Land in Arkansas on which there are hot springs valuable for the
curative powers of their waters was reserved from private
appropriation by Act of Congress, passed in 1832 while Arkansas was
a territory. A portion of it, which embraced the springs, was
permanently reserved, in charge of the Interior Department, by an
Act of Congress, passed.after Arkansas had been admitted to
statehood, and upon this portion, an Army and Navy Hospital, since
maintained, was established by authority of Congress. Thereafter,
exclusive jurisdiction over land of the permanent reservation,
including the hospital and a contiguous parcel on which a hotel was
being operated under lease from the United States, was ceded to the
United States by the state legislature and accepted by Congress,
reserving to the state power to serve civil and criminal process on
the ceded tract and the right to tax, as private property, all
structures or other property in private ownership there. The hotel
was destroyed by fire; property of the hotel guests was consumed,
and the question arose whether the landlord was liable to them as
insurer,
Page 278 U. S. 440
according to the law of Arkansas as it existed at the time of
the cession, or only for negligence, according to that law as
altered by an Arkansas statute after the cession.
Held:
1. That the cession of exclusive jurisdiction was valid under
Article I, § 8, Clause 17 of the Constitution, because of the
federal purpose to which the springs and the hospital were devoted,
and properly included the hotel and its site, which offered means
whereby the public might be aided by the surplus spring waters not
needed by the hospital. Pp.
278 U. S.
449-454.
2. Therefore, the statute of Arkansas modifying the liability of
innkeepers, passed after the cession, did not extend over the ceded
land on which the hotel was situated.
Id.
170 Ark. 440; 176
id. 612, affirmed.
Error to judgments of the Supreme Court of Arkansas sustaining
judgments recovered against the Hotel Company by persons who were
guests in the hotel and lost their personal property when the hotel
burned.
Page 278 U. S. 445
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
These are three suits brought in the Circuit Court of Garland
County, Arkansas, against the Arlington Hotel Company, a
corporation of Arkansas, in which the plaintiffs seek to recover
for the losses they sustained, when guests of the hotel, in the
destruction by fire of their personal property. The hotel was in
Hot Springs National Park.
The complaints averred that the United States, in 1904, acquired
from Arkansas exclusive jurisdiction over Hot Springs Park, and
that, under the common law, which was there in force (
Pettit v.
Thomas, 103 Ark. 593), an innkeeper was an insurer of his
guests' personal property against fire. In 1913, the Arkansas
Legislature enacted a law relieving innkeepers from liability to
their guests
Page 278 U. S. 446
for loss by fire unless it was due to negligence. The
complainants contended that this act had no force in Hot Springs
Park, as it was within the exclusive jurisdiction of the United
States, that the demurrers based thereon must be overruled, and
that judgments should be entered for them. The defendant denied the
exclusive jurisdiction of the United States, and insisted that the
demurrers to the complaint were good, and that the defendant was
entitled to judgment. There were two hearings. The circuit court
first sustained the demurrers. This ruling was reversed on appeal
by the Arkansas Supreme Court. 170 Ark. 440. Answers were then
filed. The three cases were consolidated and went to a jury, and,
in accord with the final ruling on the demurrers, resulted in
verdicts and judgments for the plaintiffs, which were affirmed by
the Supreme Court. 176 Ark. 613.
By § 3 of the Act of Congress of April 20, 1832, ch. 70, 4
Stat. 505, while Arkansas was still a territory, it was
provided
"that the hot springs in said territory, together with four
sections of land including said springs, as near the center thereof
as may be, shall be reserved for the future disposal of the United
States, and shall not be entered, located, or appropriated, for any
other purpose whatever."
Arkansas was admitted to statehood in 1836, ch. 100, 5 Stat. 50,
but there was then no reservation of exclusive jurisdiction by the
United States over the territory reserved from sale by the Act of
1832.
By Act of Congress of March 3, 1877, ch. 108, 19 Stat. 377, it
was made the duty of United States commissioners, after an
examination of the topography of the reservation, to lay it out
into convenient squares, blocks, lots, avenues, streets, and
alleys, the lines of which were to correspond with the existing
boundary lines of the occupants of the reservation.
Page 278 U. S. 447
Section 4 of the act provided:
"That before making any subdivision of said lands, as described
in the preceding section, it shall be the duty of said board of
commissioners, under the direction and subject to the approval of
the Secretary of the Interior, to designate a tract of land
included in one boundary, sufficient in extent to include, and
which shall include all the hot or warm springs situated on the
lands aforesaid, to embrace, as near as may be, what is known as
Hot Springs Mountain, and the same is hereby reserved from sale,
and shall remain under the charge of a superintendent, to be
appointed by the Secretary of the Interior:
Provided,
however, that nothing in this section shall prevent the
Secretary of the Interior from fixing a special tax on water taken
from said springs sufficient to pay for the protection and
necessary improvement of the same."
