The grant of public lands made by the Act of July 2, 1864, c.
217, to the Northern Pacific Railroad Company embraced only the
odd-numbered alternate sections of which the United States had, at
the time of definite location, "full title, not reserved, sold,
granted or otherwise appropriated, and free from preemption of
other claims or rights," provided that, whenever prior to such
definite location any sections or parts of sections had been
granted, sold, reserved, "occupied by homestead settlers" or
preempted or otherwise disposed of, other lands should be selected
by the company "in lieu thereof" not more than ten miles beyond the
limits of the alternate sections. By the same act, the president
was directed to cause
Page 188 U. S. 109
the lands to be surveyed forty miles in width on both sides of
the entire line of road after the general route was fixed and as
fast as might be required by the construction of the road, and it
was provided that the odd sections of land "hereby granted" should
not be liable to sale or entry or, preemption before or after they
were surveyed, except by the company as provided in the act. The
general route of the road was fixed in 1873, and, in the same year,
the land office directed the local officers to withhold from "sale
or entry" all odd-numbered sections falling within the forty-mile
limits of the grant along the line of road.
In 1880, Congress passed an act for the relief of settlers on
the public lands. In 1881 Nelson, qualified to enter public lands
under the homestead acts, went upon the tract in question, and
thereafter continuously occupied it as his residence with the
intention in good faith to avail himself of the benefit of the
homestead acts. In 1884, the railroad company definitely located
its line of road, and by November 18, 1888, had completed a section
of forty miles coterminous with the land here in controversy.
The land, when occupied by Nelson as a residence, was
unsurveyed, and was not surveyed until 1893, but as soon as
surveyed, he attempted to enter it under the homestead laws; but
his application was rejected by the local land officers. In 1895,
the railroad company was given a patent to the land in question.
Held:
(1) Although the company held a patent for the land in
controversy, the occupant was entitled under the local law to
judgment if it appeared that he was equitably entitled to
possession as against the company.
(2) The occupancy of Nelson as a homestead settler was protected
by the act of Congress of 1864 although, prior to such occupancy,
the land office had issued the order of withdrawal from entry or
sale, based upon the map of general route.
(3) The railroad company acquired no vested interest in the
granted lands prior to definite location, and as Nelson was in the
occupancy of the land in question as a homestead settler at the
time of such location, the land did not pass by the grant to the
railroad company, and his title was the better one.
(4) The title of Nelson, if not otherwise protected, was
protected by the third section of the Act of May 14, 1880, c. 89,
which contains a confirmation of the rights of qualified settlers
on public lands, whether surveyed or unsurveyed, with the intention
of claiming the same under the homestead laws.
(6) The order of withdrawal directing the local land office to
withhold from "sale or entry" the odd-numbered sections within the
limits of the general route could not prevent the occupancy of land
within those sections prior to definite location by one who in good
faith intended to claim the benefit of the homestead law, such
right of occupancy being distinctly recognized by the act of 1864,
and such order of withdrawal not being required by that act. But if
this were not so, the act of 1880, in its application to public
lands, which had not become already vested in some company or
person, must
Page 188 U. S. 110
be held to have so modified the order of withdrawal based merely
on general route that such order would not affect any occupancy or
settlement made in good faith, as in the case of Nelson, after such
withdrawal and prior to definite location.
The Northern Pacific Railway Company brought this action in one
of the courts of the State of Washington to recover from the
plaintiffs in error the southeast quarter of section twenty-seven,
township twenty, north of range fourteen, east of the Willamette
meridian, in Kittitas County, in that state, the company claiming
to be the owner in fee and alleging that the defendants were in
unlawful possession of the land.
The defendants denied each of the allegations of the petition,
and the case was tried under a stipulation of facts, which for the
purpose of the trial were conceded to be true. The facts so
conceded were as follows:
The company is a corporation of Wisconsin, and succeeded, prior
to the commencement of this action, to whatever right, title, or
claim the Northern Pacific Railroad Company had, if any, to the
land in dispute. The latter corporation was created by an act of
Congress approved July 2, 1864, c. 217, granting lands in aid of
the construction of a railroad and telegraph line from Lake
Superior to Puget Sound on the Pacific coast by the northern route,
and by the acts and joint resolutions of Congress supplemental
thereto and amendatory thereof. 13 Stat. 365. We will hereafter
refer to those sections of the act, upon the construction of which
the decision of this case mainly depends.
The railroad company duly accepted in writing the terms of the
act of Congress, and on the 29th day of December A.D. 1864, such
acceptance was served on the President of the United States.
The company fixed the
general route of its road
extending coterminous with said land, and within forty miles
thereof, by filing a plat of such route with the Commissioner of
the General Land Office August 20, 1873. Thereafter, on November 1,
1873, that officer transmitted to the register and receiver of the
land office for the district in which the land was situate the
following letter of instructions:
Page 188 U. S. 111
"Gentlemen: The Northern Pacific Railroad Company having filed
in this department a map showing the general route of their branch
line, from Puget Sound to a connection with their main line near
Lake Pend d'Oreille in Idaho territory, I have caused to be
prepared a diagram which is herewith transmitted, showing the
forty-mile limits of the land grant along said line, extending
through your district, and you are hereby directed to withhold from
sale or
entry all the odd-numbered sections
falling within these limits not already included in the withdrawal
for the main line period. The even sections are increased in price
to $2.50 per acre, subject to preemption and homestead entry only.
This withdrawal takes effect from August 15, 1873, the date when
the map was filed by the company with the Secretary of the
Interior, as required by the sixth section of the Act of July 1,
1864, organizing said company."
The letter of the Commissioner and the diagram therein referred
to were received and filed in the local land office November 17,
1873.
The land in dispute was within the forty-mile limit of the land
grant as designated in the diagram.
On December 6, 1884, the railroad company
definitely
located the line of its railroad, coterminous with and within
less than forty miles of the land in controversy, by filing a plat
of such line, approved by the Secretary of the Interior, in the
office of the Commissioner of the General Land Office, and prior to
November 18, 1886, it constructed and completed a section of forty
miles of railroad and telegraph line extending over the line of
definite location and coterminous with the land here in
controversy. The President of the United States having appointed
three commissioners to examine the same, and the commissioners,
having performed that duty, reported to the Secretary on the 18th
day of November, 1886, that the lines were completed in all
respects as required by the act of Congress.
On the 30th of November, 1886, the Secretary transmitted that
report to the President with a recommendation that the railroad and
telegraph line be accepted, and on the 7th day of December, 1886,
the President approved that recommendation.
Page 188 U. S. 112
The United States executed and delivered, May 10, 1895, to the
railroad company its letters patent, purporting to convey to the
company the above tract under the terms and provisions of the act
of 1864, and the various acts and joint resolutions of Congress
supplemental thereto and amendatory thereof.
In the year 1881,
three years
before the
definite location of the road, the defendant Henry Nelson went upon
the above land and
occupied it, and has since
continuously resided thereon. It is agreed that he was at
the time qualified to enter public lands under the Act of Congress
approved May 20, 1862, entitled "An Act to Secure Homesteads to
Actual Settlers on the Public Domain," and under the various acts
supplemental thereto and amendatory thereof.
The land when occupied was unsurveyed, and was not surveyed
until 1893. But,
as soon as surveyed, Nelson attempted to
enter it under the homestead laws of the United States in the
proper United States district land office. His application was,
however, rejected by the register and receiver because, in their
opinion, it conflicted with the grant to the Northern Pacific
Railroad Company.
The defendant Peter Nelson is in the occupancy of a portion of
the land in question under license from his codefendant Henry
Nelson.
Upon the facts so stipulated, the judgment was that the railroad
company was not the owner, had no claim to, and was not entitled to
the possession of the land in dispute, and that the defendant Henry
Nelson was entitled to remain in possession by virtue of the
homestead laws of the United States. Upon appeal to the Supreme
Court of Washington, that judgment was reversed and the cause
remanded with directions to enter judgment for the company.
Page 188 U. S. 113
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
1. Before considering the merits of the case, it is proper to
remark that, although the railroad company holds the patent of the
United States for the land in controversy, the defendant, according
to the laws of the state, was entitled to judgment if it appeared
that he was equitably entitled to possession as against the
plaintiff. 2 Hill's Codes, § 530
et seq.; Burmeister v.
Howard, 1 Wash.Ty. 208.
2. We have seen that the Northern Pacific Railroad Company was
created by the Act of Congress of July 2, 1864, c. 217, making a
grant of lands in aid of the construction of the road from Lake
Superior to Puget Sound. When that grant was made, substantially
the entire country between those points was untraveled, as well as
uninhabited except by Indians, very few of whom at that time were
friendly to the United States. The principal object of the grant,
as will appear from its language, was to secure the safe and speedy
transportation of the mails, troops, munitions of war, and public
stores by means of a railroad and telegraph, and to that end, and
in order to bring the public lands into market, it was deemed
important to encourage the settlement of the country along the
proposed route. The public lands in that vast region were
unsurveyed, and it was not known when they would be surveyed.
Congress, of course, knew that, if immigrants accepted the
invitation of the government to establish homes upon the unsurveyed
public lands, they would do so in the belief that the lands would
be surveyed, that their occupancy would be respected, and that they
would be given an opportunity to perfect their titles in accordance
with the homestead laws.
Such was the situation when the Act of July 2, 1864, was passed.
Necessarily the act must be interpreted in the light of that
situation. It should not be so interpreted as to justify the charge
that the government laid a trap for honest immigrants who risked
the dangers of a wild, unexplored country in order that they might
establish homes for themselves and their families. And it should
not be supposed that Congress had in view
Page 188 U. S. 114
only the interests of the company, which, with the aid of a
munificent grant of lands, was empowered to connect Lake Superior
and Puget Sound with a railroad and telegraph line.
Let us now see what is the fair import of the act of 1864, under
which both parties claim possession.
By the third section of that act, it was, among other things,
provided as follows, to-wit:
"That there be, and hereby is, granted to the 'Northern Pacific
Railroad Company,' its successors and assigns, for the purpose of
aiding in the construction of said railroad and telegraph line to
the Pacific coast, and to secure the safe and speedy transportation
of the mails, troops, munitions of war, and public stores over the
route of said line of railway, every alternate section of public
land, not mineral, designated by odd numbers, to the amount of
twenty alternate sections per mile, on each side of said railroad
line, as said company may adopt, through the territories of the
United States, and ten alternate sections of land per mile on each
side of said railroad whenever it passes through any state,
and whenever on the line thereof the United States have
full title, not reserved, sold, granted, or otherwise appropriated,
and free from preemption
or other claims or
rights at the time the line of said road is
definitely
fixed, and a plat thereof filed in the office of the
Commissioner of the General Land Office, and whenever,
prior to
said time [of definite location], any of said sections or
parts of sections shall have been granted, sold, reserved,
occupied by homestead settlers, or preempted, or otherwise
disposed of,
other lands shall be selected by said company
in lieu thereof, under the direction of the Secretary of
the Interior, in alternate sections, and designated by odd numbers,
not more than ten miles beyond the limits of said alternate
sections. . . ."
