Section 2350, Rev.Stat., is, by §§ 1 and 4 of the Act
of April 28, 1904, 33 Stat. 552, c. 1772, continued in force in the
District of Alaska, and prohibits more than one entry of coal land
by or for the same person or association of persons.
The policy adopted by Congress of restricting one coal land
entry to each qualified entryman was to prevent monopolization of
coal lands by securing to every citizen the right to obtain for
himself one tract of not exceeding one hundred and sixty acres.
The rule of construction that an intention to depart from a long
enforced uniform policy will not be imputed to Congress, applied in
construing the Act of April 28, 1904, 33 Stat. 552, c. 1772,
relative to coal lands in Alaska.
A policy to confine the entryman to one entry is not affected by
the fact that Congress leaves him free to assign a location made in
good faith.
United States v. Keitel, 211 U.
S. 370.
All the statutes affecting coal land entries -- Act of March 3,
1873,
Page 222 U. S. 176
17 Stat. 607, c. 279, now §§ 2347-2349, Rev.Stat.; Act
of June 6, 1900, 31 Stat. 658, c. 996, and Act of April 28, 1904,
33 Stat. 525, c. 1772 -- are
in pari materia and must be
read together, and no part of the earlier acts is to be regarded as
inoperative unless no other construction of the later legislation
is reasonable.
The single object of the Act of 1904 in regard to coal lands in
Alaska was to provide for the sale of unsurveyed coal lands, and it
becomes inoperative as soon as the lands are surveyed.
The facts, which involve the construction of statutes relating
to location of coal lands in Alaska, are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE LURTON delivered the opinion of the Court.
This writ of error is prosecuted by the United States from a
judgment sustaining a motion to quash an indictment.
The indictment is founded upon § 5440, Revised Statutes,
and charges a conspiracy to defraud the United States by illegally
obtaining title to 40 contiguous tracts of coal lands in the
District of Alaska, aggregating 6,087 acres, collectively known as
the Stracey group, and averred to be of the value of
$10,000,000.
The indictment is too long to be set out, even in an abbreviated
form. The gravamen of the conspiracy charged is that the defendants
induced or procured divers qualified persons to take the several
steps required by law
Page 222 U. S. 177
to make locations of Alaska coal lands not for themselves, but
as the mere agents or representatives of the defendants, for the
purpose of securing to two named corporations a larger area of coal
land than such corporations could lawfully locate for
themselves.
For the defendants in error, it has been very ably urged that,
since the concededly applicable coal land law gives to every
individual who is of age and a citizen of the United States the
right to make a coal land location for himself, and to assign his
location when made, that there can be no fraud if he makes such
location in the first instance for the benefit of another competent
to buy the location when made. But if the provisions of the general
coal land entry law, found in § 2350, Revised Statutes, apply
to the entry of coal lands in Alaska, the contention is now no
longer an open one under the repeated interpretations of that
section found in the cases of
United States v. Trinidad Coal
& Coking Co., 137 U. S. 160;
United States v. Keitel, 211 U. S. 370, and
United States v. Forrester, 211 U.
S. 399.
The corporations by whose procurement the forty locations by
forty different persons were made, under the express terms of the
statute referred to, were disqualified from making more than one
location each, and, being thus disqualified, could not make a
second location through an agent acting for their use and benefit.
Any construction which would permit one prohibited by express
command of the law from making more than one entry or location to
make other entries or locations through the agency of a third
person, qualified to make an entry for himself, would be to
sanction a device which would nullify the purpose of the
restriction.
