The mere location of a land warrant does not operate as a
payment of the purchase price and does not operate to pass the
equitable title from the United States. A state is without power to
tax public lands which have been located under warrant until the
equitable title has passed from the United States. Although if the
locator had been the lawful owner of the warrant,
Page 221 U. S. 405
location would have entitled him to patent, if the Land Office
found him not to be the lawful owner, location does not operate to
pass the title until he substitutes and pays the government price,
and meanwhile the United States has such an interest in the land as
renders its taxation by the state invalid.
140 Ia. 590 reversed.
The facts, which involve the right of a state to tax public
lands located under warrant before substitution and payment of
government price, are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit to quiet the title to 80 acres of land in the
State of Iowa, and the facts, insofar as they are material here,
are these: in 1857, Hartzell I. Shaffer located upon the land a
military bounty land warrant, issued to Jacob Hutson under the Act
of Congress of March 3, 1855 (10 Stat. 701, c. 207), and received
from the local land office a certificate of location. Shortly
thereafter he transferred the certificate and his right to the
warrant and to the land to Amos Stanley. When the location was
reported to the General Land Office, that office suspended it
because Hutson had made two assignments of the warrant, the first
to William Maltby and the second to Shaffer, and because there was
no relinquishment by Maltby. In 1875, Stanley, or a transferee of
his, surrendered the certificate of location to the General Land
Office, and withdrew the warrant for the purpose of straightening
out the difficulty arising from its double assignment, if
Page 221 U. S. 406
that could be done. But apparently nothing was accomplished in
that direction, for the warrant never was returned. The suspension
continued until 1904, when Sargeant & Lahr, who had succeeded
to the rights of Stanley, perfected the location by substituting
the government price of the land for the warrant. This was done
under Rule 41 of the circular of the Land Department relating to
such locations, which reads as follows (27 L.D. 225):
"When a valid entry is withheld from patent on account of the
objectionable character of the warrant located thereon, the parties
in interest may procure the issue of a patent by filing in the
office for the district in which the lands are situate an
acceptable substitute for the said warrant. The substitution must
be made in the name of the original locator, and may consist of a
warrant, cash, or any kind of scrip legally applicable to the class
of lands embraced in the entry."
At the time of the substitution, Sargeant & Lahr received
from the local land office a certificate of purchase, issued in
Stanley's name, and later in the same year received a patent issued
in his name, and reciting that it was predicated upon the
substitution of the purchase price for the warrant. In 1875, the
land was sold for the nonpayment of taxes levied upon it by the
officers of Clay county, Iowa, two years before, and whatever title
passed under that sale is held by Herrick & Stevens, who were
the plaintiffs in the trial court. Sargeant & Lahr, who were
the defendants, claim under the warrant location as ultimately
perfected through the substitution of the purchase price, and then
passed to patent. The trial court sustained the tax title and
entered a decree for the plaintiffs, which was affirmed by the
supreme court of the state. 140 Ia. 590.
As the state was without power to tax the land until the
equitable title passed from the United States, and as
Page 221 U. S. 407
that title did not pass until there was a full compliance with
all the conditions upon which the right to a patent depended
(
Wisconsin Central R. Co. v. Price County, 133 U.
S. 496,
133 U. S.
505), it is apparent that the validity of the tax title
depends upon the question whether the location of the warrant in
1857, without more, gave a right to a patent.
Among the conditions upon compliance with which such a right
depends, none has been deemed more essential than the payment of
the purchase price, which, in this instance, could have been made
in money or by a warrant like the one actually used. The warrant
was assignable, and was usable at a rate which made it the
equivalent of the price of the land. And had Shaffer been the
lawful owner and holder of the warrant, there could be no doubt
that its location by him would, without more, have entitled him to
a patent. But, as the General Land Office found, in effect, that he
was not the lawful owner or holder of the warrant, and as that
finding is conclusive in the circumstances in which it is brought
into this case, it is perfectly plain that the location of the
warrant did not, without more, give a right to a patent. In other
words, that location did not operate as a payment of the purchase
price, and so did not operate to pass the equitable title from the
United States. Besides, until the payment in 1904, it was wholly
uncertain that the location ever would be perfected, there being no
obligation upon anyone to perfect it. It follows that, during the
intervening years, the United States had such an interest in the
land as to make its taxation by the state void.
The case of
Hussman v. Durham, 165 U.
S. 144, is like this in all material respects, the most
noticeable difference being that there, the assignment to the
locator was forged, while here it was ineffectual because of a
prior assignment. In that case, this Court, after holding in
substance that the doctrine of relation cannot be invoked to give
effect
Page 221 U. S. 408
to a title resting upon the wrongful taxation of land while both
the legal and the equitable title were in the United States,
said:
"Confessedly, though a formal certificate of location was issued
in 1858, there was then in fact no payment for the land, and the
government received nothing until 1888. During these intervening
years, whatever might have appeared upon the face of the record,
the legal and the equitable title both remained in the government.
The land was therefore not subject to state taxation. Tax sales and
tax deeds issued during that time were void. The defendant took
nothing by such deeds. No estoppel can be invoked against the
plaintiff. His title dates from the time of payment in 1888. The
defendant does not hold under him, and has no tax title arising
subsequently thereto."
For these reasons, we hold that the supreme court of the state
erred in sustaining the tax title.
Reversed.