The grant made by the Act of May 1, 1864, c. 84, 13 Stat. 72,
was one
in praesenti.
Where a railway land grant is one
in praesenti, the
beneficiary is entitled to all the lands granted within place
limits which had not been appropriated or reserved by the United
States for any purpose, or to which a homestead or preemption right
had not attached, prior to the definite location of the road
proposed to be aided.
A claim by a state that it is entitled to lands as swamp or
overflowed under the Swamp Land Act of September 28, 1850, c. 84, 9
Stat. 519, is not an appropriation or reservation if the land is
not in fact swamp or overflowed and the claim sustained by a
decision or ruling to that effect of competent authority.
Under the Swamp Land Act, power to identify lands as swamp or
overflowed within the meaning of the act is conferred solely on the
Secretary of the Interior.
French v. Fyan, 93 U. S.
169.
A decision of the Commissioner of the Land Office, on notice to
all parties and after hearing, that lands claimed as swamp or
overflowed under the Swamp Land Act of 1850 are not swamp or
overflowed, or of a character embraced by the act, and which has
never been appealed from, modified or reversed, but has been relied
on by purchasers for value and in good faith, should not, after a
lapse of twenty-five years, be disturbed by the courts where it
does not appear that the lands were actually swamp or overflowed,
when the decision was made.
160 F. 818 affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 218 U. S. 234
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
By an act approved March 3d 1887, c. 376 (amended by Act of
February 12th, 1896, c. 18, and by Act of March 2, 1896, c. 39, 29
Stat. 6, 42), Congress provided for the adjustment of land grants
theretofore made in aid of the construction of railroads, and for
the forfeiture of unearned lands, and for the relinquishment or
reconveyance to the United States of lands which had been certified
or patented to or for the use of any railroad company.
If, upon completing such adjustment, it appeared that, from any
cause, lands had been erroneously certified or patented by the
United States to or for the use of a railroad company by, through,
or under grant from the United States to aid in the construction of
a railroad, then it became the duty of the Secretary of the
Interior to demand the relinquishment or reconveyance of such lands
to the United States, whether within granted or indemnity limits,
and if such demand was not complied with by a named time, then the
Attorney General was to institute the necessary proceedings to
cancel all patents, certificates, or other evidence of title issued
for such lands, and to restore the title to the United States.
Provision was made for the protection, by patents, of purchasers in
good faith from the grantee company, and the Secretary of the
Interior was required to demand, on behalf of the United States,
"payment from the company which has so disposed of such lands of an
amount equal to the government price for similar lands," and if
payment was refused, within a time named, "the Attorney General was
to institute suits against the company for such amount."
Ibid.
Under the authority of that act, the present suit was brought by
the United States in 1903. It relates to about
Page 218 U. S. 235
4,300 acres of lands in Kossuth, Palo Alto, and Dickinson
Counties, Iowa, which, the United States alleges, were erroneously
patented (in 1880) to the defendant railway company. That company
sold the lands to purchasers in good faith, and refuses to account
to the United States for the proceeds of such sales.
The relief asked is a decree compelling the railway company to
account for such proceeds, and declaring such indebtedness to be a
lien upon all funds in its hands realized from the above sales. The
company took issue with the government by answer, but, before the
cause was heard, the material facts were stipulated by the parties.
The circuit court dismissed the bill, and its judgment was affirmed
by the circuit court of appeals.
In order that the grounds upon which the lower courts proceeded
may fully appear, the circumstances under which the defendant
railroad company became connected with the lands must be
stated.
By an act passed May 12th, 1864, c. 84, Congress, in aid of the
construction of certain railroads, granted to the State of Iowa,
for the use and benefit of the McGregor Western Railroad
Company,
"every alternate section of land designated by odd numbers for
ten sections in width on each side of said roads; but, in case it
shall appear that the United States have, when the lines or routes
of said roads are definitely located, sold any section or any part
thereof, granted as aforesaid, or that the right of preemption or
homestead settlement has attached to the same, or that the same has
been reserved by the United States for any purpose whatever, then
it shall be the duty of the Secretary of the Interior to cause to
be selected, for the purposes aforesaid, from the public lands of
the United States nearest to the tiers of sections above specified,
so much land in alternate sections, or parts of sections,
designated by odd numbers, as shall be equal to such lands as the
United States have sold, reserved, or
Page 218 U. S. 236
otherwise appropriated, or to which the right of homestead
settlement or preemption has attached, as aforesaid, which lands
thus indicated by odd numbers and sections, by the direction of the
Secretary of the Interior, shall be held by the State of Iowa for
the uses and purposes aforesaid:
Provided, That the lands
so selected shall in no case be located more than twenty miles from
the lines of said roads:
Provided, further, That any and
all lands heretofore reserved to the United States by any act of
Congress, or in any other manner by competent authority, for the
purpose of aiding in any object of internal improvement
or
other purpose whatever, be, and the same are hereby, reserved
and
excepted from the operation of this act, except so far
as it may be found necessary to locate the route of said roads
through such reserved lands, in which case the right of way shall
be granted, subject to the approval of the President of the United
States."