The result must turn upon whether the restrictive features of
§ 2350, Revised Statutes, are applicable to the sale of coal
lands in Alaska. The ruling of the court below and the contention
made by the defendants in error is that the Act of April 28, 1904,
33 Stat. p. 525, c. 1772, is the
Page 222 U. S. 178
only act applicable to the unsurveyed coal lands of Alaska. That
act will be found set out in the margin. [
Footnote 1]
It purports to be an amendment of the Act of June 6,
Page 222 U. S. 179
1900, 31 Stat. p. 658, c. 796, which extended to Alaska "so much
of the public land laws of the United States . . . as relate to
coal lands, namely, §§ 2347 to 2352, inclusive, of the
Revised Statutes." The sections of the general law thus extended to
Alaska are set out in the margin. [
Footnote 2]
These sections came from the Act of March 3, 1873, 17
Page 222 U. S. 180
Stat. p. 607, c. 279. The only change made is in the
substitution in § 2350 of the words, "The three preceding
sections shall be held to authorize," etc., for the words of the
fourth section of the original act, reading, "[t]hat this act shall
be held to authorize" -- a change made necessary because the
provisions of the original act are made a part of a chapter of the
general land law embracing the sale of other public lands. The Act
of 1873, as thus carried into the Revised Statutes, did not permit
an entry of coal lands which had not been surveyed. The
Page 222 U. S. 181
entry permitted was only "by legal subdivisions." The coal lands
in Alaska were unsurveyed. Thus it happened that, although the Act
of June 6, 1900, extended the provisions of the general law to
Alaska, that law was for a time inoperative because the coal lands
could not be entered "by legal subdivisions" when no such legal
subdivisions existed. So obviously was this the case that a
circular from the Department of the Interior was issued,
instructing the registers and receivers in the District of Alaska
that no coal filing nor entry could be filed in their offices until
there could be filed with "the official plat of survey of the
township" in which entries were sought to be made. This was the
situation which brought about the Act of April 28, 1904, set out in
the margin.
The contention is that, although this Act of 1904 expressly
provides
"that all of the provisions of the coal land laws of the United
States not in conflict with the provisions of this act shall
continue and be in full force in the district of Alaska,"
that the restrictions in the general coal land law authorizing
"only one entry by the same person or association of persons,"
etc., is in conflict, and therefore not operative to locations
authorized by the later legislation.
Prior to the Act of 1873, the disposition of coal lands was
included in the general provisions regulating the sale of public
lands, and under which there were no limitations upon the number of
entries one person might make. But in 1873, when Congress sought to
deal with the specific subject of the sale of coal lands, the rule
was adopted of confining every qualified entryman to one entry, and
every association of persons, not less than four in number and
under certain conditions, to the entry of not exceeding 640 acres.
A corporation has been held to be an association of persons within
the meaning of this section.
United States v. Trinidad Coal
Company, 137 U. S. 160,
137 U. S. 169.
The policy of this restriction was to prevent
Page 222 U. S. 182
a monopolization of such coal lands by securing to every citizen
the right to obtain for himself one tract, not exceeding 160 acres,
of such coal land.
Ibid. United States v. Keitel,
211 U. S. 370.
That continued to be the uniform policy of Congress, and so
continues, unless a departure has been made by the Act of 1904.
But, if so, it is only as to the unsurveyed, coal lands of Alaska,
for undoubtedly when such lands shall be surveyed they will come at
once under the restrictions of the general law as found in
§§ 2347 to 2350, inclusive, of the Revised Statutes,
since the Act of 1904 applies only to the unsurveyed public lands
of Alaska.
There occurs to us no reason for assuming that Congress intended
to abandon the policy of keeping open the right of every citizen to
enter one tract, and no more, of the unsurveyed coal lands of
Alaska, that would not lead also to the abandonment of the policy
as respects coal lands which had been surveyed.
An intention to depart from a uniform policy so long enforced in
regard to coal lands should not be imputed to Congress unless the
Act of 1904 admits of no other construction.
Morton v.
Nebraska, 21 Wall. 660,
88 U. S.
669.
But it is said that the purpose to depart from the policy which
imposed a restriction upon the number of locations which had before
been authorized is manifest in the provision of § 2 of the act
in question, which requires that the locator or locators, "or their
assigns," who are citizens of the United States, shall receive a
patent to the lands so located, etc. The fact that one who has made
a lawful location is permitted to make an assignment, as is the
plain implication from the requirement that a patent "shall" issue
to "the locator or his assigns," is not indicative of a purpose to
abandon the prohibition upon more than one location. By going upon
coal land, opening up a mine, permanently marking the boundaries,
and filing
Page 222 U. S. 183
and making the notices required under the law, one otherwise
qualified initiates a claim to the land, and may, by further
compliance with the law, earn the right to a patent. That the
policy of the law stops at this point, and leaves him free to
assign his location, does not impeach the intent of Congress to
confine a locator to a single location. The prohibition is against
more than one entry, not against alienation after a good faith
location.
