Section 2347 of the Revised Statutes, in providing that public
coal lands may be entered upon payment of "not less than" ten
dollars per acre and "not less than" twenty dollars per acre,
according to their distance from a completed railroad, sets up
those prices as
minima, and, by implication, empowers the
Secretary of the Interior to charge higher prices proportionate to
the value of tracts sold. P.
255 U. S.
469.
54 Ct.Clms. 225 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Action to recover the sum of $3,600, excessive payment exacted
by the Secretary of the Interior for 120 acres of coal land, which
plaintiff (we so designate him in this opinion) was entitled to
enter and did enter under § 2347 of the Revised Statutes.
The Court of Claims dismissed the petition, and from its
judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
The right of plaintiff to enter the land is not disputed. The
dispute is as to the price prescribed by § 2347. Its provision
is that payment shall be made of not less than $10 per acre if the
lands selected be more than 15 miles
Page 255 U. S. 469
from a completed railroad, and not less than $20 per acre if
they be within 15 miles of the railroad.
The entry of plaintiff was within 15 miles of the railroad, and
the Secretary required the payment of $50 per acre. The requirement
is attacked as beyond the power of the Secretary, it being in
excess of the statutory price, which, it is contended, is $20 per
acre, and, to sustain the attack, there is adduced the prior
practice of the Interior Department and cases whose analogy, it is
contended, demonstrate that the words "not less than twenty dollars
per acre" mean not more than $20 per acre. The answer to the
contention would seem necessarily to be that "less" and "more" are
words of contrast -- indeed of opposition, and cannot be
confounded. It is easy to see that, if their difference should be
disregarded in dealing with the things of the world, sensible or
insensible, the resulting confusion would be hard to describe.
Plaintiff makes the words even more facile to management than in
the above contention, and makes them exclude all freedom of
judgment and choice of price, which they seem not only to imply,
but require, in the administration of § 2347. In support of
the liberty of identifying or confusing different things, plaintiff
invokes the practice of the Interior Department from 1873 to 1907,
and urges that Congress, by silence, gave sanction and approval to
the practice.
The inference deduced from the practice and the asserted
sanction we cannot accept. The practice was but the exercise of
administration by the Department upon the then circumstances,
deemed proper and adequate then and accepted as such by
Congress.
In 1907, there was a change of conditions, and they dictated a
change in administration, and, in aid of a judgment of values and
its exercise under the direction of § 2347, coal lands were
subjected to classification and appraisement, a procedure not
arbitrary but safe and sensible, establishing
Page 255 U. S. 470
a proportional relation between the payment made and the value
of the lands received. And this is consonant to the statute;
indeed, is its direction, if its words be considered. There has
been no protesting objection from Congress, and the executive and
legislative departments have been in accord for 14 years. The
present practice of the Interior Department therefore has the same
confirmation that plaintiff asserts for its prior practice.
Plaintiff, however, contends that § 2347 is the successor
of prior legislation, and that, by such legislation, and decisions
under it, the words "not less than" of that section have been made
the equivalent "of the minimum and minimum price" of prior
legislation, and that $20 per acre is the "sole price fixed by law"
for lands within 15 miles of a completed railroad.
The legislation referred to is an Act of July 1, 1864, c. 205,
13 Stat. 343; an Act of March 3, 1865, 13 Stat. 529, and an Act of
March 3, 1873, 17 Stat. 607. The latter statute becoming §
2347 and other sections
The first act provided for the sale of coal lands at public
auction "at a minimum price of $20 per acre," and "that any lands
not thus disposed of" should "thereafter be liable to private entry
at said minimum." The second act provided that coal land could be
entered by a citizen actually engaged in mining upon it "at the
minimum of $20 per acre fixed in the Town and Property Act of July
1, 1864." The third act omits provision for offering coal lands at
auction, and subjects them to private entry at not less than $10 or
$20 an acre, according to distance from a completed railroad. This
provision became § 2347.
These acts were the successors of one another in general policy,
but not in details. In the latter, they differed in provision, and
progressed to the explicit declarations of § 2347 and their
inevitable meaning. And there is nothing to the contrary in
Colorado Coal & Iron Co.
v. United
Page 255 U. S. 471
States, 123 U. S. 307,
123 U. S. 325.
The case, indeed, was concerned with other provisions than those
involved here.
We need not go beyond this general exposition. It would extend
this opinion to a repellant length to trace and comment upon the
details and refinements of plaintiff's reasoning, and upon the
analogies he urges of the price of lands under the preemption and
other laws.
We are not impressed with the contention that, if the price of
$20 an acre is not the fixed, an ultimate price there is no test of
price, and that the Secretary of the Interior "may charge what
price he chooses, . . . no law putting any restraint upon his
action," and that the "sale of coal lands may be stopped altogether
if, for any reason, the Secretary considers that to be judicious or
desirable." This is tantamount to saying that the Secretary may
abuse his trust and the power conferred upon him to execute it.
There is no argument against conferring power or denying power in
the assertion that it may be abused. The world acts, and must act,
upon a different consideration. Government would otherwise be
impossible. Besides, there is no contention that there is an
arbitrary abuse of power in the present case, and, when such abuse
shall occur, a remedy may be of concern, and no doubt will be
found.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE CLARKE took no part in the consideration and
decision of this case.