The Act of March 3, 1875, 18 Stat. 482, c. 152, granting rights
of way and station grounds for railroads through the public lands
was a grant
in praesenti of lands to be thereafter
identified.
Railroad Co. v. Jones, 177 U.
S. 125.
The right of way becomes definitely located by actual
construction, which is unmistakable evidence and notice of
appropriation.
A selection and location of station grounds under the Act of
March 3, 1875, filed with he Secretary of the Interior after
construction of the
Page 225 U. S. 143
railroad, is subject to approval by the Secretary, but the
approval relates back to the date of filing, and thereupon the
selection becomes superior to the intervening claim of an entryman
initiated while the selection was pending approval.
Northern
Pacific R. Co. v. Doughty, 208 U. S. 251,
where the station grounds selection was made prior to actual
construction of the railroad, distinguished. The construction now
given to the Act of March 3, 1875, is in accordance with the
settled practice of the Land Department; any other construction
would defeat the purpose of Congress in regard to encouraging the
building of railroads through the public lands.
The failure of a subordinate of the Land Department to comply
with the regulations of the department and note selections properly
made by a railroad company cannot affect the rights of the company
and permit the entry of the land pending approval of the selections
by the Secretary.
Van Wyck v. Knevals, 106 U.
S. 360.
A patent issued to an entryman whose claim was initiated while
the selection of a railroad company was pending for approval is not
an adjudication, but if, as in this case, the selection is
approved, such a patent is issued in violation of law, and is
inoperative to pass title.
16 Idaho 362 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the construction of the Act of March 3,
1875, granting station grounds on the public lands to railroad
companies, and the conflicting rights of a company claiming
thereunder and an entryman, are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE LURTON delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action brought by the railroad company under a
statute of the State of Idaho to quiet title to four certain lots
in the Town of Meridian, Idaho. The judgment in the trial court for
the railroad company was affirmed in the supreme court of the
state.
Page 225 U. S. 144
The defendant in error, as successor in title to the Idaho
Central Railway Company, claims that the property in question is a
part of the station grounds granted to its predecessor under the
Act of Congress of March 3, 1875, which grant in part conflicts
with the preemption entry made by one Joseph G. Reed, under whom
the plaintiffs in error claim. The lands in question had been
surveyed and were open for entry long prior to the initiation of
either of the claims here involved. The conflicting rights arose in
this way: the Idaho Central Railway was duly qualified under the
Act of Congress of 1875 to acquire a right of way and station
grounds. In June, 1887, its directors formally adopted a route
between Nampa and Boise City which corresponded precisely with the
route upon which the railroad was later constructed. This adoption
was followed up by the filing of the profile maps, which were
approved by the Secretary of the Interior on February 17, 1888, and
sent back to the proper land office at Boise City. These maps did
not include grounds for station purposes. By September 1, 1888, the
railroad was constructed along the route first adopted, and at that
date was in actual operation. On September 12, 1888, the company
filed in duplicate with the register of the land office at Boise
City, a plat of ground adjacent to its right of way, desired for
station purposes, which selection included the lots here in
controversy. This plat was received by the Secretary of the
Interior on September 20, 1888, and approved on December 15, 1888.
A copy was then transmitted to the register at Boise City. That
official received it, but failed and neglected to "note the same
upon the plats in the said land office," as it was his duty to do,
and it is now stipulated that it has since been lost or mislaid,
and cannot be found. A blueprint of the original map of the station
grounds as selected by the plaintiff, with its certificates and
indorsements, was stipulated into the record.
Page 225 U. S. 145
The plaintiffs in error claim through Joseph G. Reed, a
qualified entryman, who, on October 18, 1888, filed a preemption
claim upon a quarter-section adjacent to the railroad right of way.
Later he made final proofs, and, on August 4, 1891, a patent
issued. This preemption included about twelve acres of the ground
which the railroad company had theretofore selected for station
purposes. There is no evidence of occupation of the portion here
involved, and no plea of innocent purchaser for value without
notice. The question was decided by the state court upon the rights
resulting from the facts stated.
