1. Authority of the Secretary of the Interior to determine
whether land claimed under a school land grant to a state was known
to be mineral when the survey was approved may be exercised by him
directly without preliminary resort to a hearing before the local
land officers. P.
278 U. S.
213.
2. Land comprised in a section numbered 36 was deeded by the
State of California as part of her school land grant, her title
depending under the granting act of Congress upon the mineral
character of the land not having been known at the time when the
survey was approved. For the purpose of determining this question
purely in the interest of the United States, no claim under the
federal laws having been advanced by any third party, the Land
Department ordered a hearing before the local land
Page 278 U. S. 201
officer. Subsequently, a Secretary of the Interior, at the
instance of those claiming under the state, himself gave a hearing,
and, without specifying reasons, directed that the proceedings
before the local officers be dismissed.
Held:
(1) That, assuming the Secretary had power to decide the
question of known mineral character conclusively, and thus end the
jurisdiction of the Department over the land, the making of this
finding of fact cannot be implied in support of his order, the case
being unlike that of a judgment, or an administrative act passing
title, such as a patent. Pp.
278 U. S.
213-214.
(2) To ascertain whether such finding was actually made, matters
leading up to the order may be examined, such as the brief of
counsel filed with the Secretary, the notice of the hearing, and
the stenographer's transcript of the proceedings. P.
278 U. S.
214.
(3) The function of the Secretary was to determine the question
of fact whether the mineral character of the land was known when
the survey was approved, to the end that, in such case, the
interests of the United States might be protected, through legal
proceedings if necessary. It was not his duty to adjudicate
generally upon the rights of the state or her grantees, and a
decision by him arrived at without deciding this question of fact,
and which upheld their claim because, in his opinion, other facts
not questioned had operated as a matter of law to estop the
government from disputing their title, was beyond his authority.
Pp.
278 U. S.
218-220.
(4) The action of the Secretary having been based upon such
unauthorized grounds, his successor was not thereby precluded from
reopening the original inquiry. P.
278 U. S.
220.
57 App.D.C. 329, 23 F.2d 750, reversed.
Certiorari, 276 U.S. 613, to a decree of the Court of Appeals of
the District of Columbia which affirmed a decree of the Supreme
Court of the District enjoining the Secretary of the Interior from
continuing proceedings in a local land office brought for the
purpose of ascertaining whether certain land in California
comprised in a school section was known to be mineral when the
survey of the section was approved.
Page 278 U. S. 207
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought in October, 1925, by the Standard Oil
Company in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia against
Dr. Work, the then Secretary of the Interior, to enjoin the
continuation of proceedings in the local land office at Visalia,
California, ordered by him with a view to ascertaining and
determining whether particular lands were known to be mineral in
character when the survey of them was accepted. California,
Standard Oil Co., Transferees, 51 L.D. 141. Upon his resignation,
Secretary West was substituted as defendant. The proceedings were
of the kind commonly employed by the Secretary of the Interior to
ascertain the existence of alleged facts reported by a
representative of the General Land Office, because of which the
title of one claiming public lands is questioned in the Department.
The Register and Receiver, after hearing the parties in interest,
make report of their findings. These are subject to an appeal, on
the evidence, to the Land Commissioner, and also to a further
appeal to the secretary. Upon the ultimate findings, the
Commissioner decides, subject to the supervision and control of the
Secretary, what action, if any, shall be taken.
Compare
George W. Dally, 41 L.D. 295, 299. Circular No. 460, February 26,
1916, 44 L.D. 572, prescribes the procedure.
The proceedings here involved concern § 36, township 30
south, range 23 east, Mr. Diabolo B. & M. -- that land being in
Elk Hills, Kern County, California. Section 36 is one of the
sections in each township which, if not mineral or otherwise
disposed of, was
Page 278 U. S. 208
granted by Congress to the State of California in aid of public
schools by Act of March 3, 1850, c. 145, § 6, 10 Stat. 244,
246. Under patents issued by the state in 1910, and mesne
conveyances, the Standard Oil Company claims title to part, and an
interest in the rest, of the section. Drilling on this land, begun
in 1918, has been followed by extensive oil mining operations. The
proceedings were based on a charge that, on January 26, 1903, the
date of the approval of the survey, the land was known to be
mineral in character. If the land was then known to be mineral, the
title confessedly did not pass by the Act, for Congress excluded
mineral land from the grant.