The Army Appropriation Act of June 30, 1882, ch. 254, 22 Stat.
121, provided:
"That $100,000 be, and hereby is, appropriated for the erection
of an Army and Navy Hospital at Hot Springs, Arkansas, which shall
be erected by and under the direction of the Secretary of War, in
accordance with plans and specifications to be prepared and
submitted to the Secretary of War by the Surgeons General of the
Army and Navy, which hospital, when in a condition to receive
patients, shall be subject to such rules, regulations, and
restrictions as shall be provided by the President of the United
States:
Provided further, that such hospital shall be
erected on the government reservation at or near Hot Springs,
Arkansas."
The hospital and accessories were completed about the year 1886.
They originally covered 20 acres, and have been enlarged from time
to time since then. They are within the territory described in
§ 4 of the Act of
Page 278 U. S. 448
March 3, 1877,
supra, and within the territory over
which Arkansas, by Act of February 21, 1903 (Acts of Arkansas 1903,
Act 30, p. 52), ceded exclusive jurisdiction to the United States.
The language of the cession was as follows:
"Section 1. That exclusive jurisdiction over that part of the
Hot Springs Reservation known and described as a part of the Hot
Springs Mountain, and whose limits are particularly described by
the following boundary lines, . . . all in township two south,
range nineteen west, in the County of Garland, State of Arkansas,
being a part of the permanent United States Hot Springs
Reservation, is hereby ceded and granted to the United States of
America to be exercised so long as the same shall remain the
property of the United States:
Provided, that this grant
of jurisdiction shall not prevent the execution of any process of
the state, civil or criminal, on any person who may be on such
reservation or premises;
Provided further, that the right
to tax all structures and other property in private ownership on
the Hot Springs Reservation accorded to the state by the Act of
Congress approved March 3rd, 1901 (1891), is hereby reserved to the
State of Arkansas."
By the Act of April 20, 1904, ch. 1400, 33 Stat. 187, Congress
accepted this cession and directed that the land should be under
the sole and exclusive jurisdiction of the United States, and all
laws applicable to places under such sole and exclusive
jurisdiction should have full force and effect therein:
"
Provided, that nothing in this Act shall be so
construed as to forbid the service within said boundaries of any
civil or criminal process of any court having jurisdiction in the
State of Arkansas; that all fugitives from justice taking refuge
within said boundaries shall, on due application to the executive
of said state, whose warrant may lawfully run within said territory
for said purpose, be subject to the laws which apply to fugitives
from justice found in the State of Arkansas. "
Page 278 U. S. 449
The act further provided that it should not be so construed as
to interfere with the right of the state to tax all structures and
other property in private ownership within the boundaries
described.
Section 2 provided that the cession should constitute a part of
the Eastern United States Judicial District of Arkansas, and the
District and Circuit Courts of the United States for the District
should have jurisdiction of all offenses committed within the
boundaries.
The Arlington Hotel was constructed upon one acre of this tract
thus subsequently ceded to the United States and accepted by it,
and the hotel was operated for more than 50 years under lease from
the United States until its destruction by fire on April 5,
1923.
The territory included in the cession forms only a small part of
the original reservation by the United States from settlement under
the land laws. It includes the springs, and is about 1,800 feet
long and 4,000 feet wide. There is also a larger Hot Springs
reservation of over 900 acres, owned by the United States, but
under the jurisdiction of Arkansas, and reserved from sale by the
government for parks. The hospital buildings are about 1,000 feet
from the site of the Arlington Hotel. By Act of Congress of March
4, 1921, ch. 161, 41 Stat. 1407, the ceded tract was given the name
of the Hot Springs National Park.
The contention of the defendant is that the cession was invalid,
and that no jurisdiction was thereby conferred on the United
States, for the reason that the only power the United States has to
receive exclusive jurisdiction of land within a state is to be
found in the words of Article I, § 8, clause 17, of the
federal Constitution, as follows:
"to exercise like authority over all places purchased by the
consent of the legislature of the state in which the same shall be,
for the erection of forts, magazines, arsenals, dock-yards, and
other needful buildings. "
Page 278 U. S. 450
The leading case on the subject is
Fort Leavenworth R. Co.
v. Lowe, 114 U. S. 525. The
question there was whether a railroad running into the military
reservation of Ft. Leavenworth was subject to taxation by the State
of Kansas. The United States had had exclusive jurisdiction over
the land in question from 1803 by the cession of France until the
admission of Kansas into the Union. For many years before such
admission, the land had been reserved from sale by the United
States for military purposes and occupied as a military post. Until
the admission of Kansas, of course, the governmental jurisdiction
of the United States was complete. But when Kansas came into the
Union in 1861 on an equal footing with the original states, the
previous military reservation was not excepted from the succeeding
jurisdiction of the new state. The Attorney General recommended a
state cession of jurisdiction, but it was not given until February,
1875, when the Kansas Legislature enacted:
"That exclusive jurisdiction be, and the same is hereby ceded to
the United States over and within all the territory owned by the
United States, and included within the limits of the United States
military reservation known as the Fort Leavenworth Reservation in
said state, as declared from time to time by the President of the
United States, saving, however, to the said state the right to
serve civil or criminal process within said reservation, in suits
or prosecutions for or on account of rights acquired, obligations
incurred, or crimes committed in said state, but outside of said
cession and reservation,
and saving further to said state the
right to tax railroad, bridge, and other corporations, their
franchises and property, on said reservation."