By the sixth section of the act it was, among other things,
provided as follows:
"§ 6.
And be it further enacted, That the
President of the United States shall cause the lands to be surveyed
for forty miles in width on both sides of the entire line of said
road, after the general route shall be fixed, and as fast as may be
required by the construction of said railroad, and the odd sections
of
Page 188 U. S. 115
land hereby granted shall not be liable to sale, or entry, or
preemption, before or after they are surveyed, except by said
company, as provided in this act."
The stipulation of facts omits the latter part of section 6, but
of the words omitted this Court will take judicial notice. They are
as follows:
"But the provisions of the Act of September, eighteen hundred
and forty-one, granting preemption rights, and the acts amendatory
thereof, and of the act entitled 'An Act to Secure Homesteads to
Actual Settlers on the Public Domain,' approved May twenty,
eighteen hundred and sixty-two, shall be, and the same are hereby,
extended to all other lands on the line of said road, when
surveyed, excepting those hereby granted to said company. And the
reserved alternate sections shall not be sold by the government at
a price less than two dollars and fifty cents per acre, when
offered for sale."
The railroad company insists that, after the order of withdrawal
from "sale or entry" made in 1873 by the Commissioner of the Land
Office, and based upon its map of general route, no right could be
acquired by a settler upon any odd-numbered alternate section of
land within the forty-mile limit indicated by the map of general
route. As the lands in question were not surveyed until 1893, the
company's contention means that, during the twenty years succeeding
the withdrawal in 1873,
all the sections covered by the
map of general route which would, upon a survey, appear to be
odd-numbered alternate sections, were absolutely excluded from
occupancy by any settler having in view the homestead laws.
The defendant insists that the act of 1864 recognized the right
of an immigrant to occupy any section of the public lands on the
general route up to the time of the definite location of the road,
provided it was done in good faith with the intention to perfect
his title under the homestead laws whenever it became possible to
do so, and that if, at the time of
definite location, it
appeared that he was in the occupancy of an odd-numbered alternate
section, the railroad company could not disturb him.
By the sixth section of the Act of July 2, 1864, it was declared
that the odd sections "hereby granted" -- that is, by that act
granted -- should not be liable to sale, entry, or preemption
before
Page 188 U. S. 116
or after they were surveyed, except by the company, as provided
in the act. But we have also seen, looking at the third section,
which was the granting section of the act, that Congress did not
grant every odd-numbered alternate section within the
general limits specified, but
only the odd-numbered
alternate sections to which the United States had full title, and
which had
not been previously reserved, sold, granted, or
otherwise appropriated,
and which were
free from
preemption or "other claims or rights"
at the time the
line of the road was
definitely fixed -- giving to the
railroad company the right to select lands, within certain limits,
in place of such as were found,
at the date of definite
location, to have been disposed of or to be "
occupied by
homestead settlers."
The first inquiry is whether the railroad company acquired any
vested interest in the land in dispute by reason merely of
the acceptance by the Land Department of its map of
general route, or by reason merely of the withdrawal order
of 1873. In other words, did the land, after the
general
route was established, become segregated from the public domain and
cease to be a part of the public lands, so as not to be subject to
occupancy in good faith by homestead settlers prior to definite
location? These questions have a direct bearing on the present
issues, for if Congress did not intend -- as we think it did not --
that the railroad company should acquire any
vested
interest in these lands prior to definite location, we can
understand why it excluded from its grant any lands "occupied by
homestead settlers" at the time of the
definite location
of the road.
The above questions are, we think, distinctly answered in the
negative by recent decisions of this Court. Let us see if such be
not the case.
In
St. Paul & Pacific v. Northern Pacific,
139 U. S. 1,
139 U. S. 5, it
was held that, after a map of a
general route was filed
and
up to definite location, the grant to the railroad
company was in the nature of a "float," and land which previously
to definite location had been reserved, sold, granted, or otherwise
appropriated, or upon which there was a preemption "or other claim
or right,"
did not pass by the grant of Congress.
In
United States v. Northern
Pacific Railroad Company, 152
Page 188 U. S. 117
U.S. 284,
152 U. S.
296-298, the Court said:
"The act of 1864 granted to the Northern Pacific Railroad
Company
only public land, . . . free from preemption
or other claims or rights
at the time its line of road
was definitely fixed, and a plat thereof filed in the office
of the Commissioner of the General Land Office."
In
Northern Pacific Railroad Company v. Sanders,
166 U. S. 620,
166 U. S.
634-636, it was adjudged that the railroad company
"acquired, by fixing its
general route,
only
an
inchoate right to the odd-numbered sections granted by
Congress, and no right attached to any specific section until the
road was
definitely located and the map thereof filed and
accepted. Until such definite location, it was competent for
Congress to dispose of the public lands of the general route of the
road as it saw proper."
In the same case, the Court, after observing that, as the lands
there in dispute were not free from claims at the date of definite
location, it was of no consequence what was done with them after
date, proceeded:
"The only ground upon which a contrary view can be rested is the
provision in the sixth section of the act of 1864, that"
"the odd sections of land hereby granted shall not be liable to
sale or entry or preemption before or after they are surveyed,
except by said company, as provided by this act."
"But this section is not to be construed without reference to
other sections of the act. It must be taken in connection with
section three, which manifestly contemplated that rights of
preemption
or other claims and rights might accrue or become
attached to the lands granted after the general route of the road
was fixed and before the line of definite location was
established. Literally interpreted, the words above quoted
from section six would tie the hands of the government so that even
it could not sell any of the odd-numbered sections of the lands
after the general route was fixed -- an interpretation wholly
inadmissible in view of the provisions in the third section. The
third and sixth sections must be taken together, and, so taken, it
must be adjudged that nothing in the sixth section prevented the
government from disposing of any of the lands prior to the fixing
of the line of definite location, or, for the reasons stated, from
receiving, under the existing statutes, applications to purchase
such lands as mineral lands. "
Page 188 U. S. 118
The principles announced in the
Sanders case were
reaffirmed in
Menotti v. Dillon, 167 U.
S. 703,
167 U. S. 720,
the Court adding:
"It is true, as said in many cases, that the object of an
executive order withdrawing from preemption, private entry, and
sale lands within the general route of a railroad is to preserve
the lands unencumbered until the completion and acceptance of the
road. But where the grant was, as here, of odd-numbered sections
within certain exterior lines"
"
not sold, reserved, or otherwise disposed of by the
United States, and to which a preemption or homestead claim may not
have attached at the time the line of said road is definitely
fixed,"
the filing of a map of general route and the issuing of a
withdrawal order did not prevent the United States, by legislation
at any time prior to the definite location of the road, from
selling, reserving, or otherwise disposing of any of the lands
which, but for such legislation, would have become, in virtue of
such definite location, the property of the railroad company.
In
United States v. Oregon &c. Railroad,
176 U. S. 28,
176 U. S. 43,
which involved the conflicting claims of two railroad companies to
certain lands and required the Court to determine the effect of a
map of general route filed by the Northern Pacific Railroad
Company, as well as the extent of the grant made to it, the Court
said:
"If, therefore, the Perham map of 1865 were conceded for the
purposes of the present discussion to have been sufficient as a map
of 'general route' --and nothing more can possibly be claimed for
it -- these lands could not be regarded as having been brought by
that map (even if it had been accepted) within the grant to the
Northern Pacific Railroad Company, and thereby have become so
segregated from the public domain as to preclude the possibility of
their being earned by other railroad companies under statutes
enacted by Congress after the filing of that map and before any
definite location by the company of its line."
In the same case:
"In opposition to the views we have expressed, it may be said
that the clause in the Act of July 25, 1866, providing for the
selection under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior of
lands for the Oregon company in lieu of any that should 'be found
to have been granted, sold, reserved, occupied by homestead
settlers,
Page 188 U. S. 119
preempted, or otherwise disposed of,' shows that Congress did
not intend to include in, but intended to exclude from, the grant
to that company any lands that could have been earned by the
Northern Pacific Railroad Company by definitely fixing its route
and filing its map of definite location. Undoubtedly those lands
would be regarded as having been appropriated when the route of the
Oregon road was definitely located if, prior to that date, the
route of the Northern Pacific Railroad had been definitely fixed,
and if such lands were within the exterior lines of that route.
But, as we have said, these lands were within the limits of the
grant of July 25, 1866, and had not,
at that time or when
the route of the Oregon road was definitely located, been
appropriated for the benefit of the Northern Pacific Railroad
Company, for the reason that the latter company had not then filed
any map of definite location.
The Northern Pacific Railroad
Company could take no lands except such as were unappropriated at
the time its line was definitely fixed. It accepted the grant
of 1864 subject to the possibility that Congress might, before its
line was definitely fixed, authorize other railroad corporations to
appropriate lands within its general route, allowing it to select
other lands in lieu of any so appropriated. The lands here in
dispute were consequently subject to be disposed of by Congress
when the act of 1866 was passed, and, the line of the Northern
Pacific railroad not having been definitely located prior to the
passage of the forfeiture act of 1890, the Oregon Company became
entitled to take the lands and to receive patents therefor in
virtue of its accepted map of definite location."
See also Wilcox v. Eastern Oregon Land Co.,
176 U. S. 51, and
Messinger v. Eastern Oregon Land Co., 176 U. S.
58.
The cases above cited definitely determine that the railroad
company acquired no vested interest in any particular section of
land until after a definite location as shown by an accepted map of
its line, and that, until definite location the land covered by the
map of general route, was a "float" -- that is, at large.
In support of the proposition that the railroad company acquired
an interest in the lands in dispute upon its general route's being
established, reference has been made to some expressions
Page 188 U. S. 120
in the opinion of Mr. Justice Field in
Buttz v. Northern
Pacific Railroad, 119 U. S. 55,
119 U. S. 71-72,
to the effect that when the general route of that road was made
known by a map duly filed and accepted,
"the
law withdraws from sale or preemption the odd
sections to the extent of forty miles on each side. The object of
the law in this particular is plain -- it is to preserve the land
for the company to which, in aid of the construction of the road,
it is granted."
But it is evident in view of both prior and subsequent decisions
that this language is not to be taken literally or apart from the
other portions of the opinions of the eminent jurist who delivered
the judgment of the Court. If, upon the filing and acceptance of
the map of
general route, the law withdrew the
odd-numbered sections, then the previous holding in many cases
that, until definite location the grant was a float, with no
interest in specific sections being acquired by the railroad
company, would be meaningless, and there would be some difficulty
in Congress appropriating such lands prior to definite location.