Ivanhoe Mining Co. v. Keystone
Consolidated Mining Co., 102 U. S. 167;
Mullan v. United States, 118 U. S. 271,
118 U. S. 276.
See also Wyoming v. United States, 255 U.
S. 489,
255 U. S. 500;
Work v. Louisiana, 269 U. S. 250,
269 U. S.
257-258. If it was not then known to be mineral, the
legal title passed to the state on that date, for the land was
within one of the sections in place designated in the granting Act.
United States v. Morrison, 240 U.
S. 192;
United States v. Sweet, 245 U.
S. 563.
The Act of 1853 here involved, like those granting school lands
to many other states, [
Footnote
1] makes no provision for determining what part of the land is
thus excluded from the grant. It does not provide for the issue of
patents or for any equivalent action by the Department to evidence
the transfer of title to the state. No patent to the state, or
Page 278 U. S. 209
evidence of title or interest in another, has in fact been
issued by the Secretary of the Interior. Nor has there been in the
Department any contest between the state and another claimant which
might have resulted in a determination of the character of the
land. Whether this land was known to be mineral at the date of the
survey must therefore be established otherwise. The Standard Oil
Company contends that its nonmineral character had, before
Secretary Work's order, been established by a final determination
in the Department; that thereby the Department lost jurisdiction
over the land, and that, for this reason, continuation of the
proceedings should be enjoined. [
Footnote 2]
It is true that, among the several officers of the Land
Department, action had repeatedly been taken having some relation
to the charter of the land prior to the order of Secretary Work.
The survey, which was approved January 26, 1903, returned it as
mineral. In 1904, a special agent reported it as nonmineral. In
1908, it was temporarily withdrawn from agricultural entry pending
examination and classification by the United States Geological
Survey. In 1909, the Director of the Geological Survey classified
it as oil land. In 1910, the Secretary recommended its withdrawal
for a petroleum reserve, and the recommendation was approved by the
President. In 1912, it was placed in Naval Petroleum Reserve No. 1.
On January 14, 1914, the proceedings in the land office here
involved were initiated. The papers having been mislaid or misfiled
in the local office, the proceedings lay dormant, and process was
not served until after March 2, 1921. Then the Register and
Receiver were ordered by the Land Commissioner, under Secretary
Payne, to proceed in accordance with Circular No. 460. On June
9,
Page 278 U. S. 210
1921, before further action thereon, Secretary Fall directed the
Land Commissioner to dismiss the proceedings and notify all parties
in interest of the dismissal.
On May 8, 1925, Secretary Work vacated Secretary Fall's order
and directed the Register and Receiver to proceed to a hearing of
the charge that the land was known to be mineral in character on
January 26, 1903. [
Footnote 3]
If, at the time of Secretary Work's order, the Department still had
jurisdiction of the land, he possessed the power to review the
action of his predecessor and to deal with the matter as freely as
he could have done if the dismissal of the proceedings had been his
own act or that of a subordinate official. For, so long as the
Department retains jurisdiction of the land, administrative orders
concerning it are subject to revision.
New Orleans v.
Paine, 147 U. S. 261;
Beley v. Naphtaly, 169 U. S. 353,
169 U. S. 364;
Lane v. Darlington, 249 U. S. 331;
Parcher v. Gillen, 26 L.D. 34; Aspen Consolidated Mining Co. v.
Williams, 27 L.D. 1.
Compare Louisiana v. Garfield,
211 U. S. 70,
211 U. S. 75.
If, on the other hand, either Secretary Fall's order of dismissal
or some earlier action of the government terminated the
jurisdiction of the Department, Secretary Work's order reinstating
the proceedings was a nullity, and the Standard Oil Company is
entitled to enjoin their continuance.
Noble v. Union River
Logging Railroad, 147 U. S. 165;
Lane v. Watts, 234 U. S. 525;
Burke v. Southern Pacific R. Co., 234 U.
S. 669,
234 U. S.
686.