13 Stat. 72. The provisions of this act were duly accepted by
the state in 1866. Laws of Iowa, 1866, c. 42, p. 189.
The McGregor & Western Railroad Company failed to comply
with the conditions of the above act. Thereupon, all lands and
rights to land granted to it by the Act of 1864 (the lands now in
dispute being part of those so granted) were "absolutely and
entirely resumed by the State of Iowa," by an act of February 27,
1868, which declared that "the same be and are as fully and
absolutely vested in the state as if the same had never been
granted to said railroad company." Laws of Iowa, 1868, p. 20. The
state then, by an act of March 31, 1868, gave the benefit of the
grant for the road in question to the McGregor & Sioux City
Railway Company, which accepted the terms prescribed by that act.
Laws of Iowa, 1868, c. 58, p. 70. But that company also failed to
comply with the terms of the grant, and the lands and rights of
lands granted were again resumed by the state, and afterwards were
passed upon certain terms and conditions to the Chicago,
Milwaukee
Page 218 U. S. 237
& St. Paul Railway Company, by an act passed February 27th,
1878. The latter company accepted the provisions of that grant,
and, in recognition of its rights, the United States, in 1880,
patented to the state for the benefit of that company the following
lands, covered by the Act of 1864: 320 acres in Dickinson County,
by patent of April, 1880; 3754.81 in Kossuth and Palo Alto
Counties. These lands embraced all sued for except two tracts
aggregating 200 acres in Kossuth County, to which the present
defendant asserted no title. Laws of Iowa, 1878, c. 21, p. 18. Upon
compliance with the terms and conditions prescribed in that act,
the Governor of Iowa was authorized to patent and transfer to the
present defendant, the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway
Company, the lands mentioned in the act of Congress of 1864.
In 1864 and 1869 maps of definite location, designating the line
of said road in Iowa, as indicated in the act of 1864, were filed
in the office of the Commissioner of the General Land Office.
It is alleged in the bill of complaint that, at the date of such
definite location, all the lands the proceeds of the sale of which
the government now claims, by which were within the ten-mile or
place limits of the railroad, were covered by existing claims of
record in the office of the Commissioner of the General Land
Office, consisting of homestead entries, preemption declaratory
statements, warrant locations, etc., and were pending before the
Department of the Interior for adjudication. If that were true,
then, by the very terms of the act of Congress, the lands in
question would have been excepted from the grant of 1864. But the
defendant denied in its answer that such fact existed, and it does
not appear from the evidence that any homestead entry, preemption,
declaratory statement, or warrant location had been made prior to
the definite location of the line of the railroad. On the contrary,
it was stipulated in the case that, prior to and on
Page 218 U. S. 238
August 30th, 1864 -- which was after the passage by Congress of
the original granting act, and was the date of the filing of the
plat of definite location of the road --
none of the lands
described in the bill of complaint had been covered by any
homestead entry, preemption, declaratory statement, or warrant
location or other existing claims of record in the office of the
Commissioner of the General Land Office. In that view, and if
this were the whole case, then, beyond all question, the law would
be in favor of the railway company; for the grant of 1864 was one
in praesenti for the purposes therein mentioned, and
according to the settled doctrines of this Court, the beneficiary
of the grant was entitled to the lands granted in place limits
which had not been appropriated or reserved by the United States
for any purpose, or to which a homestead or preemption right had
not attached
prior to the definite location of the road
proposed to be aided. The grant plainly included odd-numbered
sections, within ten miles on each side of the road, which were
part of the public domain, not previously appropriated or set apart
for some specific purpose at the time of the definite location.
But the government insists that, before the passage of the Act
of 1864, these lands had been reserved by what was done under or in
execution of what is known as the Swamp Land Act of September 28,
1850, and cannot therefore be regarded as granted by, but were
excepted from, the operation of the Act of 1864. 13 Stat. 72,
§ 1. Consequently, it is contended by the United States,
patents could not have been legally issued to the railway company
under the Act of 1864. The contention of the railway company, on
the other hand, is that the lands in question were not in fact
swamp or overflowed lands granted by the Act of 1850 to which any
right could legally attach in behalf of the state under that act;
therefore, it is contended that nothing done under that act availed
or could have availed the state except a decision
Page 218 U. S. 239
or ruling by competent authority, in due form, that these lands
were in fact within the class of swamp or overflowed lands
mentioned in the Act of 1850.
