes across the country used by
traders or explorers.
Looking at maps published after the treaty was made, we find
that a "Great Spanish Road to Red River" is marked on the Carey and
Lea atlas of 1822. Leaving Santa Fe, it extends in a southeasterly
and easterly direction on the north side of the Canadian River to
about 101�30' of west longitude, then across that river in a
southeasterly direction, crossing the False Wachita east of the
100th meridian; then passing southeastwardly, and north of a stream
which is probably the North Fork of Red River, as now known, and
then eastwardly, and north of Red River, until it reaches and
crosses Red River just east of the 97th degree of longitude. The
same road is delineated on the Melish map of 1823 and the
Young-Mitchell map of 1835. According to those maps, each of those
roads crossed Red River near the mouth of the Wachita, far east of
the junction of the North Fork with Red River. If this be the trail
that extended from Santa Fe to Natchitoches, or if there was a
trail which in early times passed along the North Fork of Red River
to or in the direction of Santa Fe (upon which point the
evidence
Page 162 U. S. 81
is by no means clear), we should not necessarily conclude that
such trail marked the line established by the treaty, nor that its
existence proved that the river near or along which it ran was the
main branch of Red River. The direction of the treaty was to follow
the course of Red River westward to the 100th meridian. As we have
seen, the treaty did not refer to any road or trail used by traders
or trappers, but only to rivers and degrees of longitude. At the
point where the North Fork empties into Red River there is a river
which, to say the least, is as large as the North Fork, and which
extends westward. By following the course of that stream to the
100th meridian, the terms of the treaty are fully met, while they
will not be met by departing from a westward course before reaching
that meridian, and going first in a northerly, then in an easterly,
and then in a northwestwardly direction up the North Fork. The
location of the line established by the treaty should be determined
by the course of rivers and degrees of latitude and longitude,
rather than by routes, trails, or roads, the extent and character
of which cannot be certainly known at this day, and over which at
the date of the treaty and prior thereto, travel by traders and
trappers could have been only occasional and limited.
There are other matters to which, in view of the large amount of
evidence relating to them, we must advert. Many witnesses were
examined upon the question whether the Prairie Dog Town Fork or the
North Fork was the longer river, which the broader and deeper
stream, and which drained the most territory. The state insists in
this case that if regard be had to width and depth of stream and
extent of country drained, the North Fork must have been deemed in
early times, or when the treaty of 1819 was made, the more
important of the two forks of Red River, and therefore that the
fork should be held to be the river whose course, going from the
east, was required by the treaty to be followed westward until the
100th meridian was reached.
These questions were considered by the boundary commission
appointed after the passage of the Act of Congress of January 31,
1885, c. 47. The commissioners on behalf of the
Page 162 U. S. 82
United States and Texas united in declaring that
"in finding the point where the 100th meridian of west longitude
crosses Red River, if it should appear that said meridian crosses
Red River west of the confluence of what are now known as the
'North Fork' and 'Prairie Dog Town Fork,' then the true boundary
should be taken at that one of those streams which best satisfies
the provisions of the treaty of 1819."
They concurred in holding that of those two streams the Prairie
Dog Town Fork was the longer. The commissioners on behalf of the
United States voted that the Prairie Dog Town Fork was the wider
stream. In this view the Texas commissioners concurred, with the
qualification that that stream was the "wider between the banks,
but not in ordinary flow of water." The United States commissioners
held that the Prairie Dog Town Fork drained a larger area than the
North Fork. In this view the Texas commissioners concurred, with
the qualification that
"[t]here is little or no rainfall on the sources of the stream,
and hence is taken out of the usual rule of estimating the size of
rivers, while the North Fork rises in the mountains, where it rains
more, and its sources are living streams."
House Ex.Doc. No. 21 (50th Cong., 1st Sess.) pp. 165-168.
Touching these matters, the evidence in the present case is very
voluminous. Many witnesses, who had apparently equal opportunities
of observation, express opinions that are directly conflicting.
Governor Roberts, in his message of January 10, 1883, after
referring to the disputed question as to which of these two rivers
was the main branch of the Red River, said:
"I have shown how nearly equal are the claims of each to be
called the main branch from facts pertaining to them derived from
observation. From this, either one of them, in the absence of the
other, would be taken to be the main branch. It may be admitted
that the South Fork [Prairie Dog Town Fork] is the larger and
longer, and therefore the main branch in reference to the two
nearly equal branches of Red River, and that admission does not
settle the fact that the line must run up that branch."