The case must turn upon the interpretation of the Act of
Congress of March 3, 1875, 18 Stat. p. 482, c. 152. The relevant
sections are the first and fourth, which are as follows:
"
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
the United States of America, in Congress assembled, That the
right of way through the public lands of the United States is
hereby granted to any railroad company duly organized under the
laws of any state or territory, except the District of Columbia, or
by the Congress of the United States, which shall have filed with
the Secretary of the Interior a copy of its articles of
incorporation, and due proofs of its organization under the same,
to the extent of one hundred feet on each side of the central line
of said road; also the right to take, from the public lands
adjacent to the line of said road, material, earth, stone, and
timber necessary for the construction of said railroad; also ground
adjacent to such right of way for station buildings, depots,
machine shops, side tracks, turn-outs, and water stations, not to
exceed in amount twenty acres for each station, to the extent of
one station for each ten miles of its road."
"
* * * *"
"SEC. 4. That any railroad company desiring to secure the
benefits of this act shall, within twelve months after
Page 225 U. S. 146
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."
The uniform construction of this act has been that it is a grant
"
in praesenti of lands to be thereafter identified."
Jamestown & N. Railroad v. Jones, 177 U.
S. 125. In that case, the question was whether the right
of way became definitely located by the actual construction of the
railroad, or only upon the filing of a map of location, which was
much later. The conclusion was that, by the actual construction of
the railroad, the boundaries of the grant were fixed by the rule of
the statute, which granted a strip 100 feet wide on each side of
the center of the track. That had been the construction of the act
by the Interior Department, and was followed by the court below.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA, for this Court, said (p.
177 U. S.
131):
"The ruling gives a practical operation to the statute, and we
think is correct. It enables the railroad company to secure the
grant by an actual construction of its road, or, in advance of
construction, by filing a map [of its road] as provided in section
4. Actual construction of the road is certainly unmistakable
evidence and notice of appropriation."
It was therefore held that an entry made after construction, but
before filing a map of location, was subject to the prior right of
the railroad.
Possibly station grounds might also have been secured
Page 225 U. S. 147
by the actual marking of the boundaries and the construction of
stationhouses, side tracks, etc. This we need not decide. But the
fourth section of the act provides a method for securing the
benefits of the act in advance of actual construction.
Prior to the initiation of any right here involved, the Land
Department put in force certain regulations to be followed by
railroad companies desiring to secure the benefits of a grant in
advance of actual construction, as provided by the fourth section
of the act. One of these required that, upon the location of any
section, not exceeding twenty miles in length, the company should
file with the register of the land district in which the land lay
"a map for the approval of the Secretary of the Interior, showing
the termini of such portion and its route over the public lands,"
etc. Another of these departmental regulations provided that,
"if the company desires to avail itself of the provisions of the
law which grants the use of ground adjacent to the right of way for
station buildings . . . it must file for approval, in each separate
instance, a plat showing, in connection with the public surveys,
the surveyed limits and area of the ground desired."
These regulations require that "a copy" of the approved map of
"definite location," and of the "approved plat of ground selected
by a company, under the act in question, for station purposes,"
shall be transmitted to the register of the land office where the
land lies. Upon the receipt of the map of alignment, the land
office is required "to mark upon the township plats the line of the
route of the road as laid down on the map," and to note in pencil
on the tract books opposite the tract of public land cut by said
lines of railroad, "that the same is disposed of subject to the
right of way," etc., and to write upon the face of any certificate
disposing of said lands, after the filing of such approved map of
location, "that it is allowed subject to the right of way." A like
duty is
Page 225 U. S. 148
put upon the register when an approved station ground plat is
received.
The plat of the station grounds selected by the railroad company
in this case was filed in the local land office on September 12,
1888, and reached the Secretary of the Interior on September 20,
1888. Both dates are antecedent to the filing of the preemption
claim. But the selection pended in the office of the Secretary of
the Interior until December 15, 1888, on which date it was
approved. While thus pending, the preemption right of Reed was
initiated.
There can be no doubt that the provisions of the fourth section,
for securing in advance of construction the benefits of the act,
have application to the station grounds as well as to the right of
way proper. The "benefits" to be secured cover one as well as the
other. The prerequisite for securing either right in advance is the
filing of a map of location, whether it be for a right of way or
for station grounds. But, until approved, the appropriation stands
suspended.