Indeed, it is manifest that the Court did not mean to announce any
new doctrine in the
Buttz case, for Mr. Justice Field,
when delivering judgment in that case, said that the charter of the
Northern Pacific Railroad Company contemplated
"the filing by the company, in the office of the Commissioner of
the General Land Office, of a map showing the
definite
location of the line of its road, and
limits the
grant to
such alternate odd sections as have not
at that time been reserved, sold, granted, or otherwise
appropriated, and are free from preemption, grant
or other
claims or rights. . . . Nor is there anything inconsistent
with this view of the sixth section as to the general route, in the
clause in the third section making the grant operative only upon
such odd sections as have not been reserved, sold, granted, or
otherwise appropriated, and to which preemption and other rights
and claims have not attached,
when a map of the definite
location has been filed."
Further, we had occasion in
Northern Pacific Railroad v.
Sanders and
United States v. Oregon &c. Railroad
Company, above cited, to limit the broad language in the
Buttz case which implied that, after the general route was
fixed, the land was withdrawn by the law for the railroad company.
We
Page 188 U. S. 121
said in the last-named case:
"This language was too broad if it is construed to express the
thought that public lands, when within the exterior lines of a
'general route,' are 'appropriated' from the time the map of such
route is filed, so as to prevent them from being granted by
Congress to and from being earned by another railroad corporation
prior to the filing of a map of definite location by the company
designating such general route."
It results that the railroad company did not acquire any
vested interest in the land here in dispute in virtue of
its map of general route or the withdrawal order based on such map,
and if such land was not "free from preemption or other claims or
rights," or was "occupied by homestead settlers" at the date of the
definite location on December 8, 1884, it did not pass by the grant
of 1864. Now prior to that date -- that is, in 1881 -- Nelson, who
is conceded to have been qualified to enter public lands under the
homestead Act of May 20, 1862, went upon and occupied this land and
has continuously
resided thereon. The land was not
surveyed until 1893, but as soon as it was surveyed, he attempted
to enter it under the homestead laws of the United States, but his
application was rejected solely because, in the judgment of the
local land officers, it conflicted with the grant to the Northern
Pacific Railroad Company. He was not a mere trespasser, but went
upon the land in good faith, and, as his conduct plainly showed,
with a view to residence thereon, not for the purposes of
speculation, and with the intention of taking the benefit of the
homestead law by perfecting his title under that law whenever the
land was surveyed. And for fourteen years before the railroad
company, by an
ex parte proceeding and without notice to
him, so far as the record shows, obtained from the Land Office a
recognition of its claim, and for sixteen years before this action
was brought, he maintained an actual residence on this land. It is
so stipulated in this case. As the railroad had not acquired any
vested interest in the land where Nelson went upon it, his
continuous occupancy of it, with a view in good faith to acquire it
under the homestead laws as soon as it was surveyed, constituted,
in our opinion, a
claim upon the land
Page 188 U. S. 122
within the meaning of the Northern Pacific Act of 1864, and as
that claim existed when the railroad company definitely located its
line, the land was, by the express words of that act, excluded from
the grant.
This view protects the
bona fide settler in his home,
established upon the invitation of the government under great
difficulties, and does no injustice to the railroad company, for,
after restricting the grant to such odd-numbered sections of lands,
within specified lateral limits, as were free from preemption or
"other claims or rights" at the time the line of the road was
definitely fixed, Congress, in the act of 1864, as we have seen,
proceeded:
"And whenever, prior to said time [of definite location] any of
said sections or parts of sections shall have been granted, sold,
reserved,
occupied by homestead settlers or preempted or
otherwise disposed of,
other lands shall be selected by said
company in lieu thereof,"
etc. The words "occupied by homestead settlers" show that
Congress intended by the charter of the Northern Pacific Railroad
Company -- whatever it may have intended as to other companies
receiving grants of public lands -- that occupancy by a homestead
settler, with the intention to take the benefit of the homestead
laws, constituted a
claim which, existing at the date of
definite location, would exclude from the grant land that might
otherwise be covered by it. If Congress did not intend thus to
protect the occupancy of homestead settlers, the reference to lands
being "occupied by homestead settlers," at date of definite
location, was meaningless, and it was useless to reserve to the
company the privilege of selecting lands in lieu of those lost by
such occupancy. Congress knew, when passing the act of 1864, that
one going west to establish his home could not know whether the
unsurveyed land occupied by him would be an even-numbered or
odd-numbered section. Hence, the provision in section 3 in relation
to odd-numbered sections "occupied by homestead settlers." The
efficacy of such a provision could not be destroyed except by
further legislation. It is as if Congress had in words declared
that, among the "other claims or rights" of which the land must be
free at the time of definite location in order that the railroad
company might take were claims arising
Page 188 U. S. 123
out of occupancy by homestead settlers. Such settlers, Congress
in effect declared, should be protected in their rights, and the
railroad company should be reimbursed by lieu lands nearby.
Nelson's occupancy, we have seen, commenced in 1881, while the
definite location of the road occurred in 1884. That he occupied
and continuously resided upon the land in dispute as a homestead
settler after 1881 is admitted.
If it be said that Nelson's claim was that of mere occupancy,
unattended by formal entry or application for the land, the answer
is that that was a condition of things for which he was not in any
wise responsible, and his rights, in law, were not lessened by
reason of that fact. The land was not surveyed until twelve years
after he took up his residence on it, and under the homestead law,
he could not initiate his right by formal entry of record until
such survey. He acted with as much promptness as was possible under
the circumstances.
In
Ard v. Brandon, 156 U. S. 537,
156 U. S. 543,
this Court said:
"The law deals tenderly with one who, in good faith, goes upon
the public lands with a view of making a home thereon. If he does
all that the statute prescribes as the condition of acquiring
rights, the law protects him in those rights, and does not make
their continued existence depend alone upon the question whether or
no he takes an appeal from an adverse decision of the officers
charged with the duty of acting upon his application."
In the same case, the court quoted with approval these words
from
Clements v.
Warner, 24 How. 394,
65 U. S.
397:
"The policy of the federal government in favor of settlers upon
public lands has been liberal. It recognizes their superior equity
to become the purchasers of a limited extent of land, comprehending
their improvements, over that of any other person."
In the recent case of
Tarpey v. Madsen, 178 U.
S. 215,
178 U. S. 219,
which was a contest between the Central Pacific Railroad Company
and a preemptor who sought to avail himself of the Act of
September, 1841, it was found as a fact that the land in dispute
had on it at the date of definite location (which was on October
20, 1868), the improvements of a
bona fide settler, and
one of the questions in the case was how far the rights of the
settler, based upon a
bona fide occupancy, were affected
by
Page 188 U. S. 124
the absence of a local land office in which could be made some
record of his application or entry. This Court said:
"It is true that there was then no local land office in which
those seeking to make preemption or homestead entries could file
their declaratory statements or make entries, and the want of such
an office is made by the supreme court of the state one of the main
grounds for holding that the land did not pass to the railroad
company. We agree with that court fully in its discussion of the
general principles involved in the failure of the government to
provide a local land office. The right of one who has
actually
occupied, with an intent to make a homestead or preemption entry,
cannot be defeated by the mere lack of a place in which to make a
record of his intent. . . . If Olney was in possession of this
tract before October 20, 1868 [date of definite location],
with
a view of entering it as a homestead or preemption claim, and
was simply deprived of his ability to make his entry or declaratory
statement by the lack of a local land office, he could,
undoubtedly, when such office was established, have made his entry
or declaratory statement in such way as to protect his rights."
In the present case, the settler waited from 1881 to 1893 for
the land to be surveyed, and as soon as that was done, he attempted
to enter it under the homestead law in the proper office, but his
claim was overruled upon the theory, unfounded in law, that the
land was covered by the railroad grant.
So far, we have proceeded on the ground that, as the act of 1864
granted to the railroad company the alternate sections to which at
the time of definite location the United States had full title, not
reserved, sold, granted, or appropriated, and which were
free from preemption or other claims or rights at date of
definite location, and authorized the company to select other lands
in lieu of those then found to be "occupied by homestead settlers,"
Congress excluded from the grant any land so occupied with the
intention to perfect the title under the homestead laws whenever
the way to that end was opened by a survey.
3. But the case of the appellant does not depend entirely upon
this view of the act of 1864. It is placed on impregnable ground by
the Act of May 14, 1880, c. 89, entitled, "An Act for the Relief of
Settlers on Public Lands," and which was in force when,
Page 188 U. S. 125
in 1881, Nelson settled upon the land in dispute. The act is as
follows:
"§ 1. That when a preemption homestead, or timber culture
claimant shall file a written relinquishment of his claim in the
local land office, the land covered by such claim shall be held as
open to settlement and entry without further action on the part of
the Commissioner of the General Land Office."
"§ 2. In all cases where any person has contested, paid the
land office fees, and procured the cancellation of any preemption,
homestead, or timber culture entry, he shall be notified by the
register of the land office of the district in which such land is
situated of such cancellation, and shall be allowed thirty days
from date of such notice to enter said lands:
Provided,
That said register shall be entitled to a fee of one dollar for the
giving of such notice, to be paid by the contestant, and not to be
reported."
"§ 3. That any settler who has settled, or who shall
hereafter settle, on any of the public lands of the United
States, whether surveyed or unsurveyed, with the intention of
claiming the same under the homestead laws, shall be allowed the
same time to file his homestead application and perfect his
original entry in the United States Land Office as is now allowed
to settlers under the preemption laws to put their claims on
record, and his right shall relate back to the date of settlement,
the same as if he settled under the preemption laws."
21 Stat. 140.
The third section of this statute is a distinct confirmation of
the rights of a qualified person who had theretofore settled or
should
thereafter settle
"on
any of the public lands of the United States,
whether
surveyed or unsurveyed, with the intention of
claiming the same under the homestead laws,"
though, of course, no lands could be deemed of that character
which had, prior to such settlement, become vested in a railroad
company in virtue of an accepted map of
definite location.
It is, as we have seen, a fixed principle in the law relating to
the administration of the public lands that a railroad grant is a
mere float until definite location, and that, prior to that date,
all lands within the exterior limits of a general route are
entirely at the disposal of the government, to be appropriated as
it desires. The railroad company, as already shown, acquired by its
accepted map of general route no interest in any specific
lands,
Page 188 U. S. 126
but only a right to take those to which, at the date of definite
location, the United States had full title, and upon which there
was no claim, and which were not "occupied by homestead settlers."
It was therefore competent for the United States, by the act of
1880 -- which was four years prior to the definite location of the
Northern Pacific Railroad -- to give additional rights to those who
had then settled or might thereafter in good faith settle upon any
of the public lands. Some who have made comments on this act seem
to overlook the broad language of section 3, and to forget that
that section embraces not only those who had theretofore, but those
who might
thereafter, settle on the public lands, whether
surveyed or
unsurveyed. Nelson settled on unsurveyed
public land, in which the railroad company had no vested or
specific interest, and the third section of the act of 1880 was
purposeless if it did not allow him to perfect his title under the
homestead laws
as soon as the land was surveyed.