The true question, he said, was "which one of the two nearly
equal branches corresponds most nearly with the
Red River of
Natchitoches, or Red River,'" as it was
Page 162 U. S.
83
known in 1819, when the treaty was made, and as "laid down
in Melish's map of the United States, published at Philadelphia,
improved to the first of January, 1818."
We have found that the 100th meridian mentioned in the treaty
must, especially since the compromise act of 1850, be taken to be
the 100th meridian astronomically located. And we are now further
considering whether the two governments intended the line running
from the east to the west should leave Red River at the mouth of
what is now known as the "North Fork," and go northwardly and
northwestwardly up that fork, or should go westwardly up what is
now known as the "Prairie Dog Town or South Fork." So far as this
question depends upon evidence as to the relative width and length
of these two rivers, and the extent of country drained by each, we
are of opinion that although a large number of witnesses sustain
the position taken by the state, the Prairie Dog Town or South
Fork, according to the decided weight of evidence, is wider and
longer, and drains a much greater extent of territory, than the
North Fork. This is the conclusion reached by the court after a
careful and patient scrutiny of all the proof. So that the evidence
of living witnesses corroborates that furnished by maps, and
sustains the position taken by the United States as to the scope
and effect of the words in the treaty of 1819, "following the
course of the Rio Roxo westward to the degree of longitude 100 west
from London and 23 from Washington."
But suppose the evidence left it in doubt as to which was the
wider and longer stream, and which of the two drains the largest
extent of territory, and let it be assumed, as suggested by
Governor Roberts, that upon the facts, derived from observation,
the claim of each river to be the main branch of the Red River
mentioned in the treaty are nearly equal; what, in such a
contingency, is our duty? It is to ascertain which river more
nearly meets the requirement that the line from the east to the
west must follow "the course of the Rio Roxo
westward to
the degree of longitude 100 west from London." If, in following the
course of Red River
westward, it be found that that river
forks before the 100th meridian of longitude
Page 162 U. S. 84
is reached -- one of the forks coming from the north and
northwest and the other from the west -- it would seem to be our
duty to hold that the river coming from the westward direction was
the one whose course the treaty directed to be followed. Those who
insist that the course should be
north and northwestwardly
for any material distance from the main river to the 100th meridian
are under an obligation to sustain that position by such evidence
as would justify the court in departing from the plain direction of
the treaty to follow the Red River "westward" to the named
meridian. But that has not been done.
Much stress has been laid by the state upon the testimony of the
late General Marcy given before the boundary commission of 1886. In
the year 1852, that officer, being then a captain in the United
States army, was directed by General Scott to make an examination
of the Red River and the country bordering upon it from the mouth
of Cache Creek to its source. During his explorations, he camped on
the 30th of May, 1852 at a certain point on Red River, and, in his
daily journal of his movements, said:
"Red River at this place is a broad, shallow stream, six hundred
and fifty yards wide, running over a bed of sand. Its course is
nearly due west to the forks, and thence the course of the south
branch is W.N.W. for eight miles, when it turns to nearly N.W. The
two branches are apparently of about equal magnitude, and between
them at the confluence, is a very high bluff, which can be seen for
a long distance around."
Senate Ex.Doc. No. 54 (32d Cong., 2d Sess.) p. 20. We take it
that, in his reference to the forks of Red River, he had in mind
the Prairie Dog Town Fork and the North Fork.
Thirty-two years later (that is, in 1886), Captain (then
General) Marcy appeared as a witness before the boundary
commission. He referred to his report of 1852, and said:
"As the time that has elapsed since I made that exploration
(thirty-three years) is so great, many of the facts and events
connected therewith have passed from my memory; but some matters
relative to the objects for which this commission was convened, as
I understand, may not be found in the report.
Page 162 U. S. 85
I have this morning for the first time seen a copy of that
portion of Melish's map of the United States embracing the part of
the Red River country which the commission has under consideration
at this time, which is authenticated by the signature of the
Secretary of State of the United States. Upon this map only one
large fork of Red River is delineated, with one more northerly
small affluent which is not named, but may have been intended for
Washita River or Cache Creek."
House Ex.Doc. No. 21, p. 59.