In support of its contention that the jurisdiction had ended,
the company relied bill upon two earlier acts of the Department,
besides Secretary Fall's order, as constituting a final
determination that the land was not known to be mineral at the date
of the approval of the
Page 278 U. S. 211
survey. The Supreme Court of the District did not pass on the
legal effect of the two other acts. Upon the stipulated facts, it
ruled and found: (1) That Secretary Fall had jurisdiction to
determine the known mineral character of § 36 without awaiting
the trial by the local land office and appeals from the findings
there made. (2) That the Secretary granted a hearing before himself
for the purpose of determining the issues raised by the
proceedings, and gave notice to all parties in interest of such
hearing. (3) That he had before him evidence which he had a right
to consider and which supported his dismissal of the proceedings.
(4) That he dismissed the proceedings after a consideration of the
law and facts and directed that the parties in interest be notified
of the dismissal and that the case be closed on the records. (5)
That the order of dismissal was reduced to writing by his direction
and was a judicial determination of the known mineral character of
the land on January 26, 1903. (6) That the order of dismissal
reduced to writing was a judgment on the merits, and its
correctness could not be questioned by collateral proceedings,
except for fraud. A decree for a permanent injunction was entered.
That decree was affirmed by the Court of Appeals of the District.
Work v. Standard Oil Co., 57 App.D.C. 329, 23 F.2d 750.
This Court granted a writ of certiorari, 276 U.S. 613.
Ordinarily, where an act granting public lands excludes those
known to be mineral, the determination of the fact whether a
particular tract is of that character rests with the Secretary of
the Interior.
See Cameron v. United States, 252 U.
S. 450,
252 U. S. 464;
Burke v. Southern Pacific R. Co., 234 U.
S. 669,
234 U. S. 684,
234 U. S. 687.
But compare Dunbar Lime Co. v. Utah-Idaho Sugar Co., 17
F.2d 351. If such act provides for the issue of a patent, whether
it be to pass the title or to furnish evidence that it has passed,
the patent imports that final determination of the nonmineral
character of the land has been made. The issue of
Page 278 U. S. 212
the patent terminates the jurisdiction of the Department over
the land.
See Barden v. Northern Pacific R. Co.,
154 U. S. 288,
154 U. S. 327,
154 U. S. 331;
Courtright v. Wisconsin Central R. Co., 19 L.D. 410; Heirs of C. H.
Creciat, 40 L.D. 623. And in the courts, the patent is accepted,
upon a collateral attack, as affording conclusive evidence of the
nonmineral character.
St Louis Smelting & Refining Co. v.
Kemp, 104 U. S. 636,
104 U. S.
640-641;
Barden v. Northern Pacific R. Co.,
154 U. S. 288,
154 U. S. 327.
Similarly, if the granting act provides for other action by the
Secretary equivalent to a patent, such as approval of a list of the
lands, the approval ends the jurisdiction of the Department, Cole
v. Washington, 37 L.D. 387; Sewell A. Knapp, 47 L.D. 152, and it,
likewise, imports that the necessary determination has been made.
Chandler v. Calumet & Hecla Mining Co., 149 U. S.
79.
Compare Fred S. Porter, 50 L.D. 528, 533.
Even where the granting act does not require either the issue of a
patent to the grantee or such equivalent action, the Secretary may
have occasion to make a determination of the known mineral
character of the land, as when rights adverse to the grantee are
asserted under the mineral, leasing or other laws.
See Work v.
Braffet, 276 U. S. 560;
Albert E. Dorff, 50 L.D. 219; Utah v. Lichliter, 50 L.D. 231;
George G. Frandsen, 50 L.D. 516. In such event, the issue of the
patent or other instrument evidencing title likewise imports that
the determination has been made.
Steel v. St. Louis Smelting
& Refining Co., 106 U. S. 447,
106 U. S. 451.
Compare Louisiana, 30 L.D. 626. For, in every such case,
the determination of the mineral character is a prerequisite to the
authority exercised in the performance of a duty imposed.
St.
Louis Smelting & Refining Co. v. Kemp, 104 U.
S. 636,
104 U. S.
640-641.
The Standard Oil Company contends that Secretary Fall determined
that the land was not known to be mineral on January 26, 1903, and
that this determination in the informal hearing before him was
legally an equivalent of a determination of the fact in formal
proceedings before
Page 278 U. S. 213
the Register and Receiver under Circular No. 460. We agree that,
if Secretary Fall had determined as a fact that the land was not
then known to be mineral, his order dismissing the proceedings
would have had the same legal effect as if it had followed the more
formal procedure prescribed by Circular No. 460. For the Secretary
is not obliged to employ proceedings in the local land office as
the means for making the determination as to the known mineral
character. He could himself hear the evidence in the first
instance. Nor is he obliged, in so ascertaining the facts, to
follow a procedure similar to that prescribed for the local land
office.