Of the restrictions concerning the entry of land under the
timber and stone act, it was said:
"The act does not in any respect limit the dominion which the
purchaser has over the land after its purchase from the government,
or restrict in the slightest his power of alienation. All that it
denounces is a prior agreement -- the acting for another in the
purchase."
United States v. Budd, 144 U.
S. 154,
144 U. S.
163.
The same argument was addressed to this Court in
United
States v. Keitel, 211 U. S. 370,
211 U. S. 389,
as a reason for confining the prohibition to one entry made by a
qualified person for the use and benefit of another, who was
disqualified from making a second entry. But this Court said:
"True, the statute imposes no limitation on the right of a
purchaser who has acquired coal land from the United States to sell
the same after he has become the owner of the land. The absence,
however, of a limitation on the power to sell after acquisition
affords no ground for saying that the express prohibition of the
statute against more than one entry by the same person should not
be enforced according to its plain meaning. This clearly follows,
since the right to sell that which one has lawfully acquired
neither directly nor indirectly implies the authority to unlawfully
acquire in violation of an express prohibition."
Ibid.
Upon the same line of reasoning, we find no reason for supposing
that Congress intended by the Act of 1904 to remove the restriction
upon more than one entry by the
Page 222 U. S. 184
same person, because it imposed none upon alienation after the
right to a patent had accrued by a good faith location.
But it is said that the restriction upon the right to make more
than one entry by the same person applied only to entries made
under the three preceding sections,
i.e., §§
2347, 2348, and 2349. That this peculiar limitation has no material
significance we have already pointed out, its presence in the
section being due to the fact that § 2350 and the preceding
three sections, constituting the original act of 1873, were placed
in the midst of a chapter embracing many other provisions in no
wise related to the entry of coal lands. It is, however, to be
borne in mind that this act of 1904 is but an amendment to the act
of 1900, which extended these sections of the general coal entry
law to the District of Alaska. The three acts are
in pari
materia, and must be read together, and no part of the
previously existing law upon the same subject is to be regarded as
inoperative unless no other construction of the later legislation
is reasonable.
The single object of Congress in the Act of 1904 was to provide
for the sale of coal lands which had not been surveyed. The
provisions for the sale of such coal lands, in or out of Alaska,
which had been surveyed, so that entries could be made "by legal
subdivision," had already been covered by the general law which had
been extended to Alaska. The conditions in Alaska were but
temporary. When the coal land there should be brought under the
system of surveys which prevailed in the better settled parts of
the country, the Act of 1904 would cease to be operative, having
nothing to which it could apply. The legislation, read in the light
of the situation and of the uniform policy which had so long
prevailed of prohibiting more than one entry to one person, makes
it plain that Congress did not intend to except the unsurveyed coal
lands of Alaska from the operation of the restrictions which
attached to
Page 222 U. S. 185
the sale of the surveyed coal lands in Alaska and elsewhere.
The judgment must be reversed, and the case remanded for further
proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
That any person or association of persons qualified to make
entry under the coal land laws of the United States, who shall have
opened or improved a coal mine or coal mines on any of the
unsurveyed public lands of the United States in the District of
Alaska, may locate the lands upon which such mine or mines are
situated, in rectangular tracts containing forty, eighty, or one
hundred and sixty acres, with north and south boundary lines run
according to the true meridian, by marking the four corners thereof
with permanent monuments, so that the boundaries thereof may be
readily and easily traced. And all such locators shall, within one
year from the passage of this Act, or within one year from making
such location, file for record in the recording district, and with
the register and receiver of the land district in which the lands
are located or situated, a notice containing the name or names of
the locator or locators, the date of the location, the description
of the lands located, and a reference to such natural objects or
permanent monuments as will readily identify the same.