That the full force of General Marcy's statements may appear, we
here give so much of his deposition as is embodied in the brief
filed by counsel for the state:
"I regarded the Prairie Dog Town Branch as the main Red River
for the reason that its bed was much wider than that of the North
Fork, although the water only covered a small portion of its bed,
and, as the sandy earth absorbed a good deal of water after it
debouched from the canyon through which it flows, it may not
contribute any more water to the lower river than the North Fork.
The Prairie Dog Town Branch and the North Fork of Red River, from
their confluence to their sources, are of about equal length, the
former being 180 miles and the latter 170 miles in length. For
reasons which I will presently state, I have been unable to resist
the force of my own convictions that the branch of Red River that I
called the 'North Fork' of that stream was what is designated upon
Melish's map as 'Rio Roxo.' I doubt if the Prairie Dog Town River
was ever known to civilized man prior to my exploration in 1852,
and, if it was ever mapped before then, I am not aware of it. The
character of the country through which this stream flows is such
that travelers would have not been likely to pass over it when
there was a much more favorable route north of the North Fork. The
water in the Prairie Dog Town Branch, from its confluence with the
North Fork to within two miles of its head spring (about 100
miles), I found so bitter and unpalatable that many of the men
became sick from drinking it. But one pool of fresh water was found
throughout the entire distance, and the Indians told me they never
went up this stream
Page 162 U. S. 86
with their families if it could be avoided, for the reason that
the nauseous water frequently proved fatal to their children.
Hence, it is not surprising that but little, if anything, should
have been known of this repulsive region before my exploration in
1852. And this probably accounts for the entire absence of most of
its southern branches upon Melish's map. It is very certain that
the Prairie Dog Town River was never delineated by any Spanish,
French, or English name, as were most of the other streams in that
country, and it was only known to the Indians, and possibly to some
Mexican traders, as 'Ke-che-ah-que-ho-no,' a Comanche appellation
the signification of which, the Delawares informed me, was 'Prairie
Dog Town River.' . . . As before stated, owing to the absence of
good water, the sandy character of the soil along the river, and
the formidable obstruction presented by the elevated and staked
plain, and the extensive belt of gypsum crossing this route, the
Mexicans would never have attempted to traverse it with their carts
in their trading expeditions from Santa Fe to Nacogdoches,
especially when there was so good a route a little further north,
possessing all the requirements for prairie traveling. The Rio Roxo
upon Melish's map is almost entirely south and west of the Witchita
Mountains, but in close proximity to them, which is in accord with
my determination of the position of the North Fork, while there are
no mountains upon the Prairie Dog Town Branch. The head of the Rio
Roxo upon Melish's map is put down as in about latitude 37�,
while upon my map the true latitude is 35 1/2�, while the
Prairie Dog Town River rises in about thirty-four and one-half
degrees; so that if his Rio Roxo was intended to represent the
'Prairie Dog Town River,' it would be two and one-half degrees of
latitude too far north."
House Ex.Doc. No. 21, pp. 59, 60.
It thus appears that at the time (1852) General Marcy made his
exploration of the Red River country, he regarded the Prairie Dog
Town River as the main Red River, and his conclusion then formed by
actual observation was in harmony with the maps that had been
previously given to the public. After many of the facts connected
with the subject had, as he
Page 162 U. S. 87
frankly admitted, passed from his memory, he expressed the
opinion that the river that he had called the "North Fork of Red
River" was what was designated on Melish's map of 1818 as "Rio
Roxo." However persuasive his reasons for that conclusion might be
regarded if the facts then stated by him were alone taken into
consideration, they do not satisfy us that he was in error when,
the facts being fresh in his mind, he expressed the opinion, from
personal examination on the ground, that Prairie Dog Town Fork was
the main Red River. One of the reasons assigned in support of his
last view of this question is that Prairie Dog Town River was never
delineated upon any map of this country or of Europe prior to his
exploration, and that it was only known to the Indians, and
possibly to some Mexican traders, as the "Ke-che-ah-que-ho-no,"
which means "Prairie Dog Town River." Now it is quite true that no
map prior to 1852
marked any river
as "Prairie Dog
Town River," or as the "Ke-che-ah-que-ho-no." But it is shown
beyond all question that on all the maps above referred to which
appeared after 1819, and down to the time when General Marcy
testified before the boundary commission, a river was marked whose
course (going from east to west) is substantially westward from the
point where the line from the Sabine River meets the 32d degree of
latitude to the 100th meridian, and that the line thus delineated,
extending to and westwardly beyond the true 100th meridian, is the
southern boundary of the Indian Territory,
as that boundary is
claimed by the United States. Between the mouth of the North
Fork and the initial monument established by the government in
1856, there is a river whose course is substantially east and west.
