Land within place limits of the Northern Pacific Land Grant Act
of July 2, 1864, c. 217, 13 Stat. 365, actually occupied by a
homesteader intending to acquire title, did not pass by the grant,
but were excepted from its operation, and no right of the railroad
attached to such lands when its line was definitely located.
Nelson v. Northern Pacific Railway, 188 U.
S. 108.
Where a
bona fide settler was in actual occupation of
unsurveyed lands at the time of definite location of the line, the
land occupied was excepted from the grant, and if, before survey,
he sold his improvements to one who also settled on the land
intending to apply for title under the homestead laws of the United
States, the claim of the latter is superior to that of the railroad
company notwithstanding the original settler had no claim of
record.
A settler in actual occupation before the location of the
definite line of
Page 221 U. S. 209
the railroad can stand upon his occupancy until the lands are
surveyed, and his claim cannot be defeated by the railroad's
assuming without right, at a date prior to his application, to
assert a claim to the lands.
Under the Act of May 14, 1880, c. 89, 21 Stat. 140, delay on the
part of a homesteader in making application after survey cannot be
taken advantage of by one who had acquired no right prior to the
filing, and so
held that, where the Northern Pacific land
grant had not attached on account of actual occupation, delay on
the part of the settler in filing after survey did not inure to the
benefit of the company.
Nelson v. Northern Pacific Railway Co., 188 U.
S. 108, was not modified by
United States v.
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway, 218 U.
S. 233, as to the rights of
bona fide settlers
which attached prior to definite location.
Where, by error of law, the Land Office incorrectly holds a
party is entitled to patent and issues it, the courts can declare
that the patent is held by the patentee in trust for the party
actually entitled to have his ownership in the lands
recognized.
The facts, which involve the rights of settlers on the public
lands and those of the Northern Pacific Railroad Company under the
Act of July 2, 1864, are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this suit, involving the title to the southeast quarter of
Section 35, Township 15 North, Range 4 West, in the State of
Montana, the defendants McDonald and Auchard, now appellants, claim
title under a patent issued by the United States to the Northern
Pacific Railway Company, successor to the Northern Pacific Railroad
Company to which a grant of lands was made by the Act of Congress
of
Page 221 U. S. 210
July 2, 1864, 13 Stat. 365, c. 217. The plaintiff, Trodick,
seeks to obtain a decree adjudging that the title under the patent
be held in trust for him, his contention being that he is the real,
equitable owner of the land by virtue of the homestead laws of the
United States, and that no patent therefor could rightfully have
been issued to the railroad company. The circuit court of the
United States dismissed the bill, with costs to defendants. But the
circuit court of appeals reversed the decree, with directions to
give judgment for the plaintiff.
The facts in the case are few and are substantially
undisputed.
By the third section of the Act of 1864, Congress made a grant
of public lands to the Northern Pacific Railroad Company in these
words (so far as it is necessary to state them):
"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,
Page 221 U. S. 211
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."
13 Stat. 365, 368.
The company filed its map of definite location on July 6, 1882,
but one Lemline was then in the actual occupancy of the land as a
residence. He settled upon it in 1877, and thereafter made claim to
it as his homestead, intending from the outset to acquire title
under the laws of the United States as soon as the land was
surveyed. He continuously resided on the land until his death,
which did not occur until 1889. A short time prior to his death,
Lemline sold the improvements he made on the land to the plaintiff,
Trodick. This he had the right to do, although he did not hold the
title.
Catholic Bishop v. Gibbon, 158 U.
S. 155. The latter took possession of the land on the
death of Lemline. The lands had not been surveyed when Lemline died
or when Trodick went into possession. They were not surveyed until
August 10, 1891. Trodick applied on January 10, 1896, to make
homestead entry of the land, but his application was rejected
"without prejudice to his right to apply for a hearing to determine
the status of the land, July 6, 1882, when the right of the company
became effective." In the letter or opinion of the Commissioner of
the Land Office, addressed to the local register and receiver,
under date of December 24, 1898, it was said:
"He [Trodick] applied for a hearing August 10, 1896, whereupon
notice issued, citing the parties in interest to appear at your
office September 21, 1896. The hearing was continued from time to
time until April 16, 1897, when both parties were represented. It
appears from the evidence adduced that one Martin Lemline
established his residence on the land with his family in 1877,
continued to reside there until his
Page 221 U. S. 212
death sometime in 1891, and his improvements on the premises
were of the estimated value of $1,000. Mr. Trodick settled on the
land in 1891, and since then has continuously resided there. The
material question for determination in this case is this: did the
settlement claim of Mr. Lemline except the land from the operation
of the grant to the company? It is undoubtedly true that the land
was occupied by Mr. Lemline when the right of the company attached,
that he was qualified to make entry of the same, and settled there
with the intention of doing so, as the circumstances indicate. Had
he lived until the plat of survey was filed in your office, he or
his wife would, without doubt, have been allowed to perfect the
claim by them initiated prior to July 6, 1882. Since Mr. Lemline
had no claim of record, and the claim of Trodick had its inception
subsequent to the definite location of the road, it must be held
that the land inured to the grant. (
N.P. R. Co. v.
