Where one specially asserts in the state court a right
predicated on the statutes of the United States to enter upon, and
remain in possession of, public land, and that right is denied,
this Court has jurisdiction to review the judgment of the state
Court under § 237 Judicial Code.
The surveyor is not invested with authority to determine the
character of land surveyed or left unsurveyed or to classify it as
within or without the operation of particular laws.
Under the Homestead Law of the United States, unsurveyed public
lands, if agricultural and unappropriated, are open to settlement
by qualified entrymen, and this applies to land of that description
left unsurveyed by a surveyor by erroneously marking it on the plat
as included within the meander lines of a lake.
One who forces a qualified entryman who has acquired, in
compliance with the Homestead Law, an inceptive homestead right on
public land open to entry although erroneously shown on the plat as
a lake, wrongfully invades the possessory right of the
homesteader.
While the Land Department controls the surveying of the public
lands and the courts have no power to revise a survey, the courts
can determine whether the land was left unsurveyed and whether a
right of possession exists under an inceptive claim.
Courts should not interfere with the Land Department in
administrative affairs and before patent has issued, but it is not
an interference
Page 232 U. S. 453
to restrain trespassers upon possessory rights or to restore
possession to lawful claimants wrongfully dispossessed.
As Congress has not prescribed the forum or mode in which such
wrongs may be restrained or redressed, the state courts have
jurisdiction thereover, and should proceed to appropriately dispose
of such questions and protect those claiming possession under the
federal statute.
Second Employers' Liability Cases,
223 U. S. 1.
62 Wash. 572 reversed.
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction of the state court
over questions relating to the public lands and the jurisdiction of
this Court to review the judgment, are stated in the opinion.
Page 232 U. S. 456
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case originated in the Superior Court of Spokane County,
Washington, and involves the present right of possession of a tract
of unsurveyed public land, containing about 75 acres, in that
county.
Considerably abridged, the facts stated in the complaint are
these: in 1877, when the public lands in that vicinity were
surveyed, an area embracing approximately 1,200 acres was, by the
wrongful act or error of the surveyor, omitted from the survey and
meandered as a lake, when in truth it was not such, but was
agricultural land susceptible of cultivation. That area still
remains unsurveyed, and includes the tract in question. On October
30, 1909, this tract was unappropriated public land, open to
settlement under the homestead law of the United States. On that
day, the plaintiff, being in every way qualified so to do, made
actual settlement upon the tract with the purpose of acquiring the
title under that law by a full and
bona fide compliance
with its requirements, and, in furtherance of that purpose, erected
upon the tract a habitable frame dwelling, furnished the same with
all necessary household goods, entered into possession of the
tract, and established
Page 232 U. S. 457
his actual residence thereon. Shortly thereafter, during the
continuance of his possession and residence, the defendants, with
the wrongful purpose of preventing him from complying with the
requirements of the homestead law, and of subjecting the tract to
their own use, unlawfully compelled him to withdraw therefrom and
remain away, and when the action was commenced, a few months later,
they were wrongfully withholding the tract from him, and were
themselves mere trespassers thereon. It also was alleged:
"That, in order to comply with the requirements of the homestead
law of the United States, and to acquire title to the land so
settled upon by this plaintiff, as aforesaid, under said law, it
becomes and is necessary for this plaintiff to reside upon and
cultivate such land, and to have possession thereof for a period of
five years, and unless this plaintiff can reside upon, cultivate,
and have possession of said land for and during such period of time
from and after his said settlement, this plaintiff cannot comply
with the requirements of the homestead law of the United States,
and sustain and maintain his rights to said land, and acquire title
thereto from the government of the United States under the
homestead law of the United States."
The prayer was for a judgment establishing the plaintiff's right
to the possession, declaring the defendants were without any right
thereto, and awarding costs.
The defendants demurred upon the grounds that the complaint did
not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and
that the court was without jurisdiction of the subject matter. The
demurrer was sustained, and, the plaintiff electing to stand upon
his complaint, a judgment of dismissal was entered. An appeal
resulted in an affirmance by the supreme court of the state, which
held, first, that the land was not subject to settlement under the
homestead law, because the surveyor had designated and meandered it
as a lake, and second, that
Page 232 U. S. 458
only the Land Department could undo and correct the wrong or
error of the surveyor in that regard. 62 Wash. 572. To secure a
reversal of the judgment, the plaintiff prosecutes this writ of
error.