That river is marked on Long's map of 1822 and the Melish map of
1823, west of the 100th meridian, as "Rio Roxo, or Red River;" on
Finley's map of 1826 as "R. Roxo, or Red R.;" on the Young-Mitchell
map of 1835, and Maillard's map of 1841 as "Rio Roxo, or Red River
of Louisiana;" and on Mitchell's map of 1851 as "Red River." On all
the other maps, the same river is plainly delineated. That the name
of "Prairie Dog Town Fork" does not appear on maps published prior
to 1852, or that that name was not known to civilized people until
after the explorations
Page 162 U. S. 88
made by Captain Marcy, is not therefore a circumstance of
serious moment, certainly not conclusive. The river itself, though
unnamed on any map prior to 1852, was in fact delineated on maps
for more than a quarter of a century before that officer entered
the Red River country with his company.
The character of the country through which the Prairie Dog Town
River flowed, and the bad quality of its water for drinking
purposes, are also referred to by General Marcy as reasons why the
North Fork should be regarded as the stream whose course was
intended to be followed in establishing the boundary. We do not
think that the evidence upon this point is entitled to very great
weight. There is no reason to suppose that the negotiators of the
treaty had any knowledge or information as to the relative
qualities for drinking purposes of the waters of the two streams in
question, and if they had, it is difficult to perceive why such
facts would control the determination of a disputed question of
boundary between two nations. The negotiators knew or believed that
there was a Red River, whose source was not far from Santa Fe, and
which, in its course, passed Natchitoches. Their purpose was to
establish a line which would extend from the point where the line
due north from Sabine River met Red River, thence along and up Red
River "westward" to the 100th meridian of longitude, then due north
to the Arkansas River. The reference in the treaty was to rivers
and degrees of longitude and latitude. It was a question of
territory, without regard to a special trail, the location of which
might have been affected by the quality of the waters of any
particular stream.
Much significance is attached by the state to the fact that as
early as 1860, by legislative enactment, it created the County of
Greer, with boundaries that include the whole of the territory in
dispute, and that it has ever since asserted its jurisdiction over
both that territory and the people who inhabit it. However
important such facts might, under some circumstances, be deemed, it
must be remembered that during the whole of the period referred to,
the constituted authorities of Texas have been aware that the
United States regarded the territory in dispute as under its
exclusive jurisdiction, and as a part of what
Page 162 U. S. 89
is known as the "Indian Territory." The government has always
disputed the claim of Texas. The only qualification of this broad
statement is that suggested by the language inadvertently used in
the act of Congress creating the Northern Judicial District of
Texas. But that language, we have held, was not intended to express
the purpose of the United States to surrender its jurisdiction over
the territory in dispute.
It is also said that many titles to land in the disputed
territory are held under the state, and that much confusion may
follow, and injustice be done to individuals, if the claim of the
United States be sustained. On the other hand, it is to be inferred
that there are many settlers in the disputed territory who assert
title to land under the United States. It appears in evidence that,
in 1873 and 1874, a part of that territory was sectionized under
the authority of the general government. We suppose that Governor
Roberts referred to that fact when, in his message of 1883, he said
that
"the authorities of the United States had established an initial
corner on the South Fork of Red River, on the line claimed to be
the 100th degree of longitude, had sectionized the country east of
that line and protected it from settlement of white people as a
part of the Indian Territory."
He further said:
"Application was made to me to know if I would sign the patents,
if certificates were located and surveyed in Greer County. Under
the then existing circumstances, I felt it to be my duty to
discourage such locations, as they might be to our prejudice in the
settlement of our claim with the United States when the merits of
it could be more fully ascertained."
But whatever may be the facts bearing upon this point, our duty
is to determine the present issues according to the settled
principles of law, without reference to considerations of
inconvenience to individuals residing in the disputed territory. We
cannot doubt that the Congress of the United States will do all
that justice requires to be done in order to avoid any injury to
individuals that ought not be inflicted upon them.
It is further said that the state, since it assumed to create
Greer County, has expended a large amount of money in providing
Page 162 U. S. 90
a public school system for the inhabitants of that locality. To
what extent moneys have been so expended is not clearly shown.