See Knight v. U.S. Land
Association, 142 U. S. 161,
142 U. S.
177-178. We assume, without deciding, that, if Secretary
Fall had determined as a fact that the land was not known to be
mineral on January 26, 1903, his order dismissing the proceedings
would have ended the jurisdiction of the Department over the land.
And this determination would ordinarily be conclusive on the courts
even if there were demonstrable error in the admission or
appreciation of evidence.
See Shepley v. Cowan,
91 U. S. 330,
91 U. S. 340;
Lee v. Johnson, 116 U. S. 48,
116 U. S. 49.
But we are of the opinion that Secretary Fall did not make a
determination of that fact.
Secretary Fall's order is embodied in a letter sent by his
direction to the Commissioner of the General Land Office, which,
after referring to the proceedings before the Register and
Receiver, says:
"The transferees of the State of California, representatives of
the Department of Justice, and of the Navy Department appeared
before Secretary Fall on June 8, 1921, and presented the matter
orally, whereupon, after consideration of the law and facts
involved, the Secretary verbally directed that the proceedings be
dismissed. You are therefore authorized and directed to dismiss the
proceedings against the State of California and its transferees
in re said secs. 16 and 36. Notify all parties in interest
of the dismissal and close the case upon your records. "
Page 278 U. S. 214
The letter embodying Secretary Fall's direction to dismiss the
proceedings does not state why he did so. The company argues that
the dismissal was an order judicial in its nature; that, in form,
the order is a judgment on the merits; that this judgment
conclusively implies a finding of the fact that the land was not
known to be mineral at the date of the approval of the survey, and
that no evidence is admissible to contradict what the order
imports. It may be assumed that the hearing was conducted in the
judicial manner; that it was what is often called a
quasi-judicial proceeding. But the order of dismissal is
not a judgment. [
Footnote 4]
Compare Dickson v. Luck Land Co., 242 U.
S. 371,
242 U. S. 374.
It was an administrative act. And, unlike such administrative acts
as a patent or the approval of a list of lands pursuant to a duty
imposed upon the Secretary, the order of dismissal does not carry
the implication that all determinations essential to the passing of
title have been made. Since it does not, there may be inquiry
in pais to ascertain whether Secretary Fall actually made
such a determination. To that end the occurrences leading up to the
entry of the order of dismissal may be examined.
Compare
Parcher v. Gillen, 26 L.D. 34; Harkrader v. Goldstein, 31 L.D.
87.
In the oral argument of counsel for the company in this Court,
there was perhaps a suggestion that Secretary Fall actually passed
upon the known mineral character of the land as of January 26,
1903, when the survey was approved. But no such contention is made
in the brief filed here. And, when the occurrences which preceded
the making of the order are examined, it becomes clear that
Secretary Fall made no determination of the contested issue of
Page 278 U. S. 215
fact which was to be the subject of a hearing before the local
officers if he deemed the issue material. He rested his order of
dismissal on a supposed rule of law; holding, on the admitted
facts, that the actual known mineral character on January 26, 1903,
was not of legal significance. In so ruling, he yielded to the
argument of counsel for the Standard Oil Company, who insisted that
the then known mineral character had become immaterial, because the
government was estopped, by action taken prior to 1921, from
questioning the company's title. The brief filed by counsel with
Secretary Fall prior to his granting the hearing, the notice of the
proposed hearing before Secretary Fall on June 8, 1921, given by
the Department to the Attorney General and the Secretary of the
Navy, and the stenographic report of that hearing, establish that
this was the only matter considered by Secretary Fall.
That brief was entitled an
"argument in support of the request that the Secretary of the
Interior decide that, in view of the previous action of the
department and of its regulations in force in January, 1903, the
title to said section is vested in the State of California or its
grantees. [
Footnote 5]"
The notice recited that the Standard Oil Company and the Pan
American Oil Company had
"asked to be heard orally in the matter of proposed proceeding
by the government to determine whether or not said section passed
to the State of California under its school grant."
