Under the Act of March 3, 1875, c. 152, 18 Stat. 482, granting
to railroads the right of way through public lands of the United
States, such grant takes effect either on the actual construction
of the road or on the approval of the Secretary of the Interior
after the definite location and the filing of a profile of the road
in the local land office, as provided in § 4 of the act, and a
valid homestead entry made after final survey but before either the
construction of the road or the approval by the Secretary of the
profile is superior to the rights of the company.
Jamestown
& Northern Railway Co. v. Jones, 177 U.
S. 125, explained and followed.
107 N.W. 971 affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 208 U. S. 254
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought by the defendant in error against
plaintiff in error in the District Court of Foster County, State of
North Dakota, to recover compensation for injury to his land by the
construction and operation of the railroad of the plaintiff in
error.
Defendant in error has a patent to the land, and the question is
whether, before his settlement under the homestead laws, plaintiff
in error acquired a right of way over the land for its railroad
under the Act of March 3, 1875. 18 Stat. 482, c. 152.
The trial court held: (1) that defendant in error was "the owner
in absolute fee simple of the land," and that his title related
back to July 1, 1892, the date of his settlement; (2) that, the
railroad
"having attempted to acquire a right of way across said land
before and in anticipation of the construction of its railroad, in
compliance with the provisions of § 4 of the act of Congress
approved March 3, 1875, the filing with the register of the
district land office and approval by the Secretary of the Interior
of the plat or profile of the section of its railroad extending
across said land was a condition precedent to the acquisition or
claim on its part to right of way, and any title, estate, or
interest acquired by it in or to said land dates from said filing
and approval."
Judgment was entered for the sum of $1,000 damages and costs,
and it was adjudged, upon paying the sum, the title to the right of
way should vest in the railroad company.
The facts, as recited by the supreme court in its opinion, are
as follows:
"On June 25, 1892, the plaintiff's application to enter the
quarter section in question was presented to and accepted by the
register and receiver of the United States land office at Fargo. On
July 1, 1892, the plaintiff took up his residence on the land under
his homestead entry and in all things complied with the federal
homestead laws. On November 4,
Page 208 U. S. 255
1899, a patent conveying the title to him was issued. That
instrument makes no mention of any easement in favor of the
railroad."
"The defendant railway company was organized in 1891. Its
articles were filed with the Secretary of the Interior on March 26,
1891, and approved by him on April 15, 1891, and it thereby became
entitled to the benefit of the Act of March 3, 1875."
"In October, 1891, the company made a preliminary survey of its
proposed line of railway across the land, and on May 13, 1892,
completed its final survey, definitely fixing the line of its
proposed road over the quarter section. The line as surveyed was
marked by stakes driven into the ground one hundred feet apart,
indicating the center of the roadway to be constructed. The
definite location of the route as fixed by this survey was approved
and adopted by the company's board of directors on June 17, 1892,
being eight days before the plaintiff made his homestead
filing."
"The map or profile of its road as thus definitely located was
filed in the local land office at Fargo on July 20, 1892, and
received the approval of the Secretary of the Interior on October
14, 1892. In the latter part of July, 1892, the company constructed
its road across the land on the line as surveyed, and ever since
has operated its railway over the roadway so constructed, using and
appropriating for that purpose a strip 200 feet wide, 100 feet on
each side of the center of the track."
107 N.W. 971.
On these facts, the court affirmed the judgment of the trial
court, basing its decision on
Jamestown & Northern Railway
Co. v. Jones, 177 U. S. 125. The
court said that it was a necessary inference from that case
"that actual construction is the only sufficient act, other than
compliance with § 4, to constitute a definite location, and
the right of way does not exist before actual construction unless
the company's profile map has been approved by the Secretary before
the settler's rights attached. "
Page 208 U. S. 256
It will be necessary, therefore, to consider § 4 of the act
and its interpretation in that case.
Section 1 of the act reads:
"That the right of way through the public lands of the United
States is hereby granted to any railroad company . . . which shall
have filed with the Secretary of the Interior a copy of its
articles of incorporation, and due proofs of its organization, . .
. to the extent of one hundred feet on each side of the central
line of said road."
Section 4 reads as follows (18 Stat. 483):
"SEC. 4. That any railroad company desiring to secure the
benefits of this act shall, within twelve months after the location
of any section of twenty miles of its road, if the same be upon
surveyed lands, and, if upon unsurveyed lands, within twelve months
after the survey thereof by the United States, file with the
register of the land office for the district where such land is
located a profile of its road, and upon approval thereof by the
Secretary of the Interior the same shall be noted upon the plats in
said office, and thereafter all such lands over which such right of
way shall pass shall be disposed of, subject to such right of way:
Provided, That if any section of said road shall not be
completed within five years after the location of said section, the
rights herein granted shall be forfeited as to any such uncompleted
section of said road."