Whatever may be the facts touching this point, we do not feel at
liberty to give weight to them in this case. The question before
us, we repeat, is one of law, and must be determined according to
law. What may be fairly and justly demanded by the state on account
of moneys expended for the benefit of the inhabitants of the
disputed territory is a matter for the consideration of the
legislative branch of the national government.
In the argument it was suggested that this Court ought not to
forget how much was added to the power and wealth of this nation
when Texas, with its imperial domain, came into the Union, and her
people became a part of the political community for whom the
Constitution of the United States was ordained and established.
This fact cannot, of course, be forgotten by any American who takes
pride in the prestige and greatness of the republic. But the
considerations which it suggests cannot affect the decision of
legal questions, and must be addressed to another branch of the
government. The supposition is not to be indulged that that
department of the government will fail to recognize any duty
imposed upon it by the circumstances arising out of this vexed
controversy.
For the reason stated, the United States is entitled to the
relief asked. And this Court now renders the following decree:
This cause having been submitted upon the pleadings, proofs
and exhibits, and the Court being fully advised, it is ordered,
adjudged, and decreed that the territory east of the 100th meridian
of longitude, west and south of the river now known as the "North
Fork of Red River," and north of a line following westward, as
prescribed by the treaty of 1819 between the United States and
Spain, the course, and along the south bank, both of Red River and
of the river now known as the "Prairie Dog Town Fork or South Fork
of Red River" until such line meets the 100th meridian of
longitude, which territory is sometimes
Page 162 U. S. 91
called "Greer County," constitutes no part of the territory
properly included within or rightfully belonging to Texas at the
time of the admission of that state into the Union, and is not
within the limits nor under the jurisdiction of that state, but is
subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States of
America.
MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM, not having been a member of the Court when
this case was argued, took no part in the decision.
"
The County of Lipscomb. Beginning at a monument on the
intersection of the one hundredth meridian, and the thirty-six and
a half (36 1/2) degree of latitude, 1,629 feet north of the 132d
mile post
on the one hundredth meridian; thence west
thirty miles to the thirtieth mile post on the 36 1/2 degree of
latitude; thence south thirty miles and 1.629 feet; thence east
thirty miles to the 102d mile post; thence north thirty miles and
1,629 feet to the beginning."
"
The County of Hemphill. Beginning at the northeast
corner of Roberts County, and the southeast corner of Ochiltree
County and southwest corner of Lipscomb County; thence east thirty
miles to the southeast corner of Lipscomb County, to the 102d mile
post
on the one hundredth meridian; thence south thirty
miles to the 72d mile post; thence west thirty miles to the
southeast corner of Roberts County; then north thirty miles to the
place of beginning."
"
The County of Wheeler. Beginning at the 72d mile post
on the one hundredth meridian, the southeast corner of Hemphill
County; thence west thirty miles to the southwest corner of
Hemphill County and the southeast corner of Roberts County; thence
south thirty miles; thence east thirty miles to the 42d mile post
on the one hundredth meridian; thence north thirty miles to the
place of beginning."
"
The County of Collingsworth. Beginning at the
northeast corner of Donley County and southeast corner of Gray
County, and southwest corner of Wheeler County; thence east thirty
miles to the southeast corner of Wheeler County at the 42d mile
post
on the one hundredth meridian; thence south thirty
miles; thence west thirty miles to the southeast corner of Donley
County; thence north thirty miles to the place of beginning."
"
The County of Childress Beginning at the southeast
corner of Collingsworth County at the 12th mile post on the one
hundredth meridian; thence west twenty-three miles; thence south
thirty miles; thence east about thirty-five miles, to the new west
line of Hardeman County; thence north to Prairie Dog Town river;
thence up said river to the
initial monument on the one
hundredth meridian; thence north to the 12th mile post at the
place of beginning."
3 Sayles' Early Laws of Texas, Art. 4285.
"
The committee on the judiciary, by Mr. Willits, to whom was
referred the bill (H.R. 1,715) to define the boundary between the
Indian Territory and the State of Texas, begs leave to
report:"
"That said bill seeks by legislative enactment to define said
boundary at the point in dispute as the North Fork of the Red
River, instead of the South Fork, commonly called the 'Prairie Dog
Town Fork of the Red River.'"