Colburn, 164 U. S. 383.) Your action is
therefore approved, and the application of Trodick is accordingly
rejected, subject to the usual right of appeal within sixty
days."
In 1896, the railroad company contracted to sell the land to
Auchard, and in § 899 conveyed to him by warranty deed.
Subsequently, January 10, 1903, a patent was issued to the railroad
company.
The former decisions of this Court clearly sustain the decree
rendered by the circuit court of appeals. According to the
provisions of the Act of 1864, the railroad company could not
acquire any vested interest in the granted lands -- even such as
were within the primary or place limits -- until it made a definite
location of its line, evidenced by an accepted map of location; nor
would such location be of any avail as to lands, even in place
limits, which at the time of definite location were occupied by a
homestead settler intending in good faith to acquire title under
the laws of the United States. Lemline, we
Page 221 U. S. 213
have seen, was in the actual occupancy of the lands as a
homestead settler when the railroad company definitely located its
line. Therefore, the lands
did not pass by the grant of
1864,
but were excepted from its operation, and no right
of the railroad attached to the lands when its line was definitely
located.
In
St. Paul & Pacific v. Northern Pacific,
139 U. S. 1,
139 U. S. 5, a
case arising under the Northern Pacific grant of 1864, it was
distinctly held that
"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 R. Co.,
152 U. S. 284,
152 U. S. 296,
the Court, referring to the same grant, 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 R. Co. v. Sanders, 166 U.
S. 620,
166 U. S. 629,
it was said that the Act of July 2, 1864, under which the railroad
company claims title,
excluded from the grant "all lands
that were not
at the time the line of the road was definitely
fixed, free from preemption or other claims or rights."
In
United States v. Oregon &c. R. Co., 176 U. S.
28,
176 U. S. 50,
the Court held that the "Northern Pacific Railroad Company could
take no lands except such as were
unappropriated at the
time its line was definitely fixed."
In
Nelson v. Northern Pacific Railway, 188
U. S. 109,
188 U. S.
121-124,
188 U. S. 130,
the Court again construed the Act of 1864. That was the case of one
who went upon and occupied certain lands within the place limits,
before the definite location of the railroad line, with the
bona fide purpose to acquire title under the laws of the
United States. This Court said:
"It results that the railroad company did not
Page 221 U. S. 214
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 when 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 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."
Again, in the same case, there appear these pertinent
observations, applicable
Page 221 U. S. 215
in the discussion here:
"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
anywise 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. . . . 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."
To the same effect are numerous decisions in the Land Department
by different Secretaries of the Interior. Those decisions are cited
in the
Nelson case, 188 U.S.
188 U. S.
126-131.
In view of the authorities cited, it must be taken that, by
reasons of Lemline's actual occupancy of them as a
bona
fide homestead settler at the time of the definite location of
the railroad line, these lands were
excepted from the
grant, and the railroad company did not acquire and could not
acquire any interest in them
by reason of such location.
So that the issuing of a patent to it in 1903, based on such
location, was wholly without authority of law. So far as the
railroad company was concerned, the way was open to Trodick, who
had purchased the improvements from Lemline and was in actual
possession of the lands as a residence, to carry out his original
purpose to make application
Page 221 U. S. 216
to enter them under the homestead laws, and thus acquire full
technical title in himself. He made such an application in 1896,
the railroad company not having at that time any claims whatever
upon the land, for it acquired nothing, as to these lands, by the
definite location of its line. He was admittedly qualified to enter
lands under the laws of the United States, but his application was
disregarded solely on the ground that, when the railroad line was
definitely located, Lemline had no claim "of record," and Trodick's
application to the land office was after the date of such location.
This was error of law, as the authorities above cited --
particularly the
Nelson case -- show. Lemline's entry and
occupancy did not need, as between himself and the railroad
company, to be evidenced by a record of any kind, for the reason,
if there was no other, that the lands which he settled upon with
the purpose of acquiring title under the laws of the United States
had not at that time been surveyed. He was not responsible for the
delay in surveying, any more than was the homesteader in the
Nelson case, for the neglect to survey. He was entitled
under the circumstances, having made his application in proper
form, and the railroad company having acquired no interest under
the definite location of its line, to wait until the land was
surveyed, and in the meantime to stand upon his occupancy,
accompanied as such occupancy was with a
bona fide
intention to acquire title and to reside upon the lands. His claim
on the land could not be postponed or defeated by the fact that the
railroad company had assumed, without right at a prior date, to
assert a claim to the lands as having passed by the grant and to
have become its property, on the definite location of its line.
