Under subd. 5 of § 250 of the Judicial Code of 1911, a
final judgment of the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia
can only he reviewed by this Court in cases where the validity of
any authority exercised under the United States, or the existence
or scope of any power or duty of any officer of the United States,
is drawn in question.
The meaning of the phrase "drawn in question," as it occurs in
§ 250 of the Judicial Code, is the same as in § 709,
Rev.Stat.; § 5 of the Circuit Court of Appeals Act, and other
statutes regulating territorial appeals.
A statute of the United States authorizing an officer to act in
a certain manner under certain conditions is not drawn in question,
nor is the scope or validity of authority of the officer acting
thereunder drawn in question, simply because there is a controversy
as to whether the specified conditions do or do not exist.
Where the Secretary of the Interior refused to issue a patent
because a protest was pending, the denial of a petition for a writ
of mandamus
Page 227 U. S. 446
directed to him to issue the patent on the ground that there was
no protest does not draw in question the validity or scope of his
authority, but only the question of fact as to existence of a
protest, and there is no jurisdiction in this Court under §
250 of the Judicial Code to review the judgment.
Writ of error to review 40 Wash. 780 denied.
The facts, which involve the construction of § 250 of the
Judicial Code of 1911 and the jurisdiction of this Court to review
judgments of the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia, are
stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a petition for the allowance of a writ of error to the
Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia to review the judgment
of that court affirming the judgment of the Supreme Court of the
District of Columbia dismissing the petition of the Champion Lumber
Company against the Secretary of the Interior and the Commissioner
of the General Land Office.
It appears that, on April, 26, 1910, a petition was filed by the
petitioner in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia,
praying for a writ of mandamus against the Secretary of the
Interior and the Commissioner of the General Land Office to issue a
patent for the land hereinafter referred to. The grounds of the
petition were that the lumber company was the owner of certain
lands which had been finally entered under the homestead laws by
one Lucy Johns, from whom the petitioner derived title; that the
only authority left in the Land Department on the facts set forth
was to issue a patent for the land;
Page 227 U. S. 447
and further, that the ruling of the Secretary of the Interior
and the Commissioner of the General Land Office that a protest,
made within two years from the date of the issuance of the
receiver's receipt, was pending, whereby the patent was withheld in
accordance with the provisions of § 7 of the Act of March 3,
1891 (26 Stat. 1095, 1098, c. 561), was an arbitrary and capricious
ruling, made without legal authority. The respondents answered and
denied the allegations of the petition in this respect, and averred
the pendency of a protest which justified the holding up of the
patent under the provisions of the statute. The case was tried upon
an agreed statement of facts, of which the following is an
abridgment:
On September 17, 1897, Lucy Johns made entry under the homestead
laws at Jackson, Mississippi, of certain land subject to entry, the
papers showing that she was qualified to make the entry, which
showing has not been questioned; on September 24, 1902, she having
made
prima facie proof of compliance with the requirements
of the homestead laws, final certificate and receipt were issued to
her, and the proof was forwarded to the Commissioner of the General
Land Office at Washington during October of that year. On January
15, 1903, she conveyed all her interest in the entry to the
petitioner, which subsequently conveyed it to one Hines, who later
conveyed it back to the petitioner. On November 19, 1902, a special
agent of the General Land Office named Hammer wrote the
Commissioner that he had reason to believe that 90 percent of the
proofs in the territory where petitioner's land is situated were
fraudulent, and that he had under investigation certain entries,
including the one in question, and requested that all patents be
withheld until a full report was made; on November 28, 1902, Hammer
informed the Commissioner that the investigation so far made had
disclosed flagrant frauds, and renewed his request to withhold
patents to such lands, and on
Page 227 U. S. 448
December 13th of that year, the Commissioner directed the
register and receiver at Jackson to suspend action on commutations
and proofs until Hammer had reported, and on June 24, 1904, Hammer,
in response to a letter from the Commissioner inquiring as to the
necessity of an investigation, replied in the affirmative. On May
12, 1906, another special agent reported that the entry of Lucy
Johns
"was made for speculative purposes, with no attempt to comply
with the requirements of the law, and recommended that the entry be
cancelled on the ground of nonresidence, noncultivation,
nonimprovement, and abandonment."
Thereupon the Commissioner directed that a hearing be had. The
petitioner moved for a stay of proceedings, claimed that, under
§ 7,
supra, the entry should be patented without
further proceedings. The motion was denied by the Commissioner, and
this denial affirmed by the Secretary of the Interior, who later
denied a motion to review his decision, finding that a protest had
been filed against the patent of Lucy Johns' homestead entry within
two years from the issuance of the receiver's receipt, and holding
that the case should proceed to hearing on the special agent's
charge.
The Supreme Court of the District of Columbia dismissed the
petition. Upon appeal to the Court of Appeals, that court affirmed
the judgment of the supreme court. 39 App.D.C. 158. In the course
of the opinion, the Court of Appeals said:
"Every point advanced by appellant in this case is, in our view,
settled by the following very recent decisions:
Fisher v.