"The importance of the issue involved may be seen at a glance
when it is observed that the tract in dispute, lying within said
two forks of Red River and bounded on the west by the one hundredth
meridian of longitude west of Greenwich, is about 60 miles long and
40 miles wide, probably over 2,000 square miles, and containing a
large amount of valuable land. If this tract is a part of Texas,
the lands belong to that state under the act of her admission,
while, if it is a part of the area of the Indian Territory, it
becomes a portion of the public domain."
"The real question in dispute is which branch or fork of Red
River is its main branch, or the continuation of the river. The
initial point of investigation is the treaty between the United
States and Spain, dated February 22, 1819, in which this part of
the boundary is defined as follows: after it strikes the 'Rio Roxo
of Natchitoches, or Red River,' it then follows"
"the course of the Rio Roxo westward to the degree of longitude
100 west from London and 23 from Washington; then crossing said Red
River, and running thence, by a line due north, to the Arkansas,
etc.; . . . the whole being as laid down in Melish's map of the
United States, published at Philadelphia, improved to the first of
January, 1818."
"By this it will be seen that the western boundary of that
portion of the United States lying on the north of the Red River
was said one hundredth meridian, and that its southwestern corner
was where said meridian crosses the river. At the date of that
treaty, this region had never been accurately explored, and the
fact was not known that Red River divided into two branches before
it reached said meridian. In fact, the very map referred to in the
treaty makes the river a continuous stream, and does not lay down
the North Fork at all. Subsequent surveys have discovered the two
forks, and have definitely located said one hundredth meridian
about 80 miles west of where the two forks form the river proper.
The treaty with Mexico dated January 12, 1828, recognizes the
boundary as stipulated in the aforesaid treaty with Spain, as did
the joint resolution admitting Texas into the Union. Even at as
late a date as her admission into the Union, there was no knowledge
of uncertainty in this boundary. Lieutenant Emory made a map for
the War Department in 1844 (which is now in the land office), on
which the North Fork is not laid down, and on the Red River traces
nearly the course of the Prairie Dog Town Fork. Disturnel's map of
Mexico dated 1848 follows, in this regards, Emory's and Melish's
maps."
"The first accurate knowledge of these streams seems to have
been obtained by Captain R. B. Marcy and Captain George B.
McClellan, who, under the direction of the War Department, explored
the headwaters of the Red River in 1852 and made an elaborated
report, which was published under the authority of Congress.
See Ex.Doc. Senate, No. 54, 32d Cong., 2d Sess."
"Even this report did not develop the data for this dispute, as
Captain McClellan, doubtless from the inaccuracy of his
instruments, located said one hundredth meridian below the fork of
the river several miles, over one degree of longitude east of its
actual location."
"The question does not seem to have arisen until after the
astronomical survey of said meridian by Messrs. Jones and Brown in
1857 to 1859 in pursuance of a contract between them and the
Commissioner of Indian Affairs, who wished to know the boundary
line between the Choctaw and Chickasaw country. They located the
one hundredth meridian, as before stated, some 80 miles west of the
junction of the two forks, and they designated the Prairie Dog Town
branch as the main branch of the Red River."
"It appears that this designation was at once questioned by
Texas, and at the instigation of the senators of that state,
Congress passed an act, approved June 5th, 1858, 11 Stat. 310,
authorizing the President, in conjunction with the State of Texas
to run and mark said boundary line. Commissioners were appointed on
the part of the United States and of Texas, who proceeded to their
work in May and June, 1860."
"Governor Sam Houston, of Texas, instructed the commissioner of
that state as follows:"
" In the prosecution, then, of the survey, you will be guided by
Melish's map. and insist upon the North Fork as the main Rio Roxo
or Red River, and as the true boundary line, as described in the
treaty of 1819."
"He refers in his letters of instructions to the Marcy survey,
and claims that Marcy was clearly of the opinion that the North
Fork was the true Rio Roxo, or Red River proper, and further claims
that said map of Melish's lays down the North Fork as the main
prong."
"The commissioners were unable to agree, the one on the part of
the United States claiming that at and across the Red River, and to
a point about halfway from the North Fork to the Canadian River,
the line had been definitely located by Messrs. Jones and Brown the
year before, and that nothing now remained but to extend the line
north to latitude 36�3', its northern extremity. To this the
commissioner on the part of Texas objected, and the latter
proceeded south to the North Fork, and placed a monument thereon on
the north bank fifteen feet in diameter and seven feet high,
claiming that as the true southwest corner of Indian Territory, and
reported his doings to the Governor of Texas. The commissioner on
the part of the United States seems never to have completed his
report."