Although challenged by the defendants, our jurisdiction does not
admit of any doubt. The plaintiff asserted a right to settle upon
the land notwithstanding the wrongful act or error of the surveyor
in designating and meandering it as a lake, and also a right to
remain in possession to the end that he might perform the acts
essential to the acquisition of the title, and he expressly
predicated these rights upon the homestead law of the United
States. The decision was against the rights so claimed, and this
brings the case within § 709 of the Revised Statutes, now
§ 237 of the Judicial Code.
The state courts seem to have proceeded upon the theory (a) that
the surveyor's action in designating and meandering the 1,200-acre
area as a lake operated as an authoritative determination that it
was not agricultural land, but a permanent body of water, and (b)
that this determination, while remaining undisturbed by the Land
Department, took the land without the operation of the settlement
laws, including the homestead law. But in this there was a
misconception of the authority of the surveyor. He was not invested
with power to determine the character of the land which he surveyed
or left unsurveyed, or to classify it as within or without the
operation of particular laws. All that he was to do in that regard
was to note and report its character, as it appeared to him, as a
means of enlarging the sources of information upon that subject
otherwise available. In
Barden v. Northern Pacific Railroad
Co., 154 U. S. 288,
154 U. S. 292,
154 U. S. 320,
in disposing of a contention that the lands there in question had
been determined and reported by the surveyor as agricultural, and
not mineral, and that the determination and report remained in
force, this Court said:
"But
Page 232 U. S. 459
the conclusive answer to such alleged determination and report
is that the matters to which they relate were not left to the
Surveyor General. Neither he nor any of his subordinates was
authorized to determine finally the character of any lands granted,
or make any binding report thereon. Information of the character of
all lands surveyed is required of surveying officers, so far as
knowledge respecting them is obtained in the course of their
duties, but they are not clothed with authority to especially
examine as to these matters outside of their other duties, or
determine them, nor does their report have any binding force. It is
simply an addition made to the general information obtained from
different sources on the subject."
So, if the area designated and meandered as a lake was in truth
agricultural land susceptible of cultivation, as alleged in the
complaint and admitted by the demurrer, it was as much public land
after the survey, and as much within the operation of the
settlement laws, as if its true character had been reported by the
surveyor. It merely was left unsurveyed.
See Niles v. Cedar
Point Club, 175 U. S. 300,
175 U. S. 308;
French-Glenn Live Stock Co. v. Springer, 185 U. S.
47;
Security Land & Exploration Co. v.
Burns, 193 U. S. 167,
193 U. S. 187;
Scott v. Lattig, 227 U. S. 229,
227 U. S.
241.
It will be perceived that we are not speaking of land which was
covered by a permanent body of water at the time of the survey, and
thereafter was laid bare by a subsidence of the water, nor yet of
comparatively small areas which sometimes lie within meander lines
reasonably approximating the shores of permanent bodies of water.
See Horne v. Smith, 159 U. S. 40;
Kean v. Calumet Canal Co., 190 U.
S. 452;
Hardin v. Shedd, 190 U.
S. 508. Neither are we concerned with a collateral
attack upon a public survey, as was the case in
Cragin v.
Powell, 128 U. S. 691, and
Stoneroad v. Stoneroad, 158 U. S. 240, for
the plaintiff is not asking that any of the lines of the survey be
rejected or altered, but only that a possessory right acquired
Page 232 U. S. 460
by settlement upon public land confessedly left unsurveyed be
protected.
The homestead law, in terms, subjects unsurveyed public lands,
if agricultural and unappropriated, to settlement by persons having
the requisite qualifications and intending to comply with its
requirements as a means of acquiring the title, and also plainly
confers upon the settler the right of possession, without which
compliance with those requirements would be impossible. Rev.Stat.
§§ 2289
et seq.; Act May 14, 1880, 21 Stat..
140, c. 89, § 3; Rev.Stat. § 2266; Act March 3, 1891, 26
Stat. 1095, c. 561, § 5;
United States v. Waddell,
112 U. S. 76,
112 U. S. 80;
Sturr v. Beck, 133 U. S. 541,
133 U. S. 547;
Nelson v. Northern Pacific Railway Co., 188 U.
S. 108,
188 U. S. 125;
Scott v. Lattig, 227 U. S. 229,
227 U. S. 240;
Wadkins v. Producers' Oil Co., 227 U.