United States, 37 App.D.C. 436;
Ness v. Fisher,
223 U. S.
683;
McKenzie v. Fisher, 39 App.D.C. 7. In
Fisher v. United States, which involved the interpretation
of the very statute upon which appellant here relies, this Court,
speaking through Mr. Justice Van Orsdel, said:"
"While it is true that arbitrary
Page 227 U. S. 449
power resides nowhere in our system of government, and while the
supervisory authority vested in the Secretary of the Interior and
the Commissioner of the General Land Office over the disposition of
the public lands is neither unlimited nor arbitrary, yet the
question here presented as to whether or not the communication and
order amounted to a protest, which we regard as exceedingly close,
was one clearly within the power of the Commissioner to decide. To
say that he was mistaken would require us to review a matter
exclusively confided by law to his discretion and judgment. This
proceeding will not admit of such a review."
"The communications of Special Agent Hammer respecting this
entry were made within the two years contemplated by said Act of
March 3, 1891, as was the communication of June 18, 1904, from the
Commissioner to said agent. It is apparent that these
communications resulted in the withholding of a patent -- in other
words, that the Commissioner regarded the right to that patent as
dependent upon the outcome of the investigation which was to ensue.
The subsequent decision of the Secretary that what was done within
the two-year period constituted a protest against the patenting of
the entry was not arbitrary or capricious, but was based upon
evidence, and the sufficiency of that evidence was for his, and not
our, determination."
The writ of error is asked for under § 250 of the Judicial
Code, which provides:
"SEC. 250. Any final judgment or decree of the Court of Appeals
of the District of Columbia may be reexamined and affirmed,
reversed, or modified by the Supreme Court of the United States,
upon writ of error or appeal, in the following cases:"
"
* * * *"
"Fifth. In cases in which the validity of any authority
exercised under the United States, or the existence or
Page 227 U. S. 450
scope of any power or duty of an officer of the United States,
is drawn in question."
The case, therefore, to be appealable to this Court from the
Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia, must be one in which
the validity of the authority exercised or the existence or scope
of the authority of the officer named is drawn in question.
"Drawn in question" is a phrase long used in other statutes of
the United States regulating appellate jurisdiction. It is found in
§ 709 of the Revised Statutes, governing appeals from state
courts to this Court. It is in the fifth section of the Circuit
Court of Appeals Act of March 3, 1891 (26 Stat. 826, 828, c. 517).
It is in the statute regulating territorial appeals (March 3, 1885,
23 Stat. 443, c. 355). The meaning of this phrase has been the
subject of frequent consideration in this Court, and it is
unnecessary to review the numerous cases in which it has been
interpreted.
As we have said, it is in the Circuit Court of Appeals Act,
which provides that cases may be brought directly to this Court
from the circuit court, in which, among other things, the validity
or construction of any treaty made under the authority of the
United States is drawn in question. In
Muse v. Arlington Hotel
Co., 168 U. S. 430, in
considering whether the provisions of a certain treaty were drawn
in question, so far as the validity or construction thereof was
concerned, with a view to the exercise of the appellate
jurisdiction of this Court, Mr. Chief Justice Fuller, delivering
the opinion of the Court, reviewed the cases in this Court and
stated as the conclusion of the matter that, in order to involve
the validity or construction of a treaty,
"some right, title, privilege, or immunity dependent on the
treaty must be so set up or claimed as to require the circuit court
to pass on the question of validity or construction in disposing of
the right asserted."
In
Pettit v. Walste, 194 U. S. 205,
194 U. S. 216,
the construction of a
Page 227 U. S. 451
treaty was held to be drawn in question where the petition for a
writ of habeas corpus and the warrant under which the accused was
arrested referred to the treaty, and the court below proceeded on
the ground that the determination of the part upon the meaning of
certain provisions part upon the meaning of certain provisions of
that treaty, these provisions having been duly brought to the
attention of the court. It has also been held that the validity of
a statute of the United States or authority exercised thereunder is
drawn in question when the existence or constitutionality or
legality of such law is denied and the denial forms the subject of
direct inquiry in the case.
United States v. Lynch,
137 U. S. 280;
Linford v. Ellison, 155 U. S. 503;
Snow v. United States, 118 U. S. 346,
118 U. S. 353;
McLean v. R. Co., 203 U. S. 38.
In clause five of § 250, under consideration, the added
ground of appeals is given if the existence or scope of any power
or duty of an officer of the United States is drawn in question.
Within the meaning of this statute, was any such validity or
existence or scope of authority drawn in question? It appears that
the petitioner contended that no protest was pending in the
Department which could rightfully justify the withholding of the
patent. The officers of the United States took issue upon this
allegation, and the Court of Appeals decided that there was
testimony before the Secretary authorizing the exercise of the
discretion conferred by law to withhold the patent, and upon that
ground affirmed the decision, refusing the writ. The case was
therefore submitted and decided upon the issue whether the action
of the Secretary was justified in the exercise of his lawful
discretion because of the facts disclosed in the record. The
petitioner did not challenge, nor did the court pass upon, the
validity of any authority exercised under the United States, nor
was the existence or extent tent of the authority or duty of an
officer of the United States drawn in question in the sense in
which it is
Page 227 U. S. 452
used in the statute -- that is, brought forward and made a
ground of decision. The statutes under which the officers of the
United States acted were concededly valid, and the authority
exerted was lawful and within the powers of the officers, if the
facts justified their action. The petitioner's real attack upon the
action of the Secretary and Commissioner was because the facts
shown did not warrant the exercise of the power given by law. The
decision of that issue, upon which it is clear the case turned,
neither involved nor decided the questions which make the case
appealable to this Court under the fifth clause of § 250 of
the Judicial Code.
It follows that the petition for writ of error must be
denied.