The meaning we have given to the words "occupied by homestead
settlers" in the act of 1864, and what has been said about the act
of 1880, finds support in decisions of the Land Department. It will
be well, in view of the far-reaching consequences of the decision
in the present case, to refer to some of those decisions.
In Southern Pacific Railroad (Branch) v. Lopez, 3 L.D. 130, 131
(1884), Secretary Teller said that the Act of July 27, 1866, 14
Stat. 292, relating to the Southern Pacific Railroad Company,
"granted only such lands as were 'not reserved, sold, granted ,
or otherwise appropriated, and free from preemption or
other
claims or rights' at date of definite location, and provided
that 'whenever, prior to said time, any of said sections or parts
of sections shall have been
occupied by homestead
settlers, preempted,' etc., lieu lands might be taken."
It will be observed that this was the language of the Northern
Pacific Act of 1864. The Secretary proceeded:
"Now a homestead entry, which must be made on surveyed lands,
would be within the descriptive terms 'other claims' without doubt,
but the question material to the case before me, wherein the land
was not surveyed, is whether a homestead settlement on
unsurveyed
Page 188 U. S. 127
land, with a view to entering it when surveyed, is within said
terms. I think it is. Construing together the granting words and
those respecting the lieu land selection, it is evident that one of
the 'other claims or rights' excepting land from the operation of
the grant was 'occupation [occupied] by homestead settlers.' The
word 'occupied' and the idea conveyed by it were foreign to the
homestead law at date of this act as an essential element in the
reservation of land. I need not recite the numerous decisions of
the courts and of the Land Department which settle the principle
that, under the homestead law, it is the 'entry' which reserves
land (except for the short period during which it is reserved by
settlement under the Act of May 14, 1880), and not any occupation
by the claimant before or after it. The language of the granting
act is therefore peculiar in this respect, and we are to suppose
that it was used deliberately, with knowledge of then-existing law,
and for a special and important purpose. We must interpret it in
accordance with this evident purpose.
Congress was aware that,
by this act, it was making grants of land far beyond the line of
the government surveys, in regions occupied and to be occupied
largely by settlers awaiting the advent of the surveyor to prefer
their claims. By section six, the homestead law was extended
to the even sections after survey, and expressly withheld from the
odd sections before and after survey, and yet, in section three,
land '
occupied by homestead settlers' was
excepted
from the grant. Congress knew that unsurveyed land could not be
'entered' as homesteads; it had in terms prohibited homestead
'entry' on these lands; it was aware that only by such 'entry'
could a claim be appropriated and reserved from the grant, without
express exception, and therefore in the use of the words 'occupied
by homestead settlers' it intended to make such express exception,
and to indicate a different kind of appropriation by a class of
settlers not within the letter of the homestead law, though clearly
within its spirit -- namely, those who had made a home on the
public domain in advance of the surveys, with the intention of
subsequently claiming it under said law. If this was not the
purpose, then the employment of the peculiar language referred to
was a vain and useless thing, and such a
Page 188 U. S. 128
thing we are not to suppose Congress had done.
92 U. S.
733. It therefore follows that the land claimed by
Lopez, whose proofs are not questioned in any particular and who
preferred his claim promptly upon survey, was 'occupied by a
homestead settler'
when the grant to this company took effect,
and hence excepted from the operation of the grant."
In Northern Pacific Railroad Company v. Anrys, 10 L.D. 258, 259
(1890), which was a contest between the Northern Pacific Railroad
Company and a homesteader who had settled on unsurveyed public
lands, Secretary Noble said:
"It is urged that the land was not subject to the operation of
the homestead law at the date of Newland's settlement, because
unsurveyed, and that the homestead claim could have attached only
by entry. But it must be remembered that the rights of the parties
here must be determined by a proper construction of the
railroad grant, rather than of the general
homestead
law. It must be admitted that the ruling in the case at bar is
in line with those of the Department for many years. In the case of
Southern Pacific Railroad Company v. Lopez, 3 L.D. 130, the
question here presented was fully discussed in connection with a
grant framed in words identical with those used in the grant for
the Northern Pacific company, and it was held that a homestead
settlement on unsurveyed land with a view to entering it when
surveyed is within the term "other claims," and that "it is evident
that one of the
other claims or rights' excepting land from the
operation of the grant was `occupation by homestead settlers.'" In
support thereof, it was urged that Congress was aware that, by the
act in aid of a road extending across the western half of the
continent, it was making a grant far beyond the line of government
surveys, in regions occupied and to be occupied largely by settlers
awaiting the advent of the surveyor to prefer their claims. In this
view I concur. It seems beyond question that it was to protect such
settlers as described above that Congress excepted from the
operation of the grant tracts "occupied by homestead settlers." Had
Congress intended to extend its protection only to those who had
made entry, it would have said so in other and appropriate words.
The ordinary exception of "lands to which
Page 188 U. S.
129
a homestead right has attached" would have fully protected
that class of settlers. But Congress went further and made
occupation the test instead of entry. I do not deem it necessary to
cite cases to show that the views of the Department on this point
have not changed."
In Spicer v. Northern Pacific R. Co., 10 L.D. 440, 443, the
rights of an Indian were disputed by the Northern Pacific Railroad
Company under the Act of March 3, 1875, 18 Stat. 402, 420, c. 131,
extending the benefit of the homestead laws of the United States,
with certain restrictions upon the title when obtained, to Indians
twenty-one years of age, or the head of a family having abandoned
the tribal relations. Secretary Noble said:
"The provisions of this act were in force at the date when the
company's rights attached on definite location of its road, and, if
the matters alleged relative to the claim of the Indian Enoch, be
true, he was
at that date, and had been for many years prior
thereto, living upon the land in question as his home, with the
intention to acquire title thereto as a homestead; he had valuable
and permanent improvements thereon, and had cultivated the same for
many years, during all of which time he claimed it as his
home. Such a claim, it seems to me, is clearly covered by the
excepting clause of the grant to the company, and, if proven, would
be sufficient, in my judgment, to defeat the claim of the company
to the land. True, the Indian had put no claim of record for the
land, but it is well settled by departmental rulings that, while
such omission might defeat the claim as against a subsequent
settler who duly places his claim of record, it will not defeat
such claim as against the United States, and the land covered
thereby
will be excepted from the operation of any grant for
the benefit of a railroad company attaching subsequently to the
inception of the settlement right. Northern Pacific Railroad
Company v. Evans, 7 L.D. 131, and authorities there cited. It is
also well settled that a claim
resting on settlement,
residence, and improvements, acquired prior to the date when
the company's rights attached under its grant, is sufficient to
except the land covered thereby from the operation of such
grant."
In Northern Pacific Railroad Company v. McCrimmon, 12
Page 188 U. S. 130
L.D. 554, it was said:
"In support of this appeal, counsel for the railroad company
contend that Thomas did not claim the land as government land, but
as railroad land, and that, although the land was excepted from the
withdrawal on general route, yet Thomas did not insist upon the
right to take it as government land, but was satisfied to claim it
under the railroad company. Under the ruling of the Department, as
announced in the cases of Northern Pacific Railroad Company v.
Bowman, 7 L.D. 238, and Northern Pacific Railroad Company v.
Potter, 11 L.D. 531, the only question to be determined is
whether there was a settlement on the land at date of definite
location by one having the qualification to enter the land under
the settlement laws, and if these facts are shown,
the
land would be excepted from the operation of the grant,
although such settler might not have known of his right, but held
the land under the belief that it was railroad land."
In Northern Pacific Railroad Company v. Plumb, 16 L.D. 80, it
appeared that the land in dispute was within the primary limits of
the company's grant as shown by map of definite location filed July
6, 1882, and was also within the limits of the withdrawal on map of
general route filed February 21, 1872. Secretary Noble said:
"The only question raised by the appeal is as to whether the
occupancy shown by Plumb was sufficient to defeat the grant. It
appears that, in 1881, Plumb took possession of the tract in
question, together with an adjoining forty-acre tract, upon which
he resided. In the spring of 1882, he broke the entire tract in
question and enclosed it with a fence, and has since had possession
of and improved the land. He had never exercised the preemption
right, and was therefore duly qualified to claim the land under his
settlement right. In 1886, he contracted to purchase the adjoining
forty acres, upon which he had resided, from the company, and at
the hearing it was sought to show that he also claimed the land in
question under the grant at the date of the definite location of
the road, but the testimony will not warrant such a finding.
Being in possession of the land in question at the date of the
definite location of the road with valuable improvements thereon,
and duly qualified to assert a right thereto under the
settlement
Page 188 U. S. 131
laws, he had such a right to the land as served to defeat
the grant, and the fact that the claim subsequently asserted
by him was under a different law from those providing for
settlement can in nowise affect his rights in the premises. Being
excepted from the grant by reason of his settlement, Plumb was at
liberty to seek title from the government under any law under which
such lands might be taken."
In Northern Pacific Railroad Company v. Benz, 19 L.D. 229, the
land in dispute was within the limits of the grant to the company,
as shown by map of definite location filed July 6, 1882, and was
covered by the withdrawal upon general route of February 21, 1872.
Secretary Smith said:
"The present contest is between the railroad company, on one
part, and Hoy and Benz, on the other. If it can be made to appear
affirmatively by good and sufficient testimony that either of these
parties, Hoy or Benz, was
in possession of said land July
6, 1882,
when the line of the road opposite thereto was
definitely fixed, and at the same time had the right to perfect
title to the same under the preemption or homestead laws, such
possession excepted the land from the grant to the railroad
company and reduced the contest to one between Hoy and Benz,
or rather to one between Hoy and the legal representatives of Benz,
he having died since entering his appeal."
It was found that, on July 6, 1882, Hoyt was a competent
entryman under the homestead laws.
What has been said as to the meaning and scope of the acts of
1864 and 1880 is not inconsistent with anything decided in
Maddox v. Burnham, 156 U. S. 544, and
Wood v. Beach, 156 U. S. 548.
In
Maddox v. Burnham, the question was as to the rights
of a homestead occupant as against a certain railway company.
Referring to the third section of the act of 1880, the Court
said:
"By this section, for the first time, the right of a party
entering land under the homestead law was made to relate back to
the time of his settlement. But this act was passed
long after
the rights of the railway company had accrued and the legal title
had passed to it. It is not operative, therefore, to divest
such legal title or enlarge,
as against such title, any
equitable rights which the defendant theretefore had."
This was a case, therefore, in
Page 188 U. S. 132
which the claim based upon occupancy accrued after the legal
title had become vested in the railroad company, not a case in
which the grant was, as here, a float with no right attached to any
specific section.