S. 368,
227 U. S. 373.
So it clearly appears from the allegations of the complaint, as
admitted by the demurrer, that the land in question was open to
homestead settlement when the plaintiff settled thereon; that, by
his settlement and subsequent acts, he acquired an inceptive
homestead right which entitled him to the possession, and that the
defendants, in forcing him to withdraw from the land and in then
withholding the same from him, wrongfully invaded this possessory
right.
The question of the jurisdiction of the court of first instance,
although not difficult of solution, remains to be noticed. It was
not held by the appellate court that the jurisdiction of the former
under the local laws was not broad enough to enable it to entertain
the action and award appropriate relief, but only that this
jurisdiction could not be exerted consistently with the laws of
Congress, and this upon the theory that the latter invested the
Land Department with exclusive authority to deal with the
subject.
It is true that the authority to make surveys of the public
lands is confided to the Land Department, and that
Page 232 U. S. 461
the courts possess no power to revise or disturb its action in
that regard; but here, the court was not asked to make a survey or
to revise or disturb one already made. As has been indicated, the
land in question was not surveyed, but left unsurveyed, and the
plaintiff, whose possession under a lawful homestead settlement had
been invaded and interrupted by mere trespasses, was seeking a
return of the possession to the end that he might continue his
rightful efforts to earn the title. In short, it was not a survey,
but the right of possession under an inceptive homestead claim,
that was in question.
Generally speaking, it also is true that it is not a province of
the courts to interfere with the Land Department in the
administration of the public land laws, and that they are to be
deemed in process of administration until the proceedings for the
acquisition of the title terminate in the issuing of a patent. But
no interference with that Department or usurpation of its functions
was here sought or involved. It has not been invested with
authority to redress or restrain trespasses upon possessory rights,
or to restore the possession to lawful claimants when wrongfully
dispossessed. Congress has not prescribed the forum and mode in
which such wrongs may be restrained and redressed, as doubtless it
could, but has pursued the policy of permitting them to be dealt
with in the local tribunals according to local modes of procedure.
And the exercise of this jurisdiction has been not only sanctioned
by the appellate courts in many of the public land states, but also
recognized and approved by this Court.
Woodsides v.
Rickey, 1 Or. 108;
Colwell v. Smith, 1 Wash.Terr. 92;
Ward v. Moorey, 1 Wash.Terr. 104, 107;
Arment v.
Hensel, 5 Wash. 152;
Fulmele v. Camp, 20 Colo. 495;
Wood v. Murray, 85 Ia. 505;
Matthews v. O'Brien,
84 Minn. 505;
Zimmerman v. McCurdy, 15 N.D. 79;
Whittaker v. Pendola, 78 Cal. 296;
Sproat v.
Durland, 2 Okl. 24, 45;
Peckham v. Faught, 2 Okl.
173;
Page 232 U. S. 462
Lytle v.
Arkansas, 22 How. 193,
63 U. S. 205;
Marquez v. Frisbie, 101 U. S. 473,
101 U. S. 475;
Black v. Jackson, 177 U. S. 349;
United States v. Buchanan, 232 U. S.
72.
See also Cosmos Exploration Co. v. Gray Eagle
Oil Co., 190 U. S. 301,
190 U. S. 308,
190 U. S. 315;
Humbird v. Avery, 195 U. S. 480,
195 U. S. 504;
Bunker Hill Co. v. United States, 226 U.
S. 548,
226 U. S. 550.
It was well said by the Supreme Court of Oklahoma in
Sproat v.
Durland, 2 Okl. 24, 45:
"To say that no relief can be granted, or that our courts are
powerless to do justice between litigants in this class of cases,
pending the settlement of title in the Land Department, would be
the announcement of a doctrine abhorrent to a sense of common
justice. It would encourage the strong to override the weak, would
place a premium upon greed and the use of force, and in many
instances lead to bloodshed and crime. Such a state of affairs is
to be avoided, and the courts should not hesitate to invoke the
powers inherent in them and lend their aid, in every way possible,
in aid of justice by preventing encroachments upon the possessory
rights of settlers, or by equitably adjusting their
differences."
We are accordingly of opinion that the laws of Congress
interposed no obstacle to the jurisdiction of the court of first
instance, and that, instead of dismissing the case, it should have
proceeded to an appropriate disposition of the asserted right of
possession.
See R. & B. Ann.Wash. Codes, § 942;
Second Employers' Liability Cases, 223 U. S.
1,
223 U. S.
55-59.
Judgment reversed.