The Act of 1875 confers upon the railroad company the "right to
take" from the public lands adjacent to its right of way ground for
station purposes. This "right to take" in advance of construction
is subject to the approval of the Secretary of the Interior. When,
therefore, the railroad company has exercised its "right to take" a
particular tract for station purposes by filing a survey and plat
of the ground selected, the Secretary of the Interior is called
upon to interpret the law under which the right to take is claimed,
and to determine the lawfulness of the taking, as of the time when
the right was asserted, by the filing of the plat and survey. When
he acts and for the government consents by approving the plat, his
approval operates to give effect to the grant, the land upon which
it operates being thereby definitely determined. Therefore it is
that a claim by another, initiated pending his
Page 225 U. S. 149
conclusion, is cut off by giving effect to the approval as of
the date when his action was invoked. The principle is that which
has been many times applied in conflicting claims to indemnity
lands under railroad land grants. In such cases, the patent, when
issued, is held to relate to the date of the filing of the railroad
company's list of selections in lieu of place lands lost, thereby
defeating adverse rights initiated after the actual filing of the
list of selections. The same rule has likewise been applied to
lists of selections made by states to which a grant has been made
subject to location. In both classes of cases, it has been many
times ruled that, while no vested right against the United States
is acquired until the actual approval of the list of selections,
the company does acquire a right to be preferred over such an
intervener. In other words, the patent, when issued, relates back
to the initiatory right and cuts off all claimants whose rights
were initiated later. The question was fully reasoned out and the
cases reviewed in
Weyerhaeuser v. Hoyt, 219 U.
S. 380, and we can add nothing to the conclusiveness of
that case.
But it is said that the doctrine of relation does not apply to
the benefits to be acquired under the fourth section of the Act of
March 3, 1875, because a railroad desiring a right of way in
advance of construction must do three specific things: first, make
a definite location of its route; second, file a profile map of its
line with the register of the land office for the district, and
third, obtain the approval of that map by the Secretary of the
Interior, and that the act makes each of these things a
prerequisite to the acquirement of any right by expressly declaring
that "thereafter, all such lands over which such right of way shall
pass shall be disposed of subject to such right of way."
In
Minneapolis &c. Railroad v. Doughty,
208 U. S. 251, the
question was whether a homestead application filed
Page 225 U. S. 150
after the railroad company had surveyed and staked out its route
across the quarter-section claimed, but before the road had been
constructed or its map of location filed, was entitled to
preference over the right later secured by the approval of a map of
alignment, following the route which had been staked. The claim was
that the approval by the Secretary of the Interior of the map of
location related in date to the date when the route was staked out,
and thus cut out the homestead claim. This Court held that the mere
surveying and staking of a route was not such actual possession and
appropriation as to give effect to the grant and bring the case
under the authority of
Jamestown & N. Railroad v.
Jones, 177 U. S. 125.
The distinction and essential difference between a mere staking
out of a route, which, being the act of the company alone, is
changeable at its will, and actual construction, which necessarily
fixes the position of the route and consummates the purpose for
which the grant of a right of way is given, is very obvious, and
was carefully pointed out in the opinion of the Court in the case
referred to.
Another point was involved and decided in the
Doughty
case -- namely, that the approval of the map of alignment by the
Secretary of the Interior would not relate to the date of the
surveying and staking out of the route. This was manifestly so,
since that survey and staking were subject to change at any time
before the permanent line was located by the filing of a map of
such locations for the approval of the Secretary of the Interior.
Therefore it is that the doctrine of relation has always been
applied in reference to the date when the official action of the
Department was invoked to confirm the location thus permanently
settled. These points were conclusive against the railroad company,
and were the only questions for decision. The case was therefore
rightly decided.
But that case does not control this. Here, we are required to
say whether a preemptor whose claim was
Page 225 U. S. 151
initiated while the Secretary of the Interior had under
consideration the approval of a map of station grounds thereby
obtained a right to be preferred. True, this approval did not occur
until after the rights of the plaintiffs in error had been
initiated; but the patent to the preemptor did not issue until long
after that approval. Upon what principle can it be held that the
grant, which, under any view of the case, is prior in date to the
patent under which plaintiffs in error claim, is subordinate in
right as to the overlap? Neither should the case of
Railroad v.
Doughty be regarded as construing the fourth section of the
act as holding that, pending the approval of a map of final
location, any right may be initiated which will be superior to the
title which vests upon such approval. No such question was involved
in that case. What is said in the opinion about the grant of a
right of way being dependent upon the doing of three things --
location of road, filing profile of it in the land office, and the
approval thereof by the Secretary of the Interior -- and that
"thereafter all such lands over which such right of way shall pass
shall be disposed of subject to such right of way," refers to the
nonvesting of any right as against the United States, and not as
denying the priority of right in the acquisition of the premises as
between parties, growing out of priority of application.