In view of what has been said, it becomes necessary to inquire
into the scope and effect of the Swamp Land Act of 1850.
By the Act of Congress of September 28th, 1850, c. 84, Congress
granted to Arkansas all the
swamp and overflowed lands
unfit for cultivation within its limits and which remained unsold
at the time, to enable the state to construct the necessary levees
and drains to reclaim such lands. That act provided that it should
be
"the duty of the Secretary of the Interior, as soon as may be
practicable after the passage of this act, to make out an accurate
list and plats of the lands described as aforesaid, and transmit
the same to the Governor of the State of Arkansas, and at the
request of said governor, cause a patent to be issued to the state
therefor, and on that patent, the fee simple to said lands shall
vest in the said State of Arkansas, subject to the disposal of the
legislature thereof:
Provided, however, that the
proceeds of said lands, whether from sale or by direct
appropriation in kind, shall be applied, exclusively,
as far as
necessary, to the purpose of reclaiming said lands by means of
the levees and drains aforesaid"
§ 2; that,
"in making out a list and plats of the land aforesaid, all legal
subdivisions, the greater part of which is 'wet and unfit for
cultivation' shall be included in said list and plats, but when the
greater part of a subdivision is not of that character, the whole
of it shall be excluded therefrom,"
§ 3, and that
"the provisions of this act be extended to, and their benefits
be conferred upon, each of the other states of the Union in which
such swamp and overflowed lands, known and designated as aforesaid,
may be situated"
§ 4.
We have seen that, by the Act of 1864, the railroad company, by
the grant
in praesenti in that act contained, was
Page 218 U. S. 240
to get the odd-numbered sections within ten miles on each side
of its line, and not sold by the United States before definite
location, or to which no right of preemption or homestead
settlement had attached at the time of such location, or which had
not been previously reserved by the United States for some purpose.
It is stipulated that, when the line of the railroad was definitely
located, none of the lands in question
"were covered by any homestead entry, preemption, declaratory
statements, or warrant locations, or other existing claims of
record in the office of the Commissioner of the General Land Office
of the Department of the Interior."
But the United States contends that what was done prior to the
definite location of the road, for the purpose of bringing these
lands under the operation of the Act of 1850 as swamp and
overflowed lands, created a claim that covered or attached these
lands. But this contention of the government must be considered in
the light of the fundamental inquiry whether the latter claim can
avail anything whatever
if the lands were not in fact swamp or
overflowed lands, for only lands
of that character
were granted by the act of 1850, and no mere claim that they were
swamp or overflowed lands could make them such unless it was
sustained by some decision or ruling by competent authority to that
effect. There never was any such decision or ruling. It is true
that Dickinson, Palo Alto, and Kossuth Counties -- acting, we may
assume, for the purposes of this case, under the sanction of the
state -- made selections of those lands as swamp lands; but it is
stipulated and agreed in this case that those selections were never
adopted, ratified, or confirmed in any manner by the Interior or
Land Department, but remained pending and undetermined therein down
to the year 1876; that,
"during that time, the State of Iowa claimed said lands as being
swamp and overflowed lands granted to it under and by virtue of
said Act of Congress of September 28, 1850, and as having been
selected
Page 218 U. S. 241
as such by said several counties under authority of an act of
its legislature, approved January 13, 1853, and said McGregor
Western Railroad Company and said McGregor & Sioux City Railway
Company (afterwards McGregor & Missouri River Railway Company)
successively made claims to the same lands as being neither swamp
nor overflowed in character, but as inuring to them respectively,
under the Act of Congress of May 12, 1864, as place lands, within
the ten-mile limits of said grant, under the plat of definite
location filed August 30, 1864; that, on May 31, 1876, and on
October 21, 1876, the Commissioner of the General Land Office, upon
public hearings of the matter of such respective claims, and after
due notice to all parties interested, duly held and adjusted in
writing that the lands in said Dickinson, Kossuth, and Palo Alto
Counties, Iowa, mentioned and described in complainant's exhibit
'A' and in paragraphs 11 and 12 of defendant's answer in this
cause, were not
in fact swamp or overflowed lands, and
were not
of a character embraced in said act of Congress
of September 28, 1850, and known as the Swamp Land Act, and that
the State of Iowa and said several counties were never entitled to
said lands, or any part thereof, under said act. Said hearings were
had pursuant to the requirements of the Act of Congress of March 5,
1872, and said findings and decisions of the Commissioner were
never appealed from, reversed, or modified in any manner, as shown
by the records of said General Land Office."