"SEC. 2. That such locator or locators, or their assigns, who
are citizens of the United States, shall receive a patent to the
lands located by presenting at any time within three years from the
date of such notice, to the register and receiver of the land
district in which the lands so located are situated, an application
therefor, accompanied by a certified copy of a plat of survey and
field notes thereof, made by a United States deputy surveyor or a
United States mineral surveyor, duly approved by the surveyor
general for the district of Alaska and a payment of the sum of ten
dollars per acre for the lands applied for; but no such application
shall be allowed until after the applicant has caused a notice of
the presentation thereof, embracing a description of the lands, to
have been published in a newspaper in the district of Alaska
published nearest the location of the premises, for a period of
sixty days, and shall have caused copies of such notice, together
with a certified copy of the official plat or survey, to have been
kept posted in a conspicuous place upon the land applied for and in
the land office for the district in which the lands are located for
a like period, and until after he shall have furnished proof of
such publication and posting, and such other proof as is required
by the coal land laws:
Provided, That nothing herein
contained shall be so construed as to authorize entries to be made
or title to be acquired to the shore of any navigable waters within
said district."
"SEC. 3. That during such period of posting and publication, or
within six months thereafter, any person or association of persons
having or asserting any adverse interest or claim to the tract of
land, or any part thereof, sought to be purchased, shall file in
the land office where such application is pending, under oath, and
adverse claim, setting forth the nature and extent thereof, and
such adverse claimant shall, within sixty days after the filing of
such adverse claim, begin an action to quiet title in a court of
competent jurisdiction within the district of Alaska, and
thereafter no patent shall issue for such claim until the final
adjudication of the rights of the parties, and such patent shall
then be issued in conformity with the final decree of such court
therein."
"SEC. 4. That all the provisions of the coal land laws of the
United States not in conflict with the provisions of this Act shall
continue and be in full force in the District of Alaska."
[
Footnote 2]
"SEC. 2347. Every person above the age of twenty-one years who
is a citizen of the United States or who has declared his intention
to become such, or any association of persons severally qualified
as above, shall, upon application to the register of the proper
land office, have the right to enter, by legal subdivisions, any
quantity of vacant coal lands of the United States not otherwise
appropriated or reserved by competent authority, not exceeding one
hundred and sixty acres to such individual person, or three hundred
and twenty acres to such association, upon payment to the receiver
of not less than ten dollars per acre for such lands, where the
same shall be situated more than fifteen miles from any completed
railroad, and not less than twenty dollars per acre for such lands
as shall be within fifteen miles of such road."
"SEC. 2348. Any person or association of persons severally
qualified as above provided who have opened and improved, or shall
hereafter open and improve, any coal mine or mines upon the public
lands, and shall be in actual possession of the same, shall be
entitled to a preference right of entry, under the preceding
section, of the mines so opened and improved;
Provided,
That when any association of not less than four persons, severally
qualified as above provided, shall have expended not less than five
thousand dollars in working and improving any such mine or mines,
such association may enter not exceeding six hundred and forty
acres, including such mining improvements."
"SEC. 2349. All claims under the preceding section must be
presented to the register of the proper land district within sixty
days after the date of actual possession and the commencement of
improvements on the land by the filing of a declaratory statement
therefor; but when the township plat is not on file at the date of
such improvement, filing must be made within sixty days from the
receipt of such plat at the district office, and where the
improvements shall have been made prior to the expiration of three
months from the third day of March, eighteen hundred and
seventy-three, sixty days from the expiration of such three months
shall be allowed for the filing of a declaratory statement and no
sale under the provisions of this section shall be allowed until
the expiration of six months from the third day of March, eighteen
hundred and seventy-three."
"SEC. 2350. The three preceding sections shall be held to
authorize only one entry by the same person or association of
persons, and no association of persons any member of which shall
have taken the benefits of such sections, either as an individual
or as a member of any other association, shall enter or hold any
other lands under the provisions thereof, and no member of any
association which shall have taken the benefit of such sections
shall enter or hold any other lands under their provisions, and all
persons claiming under section twenty-three hundred and forty-eight
shall be required to prove their respective rights and pay for the
lands filed upon within one year from the time prescribed for
filing their respective claims, and upon failure to file the proper
notice, or to pay for the land within the required period, the same
shall be subject to entry by any other qualified applicant."