Some reliance is placed on the delay occurring after the survey
of the lands before Trodick made his homestead application -- the
statute of May 14th, 1880, c. 89, 21 Stat. 140, prescribing a
certain period within which the homesteader
Page 221 U. S. 217
should act after the survey of the lands. But that delay was
immaterial as affecting the rights of the homestead applicant,
because no rights of others had intervened intermediate the survey
and Trodick's formal application. A similar question arose in
Whitney v. Taylor, 158 U. S. 85,
158 U. S. 97,
and it was thus disposed of:
"It is true that § 6 of the Act of 1853 (10 Stat. 246)
provides"
"that, where unsurveyed lands are claimed by preemption, the
usual notice of such claim shall be filed within three months after
the return of the plats of surveys to the land offices."
"But it was held in
Johnson v. Towsley, 13 Wall.
72,
80 U. S. 87, that a failure to
file within the prescribed time did not vitiate the proceeding,
neither could the delay be taken advantage of by one
who had
acquired no rights prior to the filing. As said in the opinion
in that case (p.
80 U. S. 90):"
"If no other party has made a settlement or has given notice of
such intention, then no one has been injured by the delay beyond
three months, and if at any time after the three months, while the
party is still in possession, he makes his declaration, and this is
done
before anyone else has initiated a right of preemption by
settlement or declaration, we can see no purpose in forbidding
him to make his declaration, or in making it void when made. And we
think that Congress intended to provide for the protection of the
first settler by giving him three months to make his declaration,
and for all other settlers by saying, if this is not done within
three months, anyone else who has settled on it within that time,
or at any time before the first settler makes his declaration,
shall have the better right."
"
See also Lansdale v. Daniels, 100 U. S.
113,
100 U. S. 117, where it is
said:"
"Such a notice, if given before the time allowed by law, is a
nullity; but the rule is otherwise where it is filed subsequent to
the period prescribed by the amendatory act, as, in the latter
event, it is held to be operative and sufficient unless some other
person had previously commenced a settlement and given the required
notice of claim."
"The delay in filing, therefore, had
Page 221 U. S. 218
no effect upon the validity of the declaratory statement."
In McNeal's Case, 6 L.D. 653, Secretary Vilas referred to the
Act of May 14th, 1880, 21 Stat. 140, which related to settlers on
public lands and provided that their rights should relate back to
the date of settlement, the same as if he settled under the
preemption laws. The entry in that case was cancelled by the
Commissioner. The Secretary said:
"
There being no intervening claim, I see no reason why
his rights may not relate back to the time of his settlement, even
though he did not file for the land within three months thereafter,
in strict accordance with the requirements of the Act of May 14,
1880."
We may add that the Commissioner of the General Land Office made
no objection, in this case, to Trodick's application on the ground
of his delay in making formal application. His decision, in effect,
conceded that the application was not objectionable, and was not to
be denied except on the ground that Lemline, who preceded Trodick
in interest, had no claim "
of record," and that Trodick's
formal application was not made until after the location of the
railroad line. It is not for the railroad company to which was
wrongfully issued a patent to make an objection to Trodick's claim
which the Land Office would not make. The authorities cited show
that the ground assigned by the Commissioner was wholly untenable
as matter of law in that he assumed that the railroad company
acquired an interest in the land by the mere location of its line
when Lemline was, at the time, in actual occupancy as a homestead
settler.
Attention is called to the decision at the present term, of
United States v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry.
Co., 218 U. S. 233.
That case, it is contended, is authority for the proposition that
the railroad company, upon the definite location of its line under
a land grant act, acquired a vested interest in the lands granted
unless there was at the time some claim on the land "of record." It
is true the opinion in that case referred to the stipulation
between
Page 221 U. S. 219
the parties to the effect that, at the time of the 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,"
and then proceeded:
"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."
The above words "of record," it is supposed, show that the court
intended to modify the doctrines that a
bona fide
settlement upon unsurveyed lands, within place limits, which were
entered upon and occupied in good faith as a residence, before the
railway company located its line, with the intention of acquiring
title after such lands shall have been surveyed, gave the
homesteader a "claim" on the lands which excepted them from the
grant to the railroad company. But this is an error. The words
referred to were only intended to describe one class of the claims,
the attaching of which to lands specified in an act of Congress,
prior to definite location, had the effect to except them from the
granting act. There was no purpose to modify the principles of the
Nelson case.
It will serve no useful purpose to extend this discussion of the
cases cited on behalf of the company which, it is
Page 221 U. S. 220
alleged, distinguish this from the
Nelson case. The
facts bring the present case within the ruling of that case, and we
adhere to the principles there announced.
We are of opinion that, as between the railroad company and the
appellee, the latter has the better right to the land, and that the
Land Office incorrectly held that the company was entitled to a
patent. That was an error of law which was properly corrected by
the reversal in the circuit court of appeals of the decree of the
circuit court, with directions to render a final decree recognizing
Trodick's ownership of the lands in controversy and adjudging that
the title, under the patent, was held in trust for him. The
judgment of the circuit court of appeals is
Affirmed.