Nearly thirty years have passed since this decision of the Land
Department, and the United States, without ever appealing from the
decision of the Land Department, now comes forward and asks a court
of equity to cancel the patent issued in 1880 and 1881, under which
the railway claims. Touching this aspect of the case, the circuit
court of appeals said:
"Since then, most, if not all, of the lands have been sold and
conveyed to numerous purchasers of small tracts, who bought them in
good faith and for value.
Page 218 U. S. 242
Twenty-five years or more of quiet enjoyment of the land in
question have now elapsed. No fraud or unfair practices in any
stage of the proceedings leading up to the final patents are
charged against the railway company or any persons acting for it.
In such circumstances, it would, in our opinion, be inequitable and
conducive of no good results to grant the relief sought by this
bill."
In determining this case, it must not be overlooked that the Act
of Congress confers upon the Secretary of the Interior, and upon
him alone, the power to identify particular lands as swamp and
overflow lands embraced by the Act of 1850. Referring to the second
section of that act, Mr. Justice Miller, speaking for the court in
French v. Fyan, 93 U. S. 169,
93 U. S.
171:
"It was under the power conferred by this section that the
patent was issued under which defendant holds the land. We are of
opinion that this section devolved upon the Secretary, as the head
of the department which administered the affairs of the public
lands, the duty, and conferred on him the power, of determining
what lands were of the description granted by that act, and
made his office the tribunal whose decision on that subject was
to be controlling."
To the same effect on this point are
Ehrhardt v.
Hogaboom, 115 U. S. 67,
115 U. S. 68,
and
Rogers Locomotive Machine Works v. American Emigrant
Co., 164 U. S. 559,
164 U. S. 571.
In the latter case, the Court said:
"The identification of lands embraced by the Swamp Land Act was
therefore necessary before the state could claim a patent or
exercise absolute control of them."
We repeat that it must be taken that these lands were not swamp
or overflowed lands that had been reserved by the United States
under the Act of 1850. That fact must be regarded as conclusively
established, as between the present parties. We say conclusively
established for, after full notice to all parties who were
concerned in the matter and who had asserted titles to these lands,
the
Page 218 U. S. 243
Commissioner of the General Land Office decided, in 1876, after
full hearing, that these lands were not, in fact, swamp or
overflowed lands, and that
neither the state nor any of its
counties were entitled to them or any of them under the Act of
1850. That hearing by the Commissioner was had pursuant to
said Act of Congress of March 5th, 1872, c. 39, which provided,
among other things, that the decision should be "without prejudice
to legal entries or the rights of
bona fide settlers under
the homestead and preemption laws of the United States prior to the
date of this act." In any view, that decision was, in contemplation
of law, one by the Secretary of the Interior, who, by the original
act of 1850, was directed to make out accurate lists or plats of
the lands described by that act as swamp and overflowed lands.
Wilcox v.
Jackson, 13 Pet. 498;
Wolsey v. Chapman,
101 U. S. 755,
101 U. S. 768.
The decision was never appealed from, and has never been reversed
or modified. The United States now comes, many years after such
decision, and in disregard of the unreversed decision of the Land
Department, asks a decree which cannot be rendered except upon the
theory that these lands were, in fact, swamp or overflowed lands.
We cannot adopt this theory, nor make any such decree as that
asked. By the Act of 1850, Congress granted
in praesenti
to the state only swamp and overflowed lands within its limits, and
the state legally, we may concede, for the purposes of this case,
passed its interest in such lands to the counties in which they
were situated. A dispute arose between the parties interested in
the question before the Land Department, among whom were the
counties claiming, by sanction of the state, to have legally
selected the lands under the Act of 1850, as to whether the lands
were, in fact swamp or overflowed lands. That dispute, upon notice
and hearing, as we have seen, was decided adversely to the
contentions of the state and of the counties in question, by the
department which alone had authority to
Page 218 U. S. 244
determine what were and what were not swamp or overflowed lands.
We perceive no sound reason why what decision, unreversed and
unmodified in any respect, should not be accepted as conclusive of
the essential facts upon which it was based. In that view, the
United States has no standing in a court of equity to obtain a
decree that will be in disregard of the fact thus conclusively
found by the Land Department. Therefore, their certification to the
state for the benefit of the railway company, under the Act of
1864, cannot be held to have been an error. It is, in substance,
admitted -- at any rate, the record shows -- that, if the lands
were not swamp or overflowed, the company was entitled to them
under the act of 1864 as lands not previously reserved, but granted
for the benefit of the railway company. If, notwithstanding the
decision of the Land Department, the Court should determine the
rights of the parties according to the facts presented to that
department, it would be confronted with the fact, established by
the record, that the lands in question were not swamp or
overflowed. We omit any reference to other questions which, if
determined, would lead to the same result as above stated. The
decree dismissing the bill was right, and
The judgment of the circuit court of appeals is
sustained.