The hearing
Page 278 U. S. 216
consisted of an oral statement by counsel for the company,
interrupted from time to time by questions or remarks. The
statement was not a recital of evidence in support of the factual
assertion that the land was not known to be mineral on January 26,
1903. It was an argument in support of the legal proposition that
the proceedings should be closed without deciding that issue of
fact, because certain rules of law, arising from past action of the
Department, as well as controlling equities, estopped the
government from denying that the title had passed. [
Footnote 6]
Page 278 U. S. 217
The conclusion that Secretary Fall did not determine the known
mineral character of the land on January 26, 1903, is alone
consistent with the stipulated facts. [
Footnote 7]
Most significant among the stipulated facts is the
following:
"It was the contention of the transferees from the state, with
which contention Assistant Secretary Finney disagreed at the
hearing, that it could serve no purpose
Page 278 U. S. 218
to take evidence in the local land office to determine the
question whether or not said section or the lands adjacent thereto
showed structural and geological conditions indicative in 1903 of
the existence of oil on said section under conditions justifying
developments therefor for the reason that said questions presented
an immaterial question of fact and said question was not argued or
discussed at the proceedings held on June 8, 1921, or at any
conferences prior thereto between the representatives of the
transferees and the Secretary of the Interior or the First
Assistant Secretary of the Interior, except as shown in the brief
and in the transcript of proceedings. [The stenographic report of
the hearing above referred to.]"
Thus, Secretary Fall did not hear evidence or make a
determination on the issue of fact as to the known mineral
character of the land within the meaning of the decisions in
Diamond Coal Co. v. United States, 233 U.
S. 236, and
United States v. Southern Pacific
Co., 251 U. S. 1, and
this because he deemed the fact in issue of no legal significance.
It is true that, in making the ruling of law that the Standard Oil
Company's title was unassailable, the Secretary undertook to pass
upon the merits of its claim to the land. For he concluded that,
because of the conceded facts, urged by the company's counsel as
creating an estoppel, the United States was precluded from
questioning the title of the state and its transferees. But that
decision could not end the jurisdiction of the Department unless
Congress conferred upon the Secretary of the Interior authority to
determine the validity of the company's claim to the land, as a
matter of law, without passing upon the contested issue of fact. To
that question we now address ourselves.
Where, by the terms of an act, the Secretary is required, upon
application of the claimant, to issue a patent, as in
Michigan
Land & Lumber Co. v. Rust, 168 U.
S. 589,
168 U. S. 592,
or to certify a list, as in
Frasher v. O'Connor,
115 U. S. 102,
Page 278 U. S. 219
115 U. S.
115-116, or to approve a location for a right of way, as
in
Noble v. Union River Logging R. Co., 147 U.
S. 165, or to make a survey and approve a selection, as
in
Shaw v. Kellogg, 170 U. S. 312,
Congress, by implication, confers upon the Secretary the power to
make all determinations of law as well as of fact which are
essential to the performance of the duty specifically imposed.
After issue of the patent or other like instrument, his findings of
facts are conclusive, in the absence of fraud or mistake, not only
upon the Department, but upon the courts,
De Cambra v.
Rogers, 189 U. S. 119;
Love v. Flahive, 205 U. S. 195,
205 U. S. 198;
and, though his rulings on matters of law are reviewable in the
courts,
Doolan v. Carr, 125 U. S. 618,
125 U. S. 625;
Wisconsin Central R. Co. v. Forsythe, 159 U. S.
46,
159 U. S. 61,
they are not subject to reexamination by the Department.
Johnson v.
Towsley, 13 Wall. 72,
80 U. S. 83-84.
For in making such determinations, he acts as a special tribunal
with judicial functions.
Riverside Oil Co. v. Hitchcock,
190 U. S. 316,
190 U. S.
324=.