In
Wood v. Beach, which was a contest between a
homestead settler and a railway company, it appeared that the map
of the line of definite location was filed December 6, 1866, and a
withdrawal followed in 1867, while the occupation and settlement of
the homesteader did not commence until June 8, 1870. Of course, the
legal title to the sections granted vested in the railway company
upon the filing and acceptance of the map of definite location.
Besides, the withdrawal in 1867 was pursuant to the express command
of the Act of Congress of July 26, 1866, 14 Stat. 290, § 4,
which provided that, as soon as the railway company should
"file with the Secretary of the Interior maps of its line,
designating the route thereof, it shall be the duty of said
Secretary to withdraw from the market the lands granted by this act
in such manner as may be best calculated to effect the purposes of
this act and subserve the public interest."
It might well be, therefore, that one whose right, resting upon
occupancy, had accrued, as in
Maddox v. Burnham, after the
legal title passed to the railroad company, or one who, as in
Beach v. Wood, did not settle upon the public lands until
after the railroad company had definitely located its road and
after the lands had been withdrawn from market pursuant to the
directions of an express act of Congress, could not, as against the
railroad company, acquire an interest in them by virtue of the act
of 1880.
Nor is there any conflict between the decision now rendered and
Northern Pacific Railroad v. Colburn, 164 U.
S. 383, for, as appears from the opinion and record in
that case, the land there claimed to have been occupied by a
homestead settler at the date of definite location was
surveyed public land, and the good faith of the occupation
was not manifested by an entry or an attempt at entry at any time
in the local land office. It was held that the inchoate right of
the homesteader must be initiated by a filing in the land office.
In the present case, as we have seen, the land occupied was
unsurveyed, and at the
Page 188 U. S. 133
time of such occupancy, the land being unsurveyed, there could
not then have been any filing or entry in the land office.
The case before us is altogether different. Nelson's occupancy
occurred after the passage of the act of 1880. While that act did
not apply to a railroad company which had acquired the legal title
by definite location of its road, it distinctly recognized the
right prior to such time to settle upon the public lands, whether
surveyed or unsurveyed, with the intention of claiming the same
under the homestead laws. In occupying the land here in dispute,
Nelson did not infringe upon any
vested right of the
railroad company, for there had not been, at the date of such
occupancy in 1881, any definite location of the line of the
railroad, and the land so occupied, with other lands embraced by
the map of
general route, constituted only a "float," the
company having, at most, only an inchoate interest in them, a right
to acquire them,
if, at the time of definite location, it
was not "occupied by homestead settlers" nor encumbered with "other
claims or rights." The withdrawal merely from "sale or entry" in
1873, based only on a map of the general route of the road, did not
identify any specific sections, was not expressly directed or
required by the act of 1864, was made only out of abundant caution
and in accordance with a practice in the Land Department, and did
not and could not affect any rights given to homestead occupants by
Congress in the acts of 1864 and 1880. Besides, the order made in
1873 to withhold from
sale or
entry all the
odd-numbered sections falling within the limits of the general
route was without practical value so far as the land in dispute was
concerned, for such land had not been surveyed, and there could not
have been any sale or entry of unsurveyed lands. At any rate, the
order of withdrawal directing the local land office to withhold
from "sale or entry" the odd-numbered sections within the limits of
the
general route could not prevent the
occupancy
of one of those sections prior to definite location by one who in
good faith intended to claim the benefit of the homestead law --
this because such right of occupancy was distinctly recognized by
the act of 1864. But if this were not so, the act of 1880, in its
application to public lands which had not become already vested in
some
Page 188 U. S. 134
company or person, must be held to have
so modified the
order of withdrawal based merely on general route that such order
would not affect any occupancy or settlement made in good faith, as
in the case of Nelson, after the passage of that act and prior to
definite location. This conclusion cannot be doubted, because
the act of 1880 made no exception of public lands covered by orders
of withdrawal from sale or entry based merely on general route, and
because also public lands, which had not become vested in the
railroad company by the definite location of its line, were subject
to the power of Congress.
It results that the Supreme Court of the Washington erred in not
affirming the judgment of the court of original jurisdiction in
favor of the defendants.
The judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded for
such further proceedings as may not be inconsistent with this
opinion.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER, with whom MR. JUSTICE BROWN and MR. JUSTICE
SHIRAS concur, dissenting:
I dissent from the judgment in this case. It overrules a
unanimous judgment of this Court, one which for nearly twenty years
has been a guide to the Land Department in the construction of the
Northern Pacific railroad grant. Further, in effect, it declares
that an entire section in the act of Congress making the grant, a
section which from the inception of the work of construction has
always been regarded by the parties interested as a provision
intended to secure to the company the full measure of lands
granted, is meaningless, and gave the company absolutely no
protection whatever.
It is admitted that the company fixed the general route of its
road coterminous with the road in controversy and within forty
miles thereof, by filing a plat of such route with the Commissioner
of the General Land Office on August 20, 1873, and that, on
November 1, 1873, the odd-numbered sections within the forty-mile
limits of this route were by the Land Department withdrawn from
sale or entry and the even-numbered sections increased in price to
$2.50, notice of which
Page 188 U. S. 135
order was immediately filed in the local land office. In 1881,
eight years thereafter, the plaintiff in error for the first time
entered upon the lands and commenced its occupation. It is also
admitted that, by construction of its road, the company has
perfected its title to its land grant. Now, when the company filed
its map of general route and obtained from the Land Department the
order of withdrawal, it believed that it acquired something. It did
not suppose that it was doing a vain and useless thing. It did not
believe that Congress had cheated it with a delusive expectation of
a benefit which it did not intend to give.
Was it justified in such belief? To answer this, it is well to
look back to the condition of things at the time the granting act
was passed. In 1862, Congress created the Union Pacific Railroad
Company to build a railroad from the Mississippi River to the
Pacific Ocean along the only then frequented line of travel. It
made to the company a land grant, one-fourth the size of the
Northern Pacific grant, and agreed to lend it $16,000 and upwards
per mile to aid in the construction, taking a first mortgage on the
road as security for the loan. Notwithstanding this grant of land,
this loan of money, and the fact that the road was to be along the
only frequented line of travel, capital could not be induced to
invest in the enterprise. Two years thereafter, and in 1864,
Congress passed an amendatory act which doubled the land grant,
making it half as large as that of the Northern Pacific, and agreed
to take as security for its loan a second mortgage, giving to the
company the right to place a first mortgage on the road in an
amount equal to the government loan. And only after this large
financial assistance and increased land grant was the work of
construction commenced. On the same day, Congress passed the act
incorporating the Northern Pacific Railroad Company and making to
it its grant. It promised no assistance in money, but only in
lands. In order to give the company assurance that it would obtain
its full grant, it placed in the act section six, the section which
this Court now holds is absolutely ineffectual therefor. That
section reads:
"
And be it further enacted, That the President of the
United
Page 188 U. S. 136
States shall cause the lands to be surveyed for forty miles in
width on both sides of the entire line of said road, after the
general route shall be fixed, and as fast as may be required by the
construction of said railroad, and the odd sections of land hereby
granted shall not be liable to sale, or entry, or preemption before
or after they are surveyed, except by said company, as provided in
this act; but the provisions of the Act of September, eighteen
hundred and forty-one, granting preemption rights, and the acts
amendatory thereof, and of the act entitled 'An Act to Secure
Homesteads to Actual Settlers on the Public Domain,' approved May
twenty, eighteen hundred and sixty-two, shall be, and the same are
hereby, extended to all other lands on the line of said road when
surveyed, excepting those hereby granted to said company. And the
reserved alternate sections shall not be sold by the government at
a price less than two dollars and fifty cents per acre when offered
for sale."
At the time of the passage of the act, the entire body of the
country from the western boundary of Minnesota to the Cascade Range
was unoccupied, untraveled, and almost wholly unexplored. As said
by Senator Hendricks when the bill was before the Senate:
"Everybody can see at a glance that it is a work of national
importance. It proposes to grant lands in a northern latitude
where, without the construction of a work like that, the lands are
comparatively without value to the government. No person acquainted
with the condition of that section of country supposes that there
can be very extensive settlements until the government shall
encourage those settlements by the construction of some work like
this."
And by Senator Harlan, the chairman of the Committee on Public
Lands:
"The Committee on Public Lands agree to report this bill
favorably on account of the vast consequence that will attach to
the completion of the road. The land is to be conveyed to the
company only as the road progresses. The committee were of opinion
that, if the road should be built, the government could well afford
to give one-half the land for the distance of forty miles on each
side of the road to secure its completion. If it should not be
built, no lands will have been conveyed."
In other words, the proposition was to give half of the lands
within forty miles
Page 188 U. S. 137
of the road to the company -- not to give as much land as would
be equal to half the lands within forty miles of the road, but to
give half of those lands. The difference is obvious. The
construction of a railroad increases the value of contiguous lands.
Congress doubles the price of the even-numbered sections which it
retains. It makes no little difference to a company whether it
receives lands along the line of the road which it constructs,
lands which have been increased in value by reason thereof, or an
equal amount of lands hundreds of miles away and not so increased
in value.
The withdrawal was not left to the discretion of the company,
but was to be made by the President, after the general route had
been fixed, and "as fast as may be required by the construction of
said railroad." True, the language is that he "shall cause the
lands to be surveyed;" but this, coupled with the prohibition
against sale or entry, was tantamount to a direction to withdraw,
and has always been so regarded by the Land Department and all
parties interested. Thus, he was to determine whether the time had
arrived for a withdrawal. The withdrawal was in fact made. The
President exercised his judgment and decided that the time had
arrived for a withdrawal, and the Land Department, through all its
officials, proceeded to act accordingly. The direction in the
withdrawal was "to withhold from sale or entry all the odd-numbered
sections falling within these limits." Surely this action of the
President and the Land Department is entitled to the highest
consideration. As said by Chief Justice Marshall in
Cohen v.
Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264,
19 U. S. 418:
"Great weight has always been attached, and very rightly attached,
to contemporaneous exposition."
See the many authorities
on this proposition collected in
Fairbank v. United
States, 181 U. S. 283,
181 U. S.
307.