"Texas adopted and acted upon the report of her commissioner as
settling the question of boundary, and established the territory in
dispute as a County of that state, naming it 'Greer,' and has
assumed jurisdiction over it, and by an inadvertence, not singular
in our legislative history, the United States, by act of Congress
approved February 24, 1879 (20 Stat. 318), included said County of
Greer, as a part of Texas, in the Northern Judicial District of
that state -- not annexing it for judicial purposes, but
recognizing it apparently as an integral part of Texas."
"It is manifest, therefore, that some means should be taken to
settle this dispute as soon as possible. Conflicts are arising
between the United States authorities and persons claiming to
exercise rights on the disputed tract under the jurisdiction of the
State of Texas. Bloodshed and even death has resulted from this
conflict. As long ago as May, 1877, the attention of the Secretary
of the Interior was called to the dispute by the War Department,
and the Secretary of the Interior replied to the letter of inquiry
under date of May 10, 1877, which letter we add as part of this
report."
"On a careful review of the facts in the case -- for the
question as to which prong of the river is the true river is really
a question of fact -- your committee is decidedly of the opinion
that the South Fork is the true boundary, and that therefore the
claim of the State of Texas is unwarranted."
"So far from Captain Marcy's being clearly of the opinion, as
Governor Houston claimed, that the North Fork is the main branch,
his final opinion was in favor of the South Fork. It is true that
in his diary, on the day he struck the North Fork, he used the
language attributed to him, under the date of May 26th,
to-wit:"
" We are now in the immediate vicinity of the Wichita Mountains
[a range of mountains lying east by northeast from the mouth of
Otter Creek, which empties into the North Fork, and where he was
encamped]. Red River, which passes directly through the western
extremity of the chain, is different in character at the mouth of
Otto Creek from what it is below the junction of the
Ke-che-ah-que-ho-no (the Dog Town Fork)."
"But he had been for several days traveling along the north bank
of the Red River west, and struck the North Fork when it, as well
as the South Fork, was swollen with the rains, and both branches,
he says, 'were of apparently about equal magnitude,' and he
naturally spoke of the North Fork as 'Red River.' But he continued
up the North Fork to its source, which he located at longitude
101�55'. Then he took a southwesterly course till he came to
the headwaters of the Prairie Dog Town (or South Fork), which he
located at longitude 103�7'11', and from that time he
repeatedly speaks of that branch as the main branch.
See
his report (pages 55, 58, 84, 86, and 87). He also entitles his
plate No. 10, which is a picture of the rock and gorge out of which
the headspring of that fork flows, as 'Head Ke-che-ah-que-ho-no, or
the Main Branch of the Red River.' It is manifest that, whatever
may have been his first impressions, he finally came to the
conclusion, both from its greater length and size, that the South
Fork is the main branch."
"A reference to the letter of the commissioner of the land
office, hereto annexed, will show that Messrs. Brown and Jones had
no doubt of the south's being the main branch. The reasons they
give seem to be conclusive. The width of the South Fork at the one
hundredth meridian is 76 chains and 85 links; that of the North
Fork, 23 chains. The field notes of the commissioner on the part of
the United States, acting under the Act of June 5, 1858, of the
date of August 29, 1860, say the channel of the North Fork is only
25 chains and 44 feet, and that he found 'no water on the surface,
i.e., the river bed, but it is found by digging two or
three inches below the surface.' While in his field notes of August
30th he says:"
"Struck main Red River. Main Red River, where crossed, 65 chains
and 38 feet. Channel of running water, 22 feet 6 inches deep.
Plenty of long large lagoons of water in the bed, besides the
running channel."
"If the data given in these reports are correct, there would
seem to be no doubt of the claim of the United States to the tract
in dispute, and therefore your committee report adversely to the
bill referred to it."
"But inasmuch as the claim is disputed, and that with the
earnestness of belief on the part of Texas, and inasmuch as none of
the surveys referred to have been made with the privity of the
State of Texas, the joint commission appointed having failed to act
in concert, your committee are of the opinion that that state
should have a hearing in the matter, and should have an opportunity
to cooperate with the United States in settling the facts upon
which the question in dispute rests. A substitute is reported for
the appointment of a joint commission, the passage of which is
recommended."