1. The rule that, where lands are patented according to an
official plat, showing meander lines along or near the margin of a
body of water, the plat is to be treated as part of the conveyance
and the water itself constitutes the boundary does not apply when
it is conclusively shown that no body of water exists or existed at
or near the place indicated, or where no attempt to survey tracts
lying beyond the meander line was actually made. P.
260 U. S.
564.
2. The United States cannot be estopped to question the
existence of a survey by statements made in correspondence by
officials of the Land Department. P.
260 U. S.
564.
3. Defendants who took possession of land in Louisiana and
extracted oil in good faith under a patent which had long been
erroneously treated by government officials as conveying the tract
are liable, as innocent trespassers, for the value of the oil after
deducting the cost of drilling and operating the wells. P.
260 U. S. 564.
See Mason v. United States, ante, 260 U. S. 545.
274 F. 18 affirmed.
Appeal and cross-appeal from a decree of the circuit court of
appeals affirming a decree of the district court in a suit by the
United States to quiet its title to a tract of public land, enjoin
trespasses, and secure an accounting for oil wrongfully
extracted.
Page 260 U. S. 562
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
The United States brought suit in equity in the District Court
of the United States for the Western District of Louisiana, against
the defendants (appellants and cross-appellees here), to have its
title to 85.22 acres of land in the parish of Caddo, La.,
confirmed, possession restored, assertion of claims thereto by
defendants enjoined, and an accounting had for the value of oil
removed therefrom by the defendants, or any of them.
That court, upon the report of a master, entered a decree for
the plaintiff and awarded damages for the value of the oil removed,
after deducting the cost of drilling and operating the wells by
means of which the oil was recovered.
The case is here by appeal from the decree of the circuit court
of appeals, affirming that of the district court. 274 Fed. 18.
The Fishing & Hunting Club claimed title through mesne
conveyances from one Stephen D. Pitts, to whom a patent had been
issued in 1860 for the southwest fractional quarter of section 10,
in township 20 north, range 16 west, "according to the official
plat of the survey of said lands, returned to the General Land
Office by the Surveyor General." The other defendants depend upon a
lease from the Fishing & Hunting Club to the Producers' Oil
Company. The official plat referred to in the Pitts patent was the
plat of a survey made by A. W. Warren, in 1839, and approved and
filed in the General Land Office the same year. The fractional
quarter section described contained about 48 acres, though the
patent erroneously gave it as 23 acres. The land in question
lies
Page 260 U. S. 563
west and south and immediately adjoining, but other lands still
intervene between it and the permanent lake shore. According to the
plat, the land so patented to Pitts borders upon Ferry Lake, or
Jeems Bayou, a navigable body of water, and is shown on the plat as
a small peninsula extending into the water and connected by a
narrow neck with the mainland. The evidence which is voluminous and
substantially uncontroverted, makes it very clear that no such
peninsula exists or existed at the time of the survey in 1839. On
the contrary, a later survey, called an extension survey, made in
1916-17 shows that a large compact body of upland, more than 500
acres in extent, which is, and in 1839 was, well timbered with a
growth of pine, oak and other trees lies between this
supposititious peninsula and the shore line of the lake in every
direction, except for a short distance along the east boundary as
delineated upon the plat. This body of land extends beyond the
boundaries of section 10 into the adjoining sections 9, 15, and 16.
Across the lands in controversy, which are included in the larger
body just mentioned, the actual shore line of the lake is, and was
in 1839, from a few hundred feet to three-quarters of a mile
distant from the outside boundaries of the land patented to Pitts,
as shown on the Warren plat.
The Warren field notes describe the peninsular-shaped tract of
land not by lines purporting to meander the margin of any body of
water, but by courses and distances. There is nothing in the field
notes to indicate a water boundary, unless as a matter of mere
inference, which the most casual inspection of the locality would
instantly dissipate. The inaccuracy of the plat is plainly apparent
upon a like inspection. Why Warren made the survey and returned the
plat as he did is a matter of speculation, but the facts
demonstrated that no survey of the large, compact body of land,
which includes the tract in controversy, was ever made. The
circumstances, as well as the
Page 260 U. S. 564
extent and character of the lands, necessitate the conclusion
that the omission was of deliberate purpose, or the result of such
gross and palpable error as to constitute in effect a fraud upon
the government.
The defendants rely upon the rule that, where lands are patented
according to an official plat of survey, showing meander lines
along or near the margin of a body of water, the plat is to be
treated as a part of the conveyance, and the water itself
constitutes the boundary. The rule is familiar, and has received
the approval of this Court many times.
Producers' Oil Co. v.
Hanzen, 238 U. S. 325,
238 U. S. 338,
and cases cited. But it is not absolute, as this Court has also
frequently decided. It will not be applied where, as here, the
facts conclusively show that no body of water existed or
exists§ at or near the place indicated on the plat or where,
as here, there never was in fact an attempt to survey the land in
controversy.
Security Land & Exploration Co. v. Burns,
193 U. S. 167;
Lee Wilson & Co. v. United States, 245 U. S.
24;
Producers' Oil Co. v. Hanzen, supra; Horne v.
Smith, 159 U. S. 40;
French-Glenn Live Stock Co. v. Springer, 185 U. S.
47;
Chapman & Dewey Lumber Co. v. St. Francis
Levee District, 232 U. S. 186.
But it is asserted that plaintiff is estopped from claiming
title to the land because of certain correspondence with the
Commissioner of the General Land Office, in 1897, wherein that
officer said that there were no unsurveyed lands in the locality in
question, and because of an official letter from the Director of
the Geological Survey to the same effect. It is clear, however,
that the United States cannot be so estopped.
Lee Wilson &
Co. v. United States, supra; Utah Power & Light Co. v. United
States, 243 U. S. 389,
243 U. S.
408.
We think the measure of damages adopted by the courts below was
correct. The defendants were in possession of the land, and
extracted the oil therefrom in good faith.
Page 260 U. S. 565
The land had been for many years treated by the officials of the
government as having been conveyed by the Pitts patent. The
defendants were innocent trespassers within the rule laid down by
this Court in
United States v. St. Anthony Railroad Co.,
192 U. S. 524,
192 U. S. 542.
Moreover, the case is governed in this respect by the more liberal
rule of the Louisiana Civil Code (Article 501), as interpreted by
the decisions of the highest court of that state.
Mason et al.
v. United States, ante, 260 U. S. 545.
The decree of the Circuit Court of Appeals is
affirmed.