But, notwithstanding this section, notwithstanding the action of
the executive officers in directing a withdrawal of this land from
sale or entry, it is now held by the Court that it was subject to
homestead entry, and that the entryman acquired a right to obtain
title by an entry made eight years after the withdrawal. Of course,
as I said, such a ruling nullifies the section. A withdrawal from
sale or entry which leaves unaffected
Page 188 U. S. 138
the right of purchase or entry is an irreconcilable
contradiction. But can there be any reasonable doubt as to the
meaning of section 6, or that Congress intended exactly what was
done by the executive officers -- to-wit, the withdrawal of all the
odd sections within the forty-mile limit from sale, entry, or
preemption? The significant words are these: "The odd sections of
land hereby granted shall not be liable to sale, or entry, or
preemption, before or after they are surveyed, except by said
company." Now it is said in the opinion of the majority that
section 3 defines what is "hereby granted" as "every alternate
section" to which
"the United States have full title, not reserved, sold, granted,
or otherwise appropriated, and free from preemption or other claims
or rights at the time the line of said road is definitely
fixed,"
that those lands, and those only, are the ones not liable to
sale, entry, or preemption, except by the company. It will help to
write out the sentence with a substitution for the words "hereby
granted" of the definition thereof which is presented, and it will
read substantially as follows: the odd sections of land within the
withdrawal limits to which the United States have full title, not
reserved, sold, granted, or otherwise appropriated, and free from
preemption or other claims or rights at the time the line of the
road is definitely fixed, shall not from the time of the withdrawal
until the filing of the map of definite location be liable to sale,
entry, or preemption before or after they are surveyed, except by
the company. Or, to put it in another form, the odd sections within
the withdrawal limits, which no one purchases or enters before the
filing of the map of definite location, shall not be purchased or
entered by anybody except the company. It would be a failure of due
respect to Congress to use language adequately expressive of the
absurdity of such legislation. But Congress never meant any such
thing. While it may be that the use of the words "hereby granted"
was unfortunate, yet what was intended is clear. Congress intended
to grant the odd-numbered sections and retain the even-numbered,
and while, in the granting clause, some qualifications were placed
in respect to the odd-numbered sections in order to protect
individual rights then existing, or which Congress might
Page 188 U. S. 139
thereafter specifically create, yet, as Congress was here not
attempting a precise definition of what should pass by the grant,
it used the term "granted lands" as descriptive generally of the
odd-numbered sections to distinguish them from the lands retained,
the even-numbered sections. It obviously intended that no rights
should be acquired, either by sale, entry, or preemption, to any of
the odd-numbered sections after the filing of the map of general
route, and this whether the lands were surveyed or unsurveyed. This
is made clear by the last sentence in the paragraph. It says, "and
the reserved alternate sections shall not be sold by the government
at a price less than $2.50 per acre." Clearly that meant all the
even-numbered sections, and not simply those which happened to be
alternate to odd-numbered sections passing to the company. The
truth is that, in section 3, Congress defines specifically and
carefully the lands which it granted. Its attention was directed in
that clause to the matter of definition. While, in section 6, it
was not attempting to define, but to provide for a withdrawal
before the filing of the map of definite location, and was simply
endeavoring to make effective rights which it intended should
accompany such withdrawal.
Again, in
Hewitt v. Schultz, 180 U.
S. 139, it was held that the withdrawal directed by
Congress in section 6 coupled with the provision extending
homestead and preemption rights to all other lands on the line of
the road, created an implied prohibition of any withdrawal of lands
within the indemnity limits provided in section 3. It is
unquestioned that, whenever a grant had been made of lands, the
power of the Land Department to withdraw such body of lands as
might seem reasonably necessary for the satisfaction of the grant
had been frequently upheld by this Court.
See the long
list of cases cited in the dissenting opinion on page
180 U. S. 159.
There is no express prohibition of like action by the Land
Department in respect to lands within the Northern Pacific
indemnity limits, and the judgment was based solely on the implied
prohibition above referred to. The opinion of the Court rested
mainly on the rulings of the Land Department, as primarily
expressed in the opinion of Secretary Vilas in Northern Pacific
Railroad Company
Page 188 U. S. 140
v. Miller, 7 L.D. 100, from whose opinion large quotations were
made, and in respect to rulings of the Land Department generally,
it was said, conceding that the question involved was one of doubt
(p.
188 U. S.
157):
"It is the settled doctrine of this Court," as was said in
United States v. Alabama Great Southern Railroad,
142 U. S. 615,
142 U. S.
621,
"that, in case of ambiguity, the judicial department will lean
in favor of a construction given to a statute by the department
charged with the execution of such statute, and, if such
construction be acted upon for a number of years, will look with
disfavor upon any sudden change, whereby parties who have
contracted with the government upon the faith of such construction
may be prejudiced."
Turning to the opinion of Mr. Secretary Vilas, we find him
saying (pp. 110-111, 113, 119):
"But a peculiarity in legislation of this character is found in
the sixth section of the act, in which a provision authorized the
'general route' to be fixed, and required lands to be surveyed for
forty miles in width on both sides of the entire line so fixed, and
directed that the odd-numbered sections granted by the act should
not be liable to sale or entry or preemption before or after they
were surveyed, except by said company. In the language of the
Supreme Court, in
Buttz v. Northern Pacific Railroad
Company, 119 U. S. 71:"
"The act of Congress not only contemplates the filing by the
company, in the office of the Commissioner of the General Land
Office, of a map showing the definite location of the line of its
road, and limits the grant to such alternate odd sections as have
not at that time, been reserved, sold, granted, or otherwise
appropriated, and are free from preemption, grant, or other claims
or right, but it also contemplates a preliminary designation of the
general route of the road, and the exclusion from sale, entry, or
preemption of the adjoining odd sections within forty miles on each
side until the definite location is made."
"The facts which have been recited show beyond all reasonable
question that the privilege given to the company of fixing, first,
a line of general route, upon the basis of which the odd-numbered
sections within forty-mile limits on either side were
Page 188 U. S. 141
to be withdrawn from sale or entry or preemption before and
after survey, was fully exercised by the company in Washington
Territory, from the eastern boundary to the mouth of the Walla
Walla River, and thence along the Columbia to the first range line
west of the Willamette principal meridian, and thence north to the
international boundary, by its filing and the department's approval
of its maps of location on the 30th of July, 1870. These maps and
the action taken thereon fully met every requirement of the statute
in that behalf. The company, by resolution, fixed this line as the
basis of withdrawal, made its formal request that the land should
be withdrawn thereon, the line was plainly and sufficiently
described, the department accepted it, and applied the statutory
consequence by directing the local land officers in Washington
Territory to withdraw the odd-numbered sections along that line as
far north as the Town of Steilacoom, first, for a width of twenty
miles on either side, and, later in the same year, within the limit
of an additional twenty miles, and also by increasing the minimum
price of the even-numbered sections within the same limits to $2.50
per acre. Thus, the action of the company and of the department
cooperated to give official determination to the fact upon which
the statute became applicable, both to withdraw the odd-numbered
sections and to double the minimum price of the even-numbered
sections, and both effects were formally recognized and declared.
It cannot be doubted that, had no other action been taken before
the line of the road for construction was definitely located, this
action in regard to the line of the general route of 1870 must have
remained continuously operative upon all lands within the limit of
forty miles on either side of the line so established. So obvious
is this, indeed, that from the mouth of the Walla Walla River
westwardly along the Columbia, that withdrawal remains to this day
obligatory and operative by force of the statute and of that
location. . . . By virtue of that withdrawal, the odd-numbered
sections within forty miles of all that portion of the route lying
east of the Columbia remained for nearly two years at least
segregated from the public domain, and all purchasers of the
even-numbered sections
Page 188 U. S. 142
were required to pay the double minimum price for the land they
bought. . . . Having provided the condition upon which a withdrawal
of the public domain should be operative upon a preliminary general
route for the benefit of this company, without any latitude of
authority for any other, the legislative will must be regarded as
exclusive of any other. . . . Thus,
the meaning of the act
appears to be that the provisional line of general route should, in
the first place, be taken as the line upon which the grant was
made, and, during the period while no other line was fixed than
such line of general route, the lands in the odd-numbered sections
within forty miles should be taken as the granted lands, and
therefore they are declared by the statute to be the 'hereby
granted' lands."
(The italics are mine.)
Thus, the Court held that, because by section 6 the odd-numbered
sections were withdrawn from sale or entry, and at the same time it
was declared that the homestead and preemption laws should apply to
all other lands, there was an implied prohibition upon the Land
Department's withdrawal of odd-numbered sections within the
indemnity limits. Now it is held that the withdrawal directed by
section 6 and made by the Secretary of the Interior was absolutely
meaningless, and secured nothing to the company. If the withdrawal
directed by section 6 intended nothing, accomplished nothing, it
should not have been made the basis for an implied prohibition of
the hitherto unquestioned power of the Land Department to withdraw
lands in indemnity limits. There is an incongruity in the two
decisions which, to my mind, is, to use no stronger expression,
both sad and startling.
Further, the Land Department did in fact withdraw from sale or
entry all the odd-numbered sections within the forty-mile limits of
the general route, and this withdrawal included the tract in
controversy as well as the other odd-numbered sections, and notice
thereof was filed in the local land office, and this many years
before the plaintiff in error went upon the land. As heretofore
stated, the power of the Land Department to withdraw from private
entry lands which it has reason to believe may be necessary to
satisfy a land grant has never been
Page 188 U. S. 143
denied. It is a power which has been exercised again and again
from the inception of land grants. In one case, (
Wolcott v.
Des Moines Company, 5 Wall. 681), we sustained a
withdrawal made by the department beyond the real terminus of the
grant on the ground that there was some doubt where the grant
terminated, and therefore the department was justified in making
the withdrawal cover any possible conclusion as to such terminus.
There was in the Northern Pacific act no prohibition on the Land
Department's exercise of this customary power. Indeed, as I have
shown, it was held in
Hewitt v. Schultz, 180 U.
S. 139, that the express direction to withdraw lands in
the place limits was the foundation of an implied prohibition on a
withdrawal of lands within the indemnity limits. The purpose and
effect of a withdrawal are not to vest any title in the beneficiary
of the grant, but to preserve the lands from private entry in order
that, when the time arrives, the grantee may receive the full
measure of its grant. As said in
Menotti v. Dillon,
167 U. S. 703,
167 U. S.
720-721:
"It is true, as said in many cases, that the object of an
executive order withdrawing from preemption, private entry, and
sale lands within the general route of a railroad, is to preserve
the lands, unencumbered until the completion and acceptance of the
road. . . . That order took these lands out of the public domain as
between the railroad company and individuals, but they remained
public lands under the full control of Congress, to be disposed of
by it in its discretion at any time before they became the property
of the company under an accepted definite location of its
road."
This language was quoted with approval in
United States v.
Oregon &c. Railroad Company, 176 U. S.
28,
176 U. S.
48.
Again, in
Northern Pacific Railroad Company v.
Musser-Sauntry Company, 168 U. S. 604,
168 U. S. 607,
we said:
"The withdrawal by the Secretary in aid of the grant to the
State of Wisconsin was valid, and operated to withdraw the
odd-numbered sections within its limits from disposal by the land
officers of the government under the general land laws. The act of
the Secretary was in effect a reservation."
And the same doctrine has been affirmed in many cases.
Page 188 U. S. 144
Turning to the rulings of the Land Department, in Hestetun v.