But here, no similar affirmative duty rested upon the Secretary
to the performance of which the determination of the question of
law was incidental. Secretary Fall owed no active duty to the state
or to any other claimant. His duty in respect to the land was
solely that owed to the United States -- the duty to preserve its
interests therein. The inquiry directed to be made in the local
land office had been ordered by a predecessor solely in the
performance of that duty. If, as a result of the inquiry, it should
be found that the land was known to be mineral, the government
would, if necessary, bring legal proceedings for possession and for
damages or an accounting. If it should be found that the land was
not known to be mineral, there would be no occasion for any further
departmental action. Secretary Fall had, of course, the power to
vacate the order of his predecessor that the Register and Receiver
proceed with the investigation. For it is within the discretion
Page 278 U. S. 220
of every Secretary to decide what investigations he shall pursue
in the public interest, and no Secretary is obliged to continue an
inquiry which he believes to be futile. But the question here is
whether he can, by action other than the final determination of
fact, preclude resumption of the inquiry in the Department, and
thereby vest the title of known mineral land in the state.
We think that Congress did not confer upon the Secretary of the
Interior the power to pass generally upon the right of the state to
the land. When the Secretary has the duty to issue a patent or to
furnish other evidence of title of a claimant, he must have
authority to determine the questions of law incident to the
performance of that duty.
Litchfield v.
Register, 9 Wall. 575,
76 U. S.
577-578. But here, no such duty rested upon him.
Compare Louisiana v. Garfield, 211 U. S.
70,
211 U. S. 77.
Authority to determine as a fact the known mineral character of the
lands falls naturally to the Secretary as "the supervising agent of
the government to do justice to all claimants and preserve the
rights of the people of the United States" to public lands.
Knight v. U.S. Land
Association, 142 U. S. 161,
142 U. S. 178.
But that authority does not carry the power to relinquish the
jurisdiction of the Department over the land without determining,
as a fact, that it was nonmineral at the time of the approval of
the survey.
Compare Work v. Louisiana, 269 U.
S. 250,
269 U. S. 261.
The broad power of control and supervision conferred upon the
Secretary
"does not clothe him with any discretion to enlarge or curtail
the rights of the grantee, nor to substitute his judgment for the
will of Congress as manifested in the granting act."
Payne v. Central Pacific Railway Co., 255 U.
S. 228,
255 U. S. 236.
See also Burfenning v. Chicago, St. Paul, etc., Ry.,
163 U. S. 321.
Daniels v. Wagner, 237 U. S. 547,
237 U. S. 558.
To read into the legislation, under such circumstances, authority
to pass upon the state's claim of right to the land, regardless of
its known mineral character, would create, by implication,
Page 278 U. S. 221
a power in direct contravention of the expressed intention of
Congress that mineral lands were not granted to the state. Thus,
the Secretary would be constituted an agent rather for
relinquishing than for preserving the rights of the United States
in the public lands.
See Shaw v. Kellogg, 170 U.
S. 312,
170 U. S.
337-338.
When Secretary Fall undertook to determine, not as a fact
whether the land was known to be mineral in 1903, but as a
proposition of law that, because of other conceded facts, the
company's title had become unassailable, he acted without
authority, and the order of dismissal based thereon did not remove
the land from the jurisdiction of the Department.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE STONE took no part in the consideration or decision
of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
See Joint Hearings before Senate Committee on Public
Lands and Surveys and House Committee on Public Lands on S. 3078
and H.R. 9182, to assure title to granted school lands, February 11
and 12, 1926; Report of Senate Committee No. 603, April 5 [16],
1926, 69th Cong. First Session; Report of House Committee, No.
1617, December 9, 1926, 69th Cong. Second Session; No. 1761,
January 13, 1927, 69th Cong. Second Session; 67 Cong. Record, p.
8424; 68 Cong. Record, pp. 1815, 1820, 2015, 2581.
See
also Hearings of Subcommittee, 69th Cong. First Session,
pursuant to S.Res. 347, vol. 2, pp. 1987-2062.
[
Footnote 2]
By reason of subsection (c) of § 1 of the Act of January
25, 1927, 44 Stat. 1026, the proceedings here involved are not
affected by that Act.
See 52 L.D. 51-54.
[
Footnote 3]
This action was taken after a joint resolution of Congress,
dated February 21, 1924, 43 Stat. 15. It is conceded that this fact
has no legal significance in the case. The basis on which Secretary
Work proceeded is shown in his decision reported in 51 L.D.
141.
[
Footnote 4]
The Department has repeatedly ruled that its decisions are not
to be controlled by the same strict doctrine of
res
judicata which obtains as to judgments of the courts. Osborn
v. Knight, 23 L.D. 216, 218; Joseph Pretzel, 24 L.D. 64, 65; Ernest
B. Gates, 41 L.D. 384.
Compare Howard A. Robinson, 43 L.D.