Any construction of the fourth section of the Act of 1875 which
would permit rights initiated while the Secretary of the Interior
was considering the approval of a map of location of a right of way
over public lands, or a plat of survey of depot grounds, to prevail
over rights resulting from the prior commencement of proceedings
for the acquisition of title, would be in conflict with the settled
practice of the Land Department and the repeated rulings of this
Court under other acts.
Shepley v. Cowan, 91 U. S.
330;
Weyerhaeuser v. Hoyt, 219 U.
S. 380.
Any other conclusion would lead to great confusion, and
Page 225 U. S. 152
tend to defeat the purpose of the fourth section by inviting
interveners to initiate rights made desirable by the disclosure of
the land most available to the railroad company, and rights
presumably hurtful to the railroad enterprise, which Congress
intended to encourage and promote.
The principle applicable is fully discussed in
Shepley v.
Cowan, cited above, where, after discussing certain prior
cases, the Court said (p.
91 U. S.
338):
"But whilst, according to these decisions, no vested right as
against the United States is acquired until all the
prerequisites for the acquisition of the title have been complied
with, parties may, as against each other, acquire a right to be
preferred in the purchase or other acquisition of the land when the
United States have determined to sell or donate the property. In
all such cases, the first in time in the commencement of
proceedings for the acquisition of the title, when the same are
regularly followed up, is deemed to be the first in right."
The initiatory act, to which the final act of approval relates,
is the filing with the Secretary of the Interior of the map of
definite location. The mere surveying and staking of a route is the
tentative act of the railroad. It might at will select a different
route, and move its stakes. But when it adopts a route definitely
and then causes a map of such route to be filed in the land office
of the district, in duplicate and then filed with the Secretary of
the Interior, a right is thereby initiated which, until disposed
of, rightly precludes the creation of a later right, and gives to
the company, as prior in time, priority in right. The foundation
for this doctrine of relation is so fully stated and so thoroughly
vindicated by the opinion in
Weyerhaeuser v. Hoyt, cited
above, that we need say nothing more.
It is next said that the register did not, after a copy of the
approved map of station grounds had been transmitted
Page 225 U. S. 153
to him, mark the proper township plat and tract books, as
required by the regulations of the Land Department, so as to show
the station land selected. This notation on the books of the local
land office is for the purpose of giving notice to future enterers.
But this was not required to be done until the receipt in the land
office of the approved plat of station grounds. That approval did
not occur until December 15, 1888. Reed filed his right of
preemption October 18, 1888 -- a date antecedent to any possible
notation. He could not, therefore, have been misled, but, on the
other hand, had the constructive notice which came from the then
pending proceedings before the Secretary of the Interior. But,
aside from this, there are two answers to the contention: first, if
we are right in holding that the grant vested in the company when
the plat was approved, as of the date when filed, the failure of
the officer in the district land office to properly mark the plat
could not operate to defeat the grant; and, secondly, the railroad
company, having done everything which it was required by law to do,
should not be affected by the negligence of the register in not
doing a duty upon which the vesting of title as against the United
States did not depend. If the taking effect of the grant had been
made to depend upon his properly marking the plat books, there
would be no room for the doctrine of relation to the initiatory
step of filing the plat of selection. As that is not the case, his
neglect to do something not vital to the vesting of title will not
defeat the title so vested.
When the plat of station grounds was approved by the Land
Department, the grounds so selected were segregated from the public
lands, and it was the duty of the Land Department to withdraw the
land so granted from the market. If a subordinate failed to make
the proper notation by which this withdrawal would have been
recorded, it was not the fault of the railroad company. In
Van
Page 225 U. S. 154
Wyck v. Knevals, 106 U. S. 360,
106 U. S. 367,
this Court said of the effect of the approval of a map of definite
location:
"No further action is required of the company to establish the
route. It then becomes the duty of the Secretary to withdraw the
lands granted from market. But if he should neglect this duty, the
neglect would not impair the rights of the company, however
prejudicial it might prove to others. Its rights are not made
dependent upon the issue of the Secretary's order, or upon notice
of the withdrawal being given to the local land officers."
We therefore conclude that the subsequent issue of a patent to
the land entered by Reed was subject to the rights of the railroad
company theretofore acquired by approval of its station ground map.
The patent is not an adjudication concluding the paramount right of
the company, but, insofar as it included lands validly acquired
theretofore, was in violation of law, and inoperative to pass
title.
Certain other questions have been touched upon in the briefs.
None of them needs special notice.
We find no error in the judgment of the Idaho court, and it is
therefore
Affirmed.