St. Paul &c. Railroad Company, 12 L.D. 27, 28, it was said by
Secretary Noble:
"The legal effect of the withdrawal is to preclude the disposal
of the land covered thereby under any of the land laws. In other
words, so long as the withdrawal remains in force, the land covered
thereby is simply held for the purpose for which the withdrawal was
made."
And again, in the same volume, in In re Chicago &c. Railway
Company, pp. 259, 261:
"In the case of
Riley v. Welles, referred to and quoted
in the Shire case, it was said by the Supreme Court that settlement
upon and possession of land within the limits of an executive
withdrawal were 'without right,' and that the subsequent
recognition by the land officers of such settlement and possession,
and the permission to the party to make proof and entry under the
preemption law, and the issuing patent 'were acts in violation of
law and void.' This case of
Riley v. Welles has never been
overruled or modified, but has been referred to and approved in a
number of the decisions of the Supreme Court, and must therefore be
accepted as expressing the opinion of that tribunal as to the
absolute invalidity of settlements upon lands withdrawn by
executive order."
In In re Hans Oleson, 28 L.D. 25, 31, Secretary Bliss thus
defined the word "withdrawal: "
"In the nomenclature of the public land laws, the word
'withdrawal' is generally used to denote and order issued by the
President, Secretary of the Interior, Commissioner of the General
Land Office, or other proper officer whereby public lands are
withheld from sale and entry under the general land laws in order
that presently or ultimately they may be applied to some designated
public use or disposed of in some special way. Sometimes these
orders are not made until there is an immediate necessity therefor,
but more frequently the necessity for their making is
anticipated."
And in the same volume (Inman v. Northern Pacific Railroad
Company) the same Secretary uses this language (pp. 95, 100):
"From the authorities cited, the following rules are clearly
Page 188 U. S. 145
deducible: First. Subject only to the control and power of
disposition remaining in Congress, an anticipatory withdrawal,
whether legislative or executive, during the time it remains in
force, withholds the lands embraced therein from other
appropriation or disposition, and prevents the acquisition of any
legal or equitable title or right by settlement or entry in
violation of such withdrawal."
Similar declarations may be found in almost every volume of the
Land Decisions.
In the execution of this Northern Pacific land grant, many
withdrawals were made as called for from time to time along the
line of general route, and the Land Department has uniformly
recognized the validity and effect of such withdrawals. In Northern
Pacific Railroad v. Pressey, 2 L.D. 551, it appeared that Pressey
settled upon a tract within forty miles of the line of general
route; that the lands at the time of his settlement were
unsurveyed; that, after survey, he made application for a homestead
entry, and it was held that he acquired no rights by his
settlement, inasmuch as the land had been withdrawn by order of the
Land Department, Secretary Teller saying (p. 533):
"The settlement by Pressey upon the odd section was clearly in
violation of the order of withdrawal, and he could acquire no
rights or equities under such a settlement."
In Northern Pacific Railroad Company v. Miller, 7 L.D. 100, a
case in which the implied prohibition of the withdrawal of
indemnity lands was first distinctly decided in the Land
Department, Secretary Vilas said (p. 110) in reference to the
withdrawal of lands within the place limits of the line of general
route:
"Thus, the action of the company and of the department
cooperated to give official determination to the fact upon which
the statute became applicable, both to withdraw the odd-numbered
sections and to double the minimum price of the even-numbered
sections, and both effects were formally recognized and declared.
It cannot be doubted that, had no other action been taken before
the line of the road for construction was definitely located, this
action in regard to the line of the general route of 1870 must have
remained continuously operative upon
Page 188 U. S. 146
all lands within the limit of forty miles on either side of the
line so established. So obvious is this, indeed, that from the
mouth of the Walla Walla River, westwardly along the Columbia, that
withdrawal remains to this day obligatory and operative by force of
the statute and of that location."
"If authority be wanting to so manifest a proposition, it is
found in the following language of the Supreme Court in the case
already referred to."
In McClure v. Northern Pacific Railroad Company, 9 L.D. 155, in
an opinion by Secretary Noble, it was held that
"when the map of general route was filed, the withdrawal
thereunder became at once effective, and reserved from general
disposal the odd-numbered sections embraced therein."
In Northern Pacific Railroad Company v. Collins, 14 L.D. 484, it
was again decided by the same secretary that "lands withdrawn for
the benefit of said grant are not subject to settlement."
In Central Pacific Railroad v. Beck, 19 L.D. 100, which was also
a settlement upon unsurveyed land within the place limits of the
general route of the road, and in which a withdrawal had been
ordered in accordance with the provisions of the act making the
grant, Secretary Smith, sustaining the title of the railroad
company, said (p. 103):
"I am clearly of the opinion that, after the withdrawal made
upon the map of general route, no rights could be acquired adverse
to the company by settlement upon the land, and that a settlement
so made, even though it existed at the date of the filing of the
map of definite location, would not serve to except the land
settled upon from the operation of the grant to said company."
In the very last volume of the Land Decisions (vol. 30, p. 247),
in respect to the Southern Pacific Railroad Company, whose granting
act contained a similar provision in reference to withdrawal on the
filing of a map of general route, it was said by Secretary
Hitchcock (p. 249):
"As between individual claimants and the company, no claim could
be predicated upon settlement or entry made after the filing of the
map of general route, and as against such claims,
Page 188 U. S. 147
the grant in effect was operative from April 3, 1871, the date
upon which the map of general route was filed."
So that, from the beginning until the present time, in
construing this grant and others containing like provision, there
has been an unbroken line of decisions in the Land Department to
the effect that a withdrawal made on the filing of the map of
general route prevents any private claims attaching to the
odd-numbered sections of land, and this whether the lands were
surveyed or unsurveyed. Indeed, when Congress in the sixth section
expressly declared that the lands "shall not be liable to sale or
entry or preemption before or after they are surveyed," it would
seem as though it had made every provision which language was
capable of expressing to reserve from private entry for the benefit
of the railroad company all odd-numbered sections, surveyed or
unsurveyed, within the place limits of the line of general
route.
I have already quoted from
Hewitt v. Schultz in
reference to the duty of following, in case of ambiguity, the
construction given to a statute by the department charged with the
execution of such statute. That doctrine was there applied although
it appeared that the practice of the department during the building
of the railroad had been one way and only changed after its
completion, and the latter construction was upheld by this Court as
the ruling of the department. It was said (p.
180 U. S.
156):
"It was admitted at the hearing that the construction of the
Northern Pacific Act of 1864 announced by Secretary Vilas had been
adhered to in the administration of the public lands by the Land
Department. We are now asked to overthrow that construction by
holding that it was competent for the Land Department, immediately
upon the definite location of the line of the railroad, to withdraw
draw from the settlement laws all the odd-numbered sections within
the indemnity limits as defined by the act of Congress. If this
were done, it is to be apprehended that great, if not endless,
confusion would ensue in the administration of the public lands,
and that the rights of a vast number of people who have acquired
homes under the preemption and homestead laws, in reliance upon the
ruling of Secretary Vilas and his successors in office, would be
destroyed. "
Page 188 U. S. 148
Now we have a case in which the ruling of the department has
been unchanged from the commencement to the present time -- a
ruling which Secretary Vilas, in 7 L.D.,
supra, called "so
manifest a proposition," and it is wholly disregarded. The recent
and temporary ruling of the Land Department was in the former case
sustained in order, as was said, to protect the settler. Here, the
continuous practice of the department is disregarded, and the
patent issued by it to the railroad company is overthrown.
Still again, the company, by reason of section 6, believing that
a withdrawal was to be made which should operate to its benefit,
filed a map of general route, and a withdrawal was made of the
odd-numbered sections of land. It is now held that such withdrawal
did not withdraw the odd-numbered sections from entry and sale, but
they remained still open to entry or purchase under the land laws.
If that be the true construction, it follows that, whereas, if the
company had filed no map of general route, no one would know where
its line of road was to be until after it filed the map of definite
location, and then the title would attach to all odd-numbered
sections not burdened with existing claims. But by filing the map
of general route, as it did eleven years before filing the map of
definite location, it notified everybody of the proposed route, and
so all settlers could take advantage of that knowledge and enter
the odd-numbered sections contiguous thereto. Having this knowledge
of where the line was to be located, of course, settlers would come
as near to that line as possible in order to take advantage of the
increased value coming from the construction of the road, and so
taking advantage of the notice given, would deplete the grant of
lands which Congress had intended for the benefit of the
company.
But this question has been definitely decided by this Court.
Buttz v. Northern Pacific Railroad Company, 119 U. S.
55. That was an action brought by the railroad company
for the possession of a tract of land within forty miles of the
general route as also of the line of definite location of
plaintiff's road. The defendant entered upon the land in October,
1871, he at the time possessing all the qualifications of a
preemptor and intending
Page 188 U. S. 149
to obtain title by preemption. At that time, the tract was, with
others, in the occupation of the Sioux Indians. An agreement for
the surrender by the Indians of all their rights was ratified on
May 19, 1873. On May 26, 1873, the company filed in the Land
Department its map of definite location. The defendant was
therefore in occupation of the tract with intent to preempt it for
seven days after the rights of the Indians had ceased and before
the filing of the map of definite location. So if the opinion of
the court now announced had prevailed, the defendant was entitled
to hold that tract as against the company. On the 11th of August,
1873, he presented his application for entry, which was refused,
and refused because it was within the forty-mile limit, as shown by
a map of general route filed on February 21, 1872. This presents
the precise question here involved. The unanimous opinion of the
Court sustained the action of the Land Department in refusing
defendant's application to enter, and confirmed the title of the
railroad company. In the course of the opinion, by Mr. Justice
Field, it was said (p.
119 U. S.
72):
"When the general route of the road is thus fixed in good faith,
and information thereof given to the Land Department by filing the
map thereof with the Commissioner of the General Land Office, or
the Secretary of the Interior, the law withdraws from sale or
preemption the odd sections to the extent of forty miles on each
side. The object of the law in this particular is plain -- it is to
preserve the land for the company to which, in aid of the
construction of the road, it is granted. . . . Nor is there
anything inconsistent with this view of the sixth section as to the
general route, in the clause in the third section making the grant
operative only upon such odd sections as have not been reserved,
sold, granted, or otherwise appropriated, and to which preemption
and other rights and claims have not attached, when a map of the
definite location has been filed. The third section does not
embrace sales and preemptions in cases where the sixth section
declares that the land shall not be subject to sale or preemption.
The two sections must be so construed as to give effect to both, if
that be practicable."