221.
[
Footnote 5]
The brief states:
"There is no reason why this decision as to the title of the
state should not be made now without putting the state to the
enormous and costly burden of proof, such as was in issue in the
Elk Hills case [
United States v. Southern Pacific Co.,
251 U. S.
1]. In other words, if the absence of clear proof of the
mineral character of the section in 1903 in the shape of discovery
of mineral was sufficient to characterize the lands as nonmineral
under the regulations and repeated decisions of the department, it
will make no difference that, by the application of the principles
of the
Elk Hills case, it could be successfully shown that
the land, within the reasoning of that decision, was believed to be
mineral land."
[
Footnote 6]
The prior action relied upon as vesting title in the state and
its transferees was: (1) the fact that the land was classified as
nonmineral in 1904, when, upon receipt of a report from Special
Agent Ryan that it was nonmineral, it was relieved from suspension;
(2) the fact that, on March 6, 1903, the Department adopted an
administrative rule respecting school land grants that the state
would not be permitted to make lieu selections based on the alleged
mineral character of land within a school section, unless it proved
that there had been actual discovery or exposure of mineral
thereon. Mr. Sutro argued that, since under this rule the state
could not have made the land the base for a lieu selection, it was
legally entitled to retain it, and, having acted on the rule, its
transferees were unaffected by later decisions of this Court
(
Diamond Coal Co. v. United States, 233 U.
S. 236;
United States v. Southern Pacific Co.,
255 U. S. 1)
inconsistent with the rule. In closing, he said:
"And I submit that, in this case, where there is no fraud, no
possible allegation of fraud, where the state, five years after the
classification of this land, sold it in good faith to people who
bought it in good faith, and who held it for 10 years, and who have
now invested some millions of dollars in the land, that the time
has passed when the United States can assert its title thereto, and
that the United States is estopped by the judgment of this
department that this was nonmineral land in 1904, and by its own
regulations, which defined it as nonmineral land in 1903. Now if
you will ask me what it is I am asking you to do, I will say it is
this: I am asking the department to close this case on the ground
that the title is in the state, and there is nothing further to
investigate."
Secretary Fall then said:
"What you are asking now is that, if convinced that the rule is
as you state it, that, instead of allowing this case to go to a
hearing, and then in event I would hold with you, so deciding at
that time, that, if I am with you that I should decide it at this
time and prevent the delay in the trial?"
After some further discussion, Secretary Fall asked: "Is Mr.
Sutro's statement of the case practically admitted?" First
Assistant Secretary Finney answered: "I think that is substantially
the case." Whereupon the Secretary said: "The contest will be
dismissed."
[
Footnote 7]
The land lies within Naval Petroleum Reserve No. 1; a part of it
is immediately adjacent to that involved in
United States v.
Southern Pacific Co., 251 U. S. 1, which
was rendered in 1919. The fact that the proceedings were pending
was not discovered by the Chief of the Field Division of the Land
Office until the close of 1920. In February, 1921, the importance
of taking immediate action to protect supposed interests of the
United States in the land was brought to the attention of the
Department of Justice and the Secretary of the Navy. On March 2,
1921, the Commissioner of the General Land Office directed the
Register and Receiver and the Chief of the Field Division to take
prompt action to determine by proper proceedings whether the land
was known to be mineral at the date of the approval of the survey.
The advisability of protecting the supposed interests of the
government, pending that determination, by an application for a
receiver and an injunction, was considered by the several
departments. That course was deemed inadvisable. Conference with
representatives of the company resulted in an agreement that it
would endeavor to secure from the Department of the Interior an
early hearing and determination with respect to the known mineral
character of the land, that, until such determination, there should
be no further development thereon, and that the government would
not take any action in court. Thereafter, on several days prior to
May 26, 1921, Mr. Oscar Sutro, representing the Standard Oil
Company, presented to Secretary Fall and the First Assistant
Secretary, a request for an early determination with respect to the
title to § 36. On May 26, he filed with the Secretary the
brief above referred to. On May 28, 1921, the Secretary gave the
Attorney General and the Secretary of the Navy the notice of
hearing above referred to.