Did the district court and the supreme court construe this
section correctly? The railroad contends against an affirmative
answer, and urges that it is the location of its road which
initiates a railroad company's right, and which, "if regularly
followed up, makes it the first in right as to any unoccupied
government land." And this, it is contended, is a necessary
conclusion from other provisions which make the location the first
act the act from which "everything is reckoned" -- the time within
which the map must be filed and the time within which the road must
be built. And it is further urged that an entry upon the land to
locate the road is as necessary as an entry on the land to build
the road, and, being there,
Page 208 U. S. 257
the railroad "could not become a trespasser, either as to the
government or as to the plaintiff." In further support of the
contention, it is pointed out that Congress gave the company twelve
months after the location within which to make its filing, and
therefore in analogy to preemption and homestead laws, Congress
intended to protect the location during the time allowed for the
filing of the profile or plat. But § 4 gives little play to
construction or the analogies which the company invoke. That
section determines the priority of rights between railroads and
settlers by explicit language. A right of way is granted, but, to
secure it, three things are necessary: (1) location of the road;
(2) filing a profile of it in the local land office, and (3) the
approval thereof by the Secretary of the Interior, to be noted upon
the plats in the local office. It is after these things are done
that the statute fixes the right of the railroad and subjects the
disposition of the land, under the land laws, to that right. "And
thereafter," are the words of the statute, "all such lands over
which such right of way shall pass shall be disposed of subject to
such right of way." It would be a free construction of these words
to give them the meaning for which the railroad company contends.
They neither convey an unnatural sense nor lead to an unnatural
consequence. Unless rights under the act of 1875 and rights under
the land laws were to be kept for an indeterminate time in
uncertainty and possible conflict, to fix some act or point of time
at which they should attach was natural, and to construe language
which is apt and adequate by its sense and arrangement to express
one time to mean another would be a pretty free exercise of
construction. We admit that the letter of a statute is not always
adhered to, and words may be transposed, but the necessity for it
must be indicated to accomplish the purpose of the legislation.
There is always a presumption that the words were intended as
written and in the order as written -- certainly when they express
a definite sense which would be changed to another with different
and opposing legal consequences. The railroad company, however,
Page 208 U. S. 258
contends for that result. We have stated its contentions, and,
it is urged, if there is difficulty in accepting them, it arises
"from a too rigid and literal or verbal construction" of §
4;
"that the word 'thereafter' means only after the last act
recited has been done, whereas it is perfectly legitimate to
consider that the term 'thereafter' applied to the first thing
which the railroad company was required to do, to-wit, the location
of its road; that it refers to the whole group of acts for securing
the title, and that, by the doctrine of relation, when the map is
approved, the title vests in the railway company as of the date of
the location of its road."
And this, it is further urged, is the rule applied to preemptors
on the public lands and which this Court has applied to some
railway land grants. The contention is supported by
Kinion v.
Railway Co., 118 Mo. 577;
Lewis v. Railway, 17 Utah
504; and, it is urged, by
Denver & Rio Grande R. Co. v.
Hanoum, 19 Colo. 162. It is opposed by
Lilienthal v. So.
Cal. Ry. Co., 56 F. 701;
Larsen v. Oregon Co., 19 Or.
240;
Hamilton v. Spokane, 3 Idaho 164;
Enoch v.
Spokane, 6 Wash. 393;
Denver &c. v. Wilson, 28
Colo. 6. The simple weight of opinion is against the contention of
the railroad, and its counsel meets the fact squarely, and says
that those cases "are, in their broad scope, in clear and
unmistakable conflict with the fundamental principle on which"
Jamestown & Northern Railway Co. v. Jones was
decided,
"and rest upon the hard and fixed proposition that no railroad
company under this act [act of 1875] could get any right in the
land until its map was approved."
But counsel, while invoking the "fundamental principle" of
Jamestown & Northern Railway Co. v. Jones, attacks the
construction of the statute there made and the reasoning which led
us to the principle.
That case decided three propositions: (1) that a railroad
company becomes specifically a grantee under the act of 1875 by
filing its articles of incorporation and due proof of its
organization under the same with the Secretary of the Interior;
Page 208 U. S. 259
(2) that the lands granted were identified by a definite
location of the right of way, and, sustaining the contention of the
railroad that definite location could be made by actual
construction of the road against the decision of the lower courts
that such location could only be made by a profile map of the road,
we said that the contention gives practical operation to the
statute and enables the railroad company to secure the grant by an
actual construction of the road, or, in advance of construction, by
filing a map as provided in § 4; (3) actual construction of
the road is certainly unmistakable evidence and notice of
appropriation.
This, it is now contended or intimated, reads something into the
statute which is not there, and that the Jamestown & Northern
Railway Company "could only maintain its claim to right of way upon
the same construction of the statute as that for which the
plaintiff in error contends." In other words, location initiated
the company's right, and any other view will put
Jamestown
& Northern Railway Company v. Jones in opposition to the
decisions in railway land grant cases. The latter proposition was
disposed of in the case. The answer to the other is contained in
the words of the statute, and the essential difference between a
mere location, movable at the will of the company, and the actual
construction of the road, necessarily fixing its position and
consummating the purpose for which the grant of a right of way was
given.
Judgment affirmed.