This decision, rendered seventeen years ago, has never
hitherto
Page 188 U. S. 150
been overruled. It was reaffirmed in
St. Paul & Pacific
Railroad Company v. Northern Pacific Railroad Company,
139 U. S. 1,
139 U. S. 17-18,
in which, speaking for a unanimous court, Mr. Justice Field
said:
"Besides the withdrawal made by the Secretary of the Interior of
lands within the forty-mile limit, on the 13th of August, 1870,
preserved the lands for the benefit of the Northern Pacific
Railroad from the operation of any subsequent grants to other
companies not specifically declared to cover the premises. The
Northern Pacific act directed that the President should cause the
lands to be surveyed forty miles in width on both sides of the
entire line of the road, after the general route should be fixed
and as fast as might be required by the construction of the road,
and provided that the odd sections of lands granted should not be
liable to sale, entry, or preemption before or after they were
surveyed, except by the company. They were therefore excepted by
that legislation from grants, independently of the withdrawal by
the Secretary of the Interior. His action in formally announcing
their withdrawal was only giving publicity to what the law itself
declared. The object of the withdrawal was to preserve the land
unencumbered until the completion and acceptance of the road. . . .
After such withdrawal no interest in the lands granted can be
acquired, against the rights of the company, except by special
legislative declaration, nor, indeed, in the absence of its
announcement, after the general route is fixed."
In the opinion of the majority, some later cases are referred to
which are said to qualify the decision in
Buttz v. Northern
Pacific Railroad Company. But even the slightest attention to
what was decided in those cases shows that in no manner do they
qualify or limit that decision so far as it affects the present
question. Before noticing those cases, it is well to consider what
was the purpose and effect of section 6. It was not a granting
section. It did not purport to give title to anything to the
company. Its whole scope and effect was to withdraw from sale,
entry, or preemption the odd-numbered sections in order that, when
the company filed its map of definite location it might secure
those odd-numbered sections. The grant was
Page 188 U. S. 151
made only by section 3 and attached to particular lands when the
map of definite location was filed, but the proposition laid down
in the
Buttz case -- and the proposition I am contending
for here -- is that this plaintiff in error could acquire nothing
by his entry upon an odd-numbered section after the filing of the
map of general route and the withdrawal; that the tract was
therefore free from a claim of any kind when the map of definite
location was filed, and so there was nothing to prevent the
railroad company from receiving title.
Now the cases referred to are
St. Paul & Pacific v.
Northern Pacific, 139 U. S. 1;
United States v. Northern Pacific Railroad Company,
152 U. S. 284;
Northern Pacific Railroad Company v. Sanders, 166 U.
S. 620;
Menotti v. Dillon, 167 U.
S. 703;
United States v. Oregon &c. Land
Company, 176 U. S. 28;
Wilcox v. Eastern Oregon Land Company, 176
U. S. 551, and
Messinger v. Same, 176 U. S.
58. After quoting from the opinions in some, the court
sums up by saying:
"The cases above cited definitely determine that the railroad
company acquired no vested interest in any particular section of
land until after a definite location was shown by an accepted map
of its line."
This is a proposition among the A, B, C's of public land law and
needed no authorities in support thereof. But that proposition
throws no light on the question as to the scope of the withdrawal
given by section 6, and when the cases themselves are referred to
not one of them conflicts with the proposition I have heretofore
laid down. I have already shown what was decided in
St. Paul
& Pacific v. Northern Pacific, and need not repeat. In
United States v. Northern Pacific Railroad Company, it
appeared that the Northern Pacific Railroad Company had attempted
to locate a line from Portland directly north to Puget Sound, and
in 1865 had filed a map of the general route thereof. Such a line
was not within the authority granted by the act of Congress
incorporating the Northern Pacific Railroad Company. On May 4,
1870, Congress made a land grant to the Oregon Central Railroad
Company which included some of the lands within the forty-mile
limits of the above-mentioned general route. On May 31, 1870, and
twenty-seven days after the grant to the Oregon Central
Railroad
Page 188 U. S. 152
Company, Congress passed an act which authorized the Northern
Pacific company to construct a line from Portland to Puget Sound,
with the privileges and grants provided for in the original act of
incorporation, and it was held that the rights of the Oregon
Central Railroad Company antedated and were superior to those of
the Northern Pacific. First in time, first in right, is as to lands
within place limits the settled rule of railroad land grants. What
possible bearing this decision can have upon the case before us it
is hard to conceive. In
Northern Pacific Railroad Company v.
Sanders, the lands in controversy were claimed as mineral
lands, and applications for entry of them as such were pending in
the Land Department. The court had held in
Barden v. Northern
Pacific Railroad Company, 154 U. S. 288,
that mineral lands did not pass under the grant to the railroad
company, and that whether they were known or not known to be
mineral lands at the time of the filing of the map of definite
location was immaterial. Of course, it followed that whether they
were known or not known at the time of the filing of the map of the
general route was also immaterial. The lands were of such a
character as could not, in any event, pass to the railroad company
any more than the even-numbered sections. They were not with drawn
by filing the map of general route; they did not pass by filing the
map of definite location. The four remaining cases all proceeded
upon the one proposition that the mere filing of the map of general
route does not preclude Congress from making subsequently thereto
and prior to the filing of the map of definite location -- that is,
prior to the time when title vested in the company -- any other
specific grant of the reserved lands. In other words, until the
proposed grantee shall have done all that is necessary to vest
title in it, there remains in Congress the power to make other
disposition of the lands. But this was no new doctrine in the
public land law. It was laid down in
Frisbie v.
Whitney, 9 Wall. 187; in the well known
Yosemite Valley
Case, 15 Wall. 77, and has been followed in many
cases since. Of course, Congress could at any time before the
filing of the map of definite location and while the title of the
company was still inchoate, reserve any
Page 188 U. S. 153
of the lands for military or other purposes, or make a specific
grant of them to individuals or corporations. But, as said in
St. Paul & Pacific Railroad Company v. Northern Pacific
Railroad Company, 139 U. S. 1, "after
such withdrawal, no interest in the lands granted can be acquired
against the rights of the company except by special legislative
declaration," and in this case there has been no such legislative
declaration.
But it is said that the case of the plaintiff in error is
"placed on impregnable ground by the Act of May 14, 1880, c. 89." I
pass the proposition that this is a general act for the relief of
settlers on public lands and the familiar doctrine that a general
law passed after a special act does not interfere with the
provisions of that act, provided there is room for the operation of
both, and there is ample room for the operation of this act on
public lands generally without interfering with the special
provisions made in the Northern Pacific grant. But the act itself
has no force whatever as applied to the present question. The
provision is that one who is a settler on any of the public lands
of the United States
"with the intention of claiming the same under the homestead
laws, shall be allowed the same time to file his homestead
application and perfect his original entry in the United States
land office as is now allowed to settlers under the preemption laws
to put their claims on record, and his right shall relate back to
the date of settlement, the same as if he had settled under the
preemption laws."
If we turn to the preemption law, we find, Revised Statutes,
section 2264, that a person intending to preempt shall, "within
thirty days after the date of such settlement, file with the
register of the proper district a written statement." That is, the
preemptioner had thirty days after settlement within which to make
his entry, while, when we turn to the homestead law, Revised
Statutes, section 2290, we find that a party seeking to
homestead
"shall, upon application to the register of the land office in
which he is about to make such entry, make affidavit . . . that his
entry is made for the purpose of actual settlement and
cultivation."
In other words, his right is initiated by the application to
enter, and does not relate back to any settlement, and this statute
simply gives him a right of thirty days' occupancy before
Page 188 U. S. 154
making his application to enter. How such a statute, equalizing
the rights of one seeking to make a homestead entry with those of
one seeking to make preemption, can have any pertinency to the
question before us passes my comprehension.
Again, several pages of the opinion are taken up with references
to quotations from opinions in the Land Department as to the
meaning of the term "occupied by homestead settlers." Here again, I
am unable to see the pertinency of these references. If there had
been no withdrawal, and the question arose as to the effect of
plaintiff in error's occupancy of the land as against the rights of
the company obtained by the map of definite location, these
authorities might be worth considering, but they throw no light
upon the effect of the withdrawal, which is the question before
us.
The fact that this tract was not surveyed at the time the
plaintiff in error entered upon it, nor until after the completion
of the road, is immaterial. By the terms of section 6, the
prohibition against sale, entry, or preemption extended to lands
"before or after they are surveyed." Reference is made to several
cases in which we held that the rights of a settler were not lost
by the failure of the government to make a survey prior to his
occupation. But those decisions were to the effect that the settler
loses nothing by the neglect of the government. Here it is held
that he gains something. If the survey had been completed before he
commenced his occupation, and he could not then enter an
odd-numbered section, surely he could not, in face of the
prohibition of the section, enter the land after it had been
surveyed. If, instead of going upon lands that had been surveyed,
the settler chose to go into unsurveyed territory, he took his
chances of placing his improvements upon an odd or even-numbered
section. If he placed them upon what proved to be an odd-numbered
section, he acquired no right as against the grant to the company.
If he put them on what proved to be an even-numbered section, he
would be compelled to pay the government double price. In the
latter event, does anyone for a moment suppose that it would be an
answer to the demand for a double price that the government had
failed to make a survey before he chose to occupy the land and
make
Page 188 U. S. 155
improvements thereon? The construction placed by the majority,
not only takes from the railroad company the land which was granted
to it, but deprived the government of that which it intended to
obtain, a double price for the lands it reserved for sale.
Finally, I may say this decision clouds the title to all the
lands granted to the railroad company. At the time the map of
definite location was filed, as well as at the time the road was
completed, there was not on the records of the Land Department a
single word or mark which indicated to anybody that plaintiff in
error was on the land or claiming it, or that the title of the
railroad company was other than perfect. But because plaintiff in
error was on the land it is held that the patent of the government
to the railroad company conveyed to it no title, and that this
occupant by parol testimony may show the fact of his occupancy and
overthrow the record title. Yet this Court unanimously held in
Northern Pacific Railroad Company v. Colburn, 164 U.
S. 383, that mere occupation, unaccompanied by the
filing of a claim in the land office, did not exclude a tract from
the operation of the land grant. And that there was no oversight or
lack of attention to this particular matter is shown by the fact
that the United States promptly filed a brief of thirty-six pages,
quoting the principal land decisions referred to in the opinion of
the majority, and asked the court to reconsider its decision, which
application was denied without dissent. Indeed, as appears from the
authorities cited in that opinion, the conclusion was in accord
with prior rulings, to the effect that there must be something of
record in the Land Department to support the contention of an
adverse right. That unanimous opinion of the court is put one side
by the assertion that the land there in controversy had been
surveyed, while in this it had not been. No distinction was made in
the discussion between surveyed and unsurveyed lands, no suggestion
that it affected the question in the slightest degree, and, as we
have seen, the prohibition against sale, entry, or preemption in
section 6 extended to lands unsurveyed as well as surveyed. How can
one say in respect to any tract claimed by the railroad company
that it was not at the time of the filing of the map of
definite
Page 188 U. S. 156
location in the occupation of someone intending to preempt or
homestead it? If such occupation is sufficient to avoid the patent
of the United States, has the company sure title to any lands?
I think the judgment ought to be affirmed.