Laws of Kansas 1875, p. 95.
The last words seemed to save fully the right of the state to
tax the railway. But, as the Constitution provided that Congress
should have power to exercise exclusive jurisdiction in all places
purchased by the consent
Page 278 U. S. 451
of the legislature of the state in which the same should be for
the erection of forts, etc., the railroad company contended that no
right to tax a railroad on the reservation could be retained by the
state, and that the saving clause was void.
In answering this claim, the Court pointed out that the United
States, without the consent of a state, might purchase or condemn
for its own use state land for a national purpose, and that,
without any consent or cession by he state, such jurisdiction would
attach as was needed to enable the United States to use it for the
purpose for which it had been purchased. The Court held that, in
such a case, when the purpose ceased, the jurisdiction of the
federal government ceased. But the Court further held that, when a
formal cession was made by the state to the United States, after
the original purchase of the ownership of the land had been made,
the state and the government of the United States could frame the
cession and acceptance of governmental jurisdiction so as to divide
the jurisdiction between the two as the two parties might
determine, provided only they saved enough jurisdiction for the
United Stated to enable it to carry out the purpose of the
acquisition of jurisdiction. The Court therefore held that a saving
clause in the language of the cession requiring that the railroad
should pay taxes was not invalid, but was in accord with the power
of both parties and might be enforced. This decided the point in
the case.
Mr. Justice Field, in elaborating the opinion, said that, if the
act of cession of exclusive jurisdiction adopted subsequently to
the purchase of the land was followed by a failure of the United
States to continue to use the land for any purpose for which it was
purchased, the exclusive jurisdiction would lapse. This statement
that, after the formal cession by the state of exclusive
jurisdiction had been accepted by the United States, there was
Page 278 U. S. 452
nevertheless a reverter of the exclusive jurisdiction of the
United States though conveyed in the formal cession without
limitation is said by counsel for appellees not to have been
necessary for the decision.
In
Benson v. United States, 146 U.
S. 325, Benson was indicted in a federal court for
murder committed in the Ft. Leavenworth Military Reservation within
the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States, and the first
question was one of jurisdiction. It was contended that the
evidence showed that the murder was committed on a particular part
of the reservation which was used solely for farming purposes, but
the Court held that, in matters of this kind, the courts followed
the action of the political department of the government; that the
entire tract had been legally reserved for military purposes
(
United States v.
Stone, 2 Wall. 525,
69 U. S. 527,),
and that the character and purpose of its occupation having been
officially and legally established by that branch of the government
which had control over such matters, it was not open to the courts
on question of jurisdiction to inquire what might be the actual
uses to which any portion of the reservation was temporarily put.
There was therefore jurisdiction, and the objection was
overruled.
In
Palmer v. Barrett, 162 U. S. 399, the
United States acquired title to navy yard lands in the state of New
York, the record not disclosing how. In an appropriation act,
Congress empowered the Secretary of War to sell and convey part of
these to any purchaser, provided that they should not be sold at
less price than they cost the government, and provided that, prior
to the sale of the lands, exclusive jurisdiction should be ceded to
the United States of all the remaining lands connected with the
Navy Yard belonging to the United States. The jurisdiction was
ceded by the state to the United States, but the act of cession
contained the proviso that the United States could
"retain such use and jurisdiction as long as the premises
Page 278 U. S. 453
described shall be used for the purposes for which jurisdiction
is ceded, and no longer."
The land in question in the case was not to be used by the
United States for a navy yard or naval hospital, but was a part of
the vacant land adjoining the Navy Yard which had been leased by
the United States to the City of Brooklyn for market purposes. A
direct consideration was received by the United States for the
lease, since it provided that a supply of water for the purpose of
the Navy Yard at reduced rates would be furnished by the city to
the United States during the use by the former of lands covered by
the lease. This Court said:
"In the absence of any proof to the contrary, it is to be
considered that the lease was valid, and that both parties to it
received the benefits stipulated in the contract. This being true,
the case then presents the very contingency contemplated by the act
of cession -- that is, the exclusion from the jurisdiction of the
United States of such portion of the ceded land not used for the
governmental purposes of the United States therein specified.
Assuming, without deciding, that, if the cession of jurisdiction to
the United States had been free from condition or limitation, the
land should be treated and considered as within the sole
jurisdiction of the United States, it is clear that, under the
circumstances here existing, in view of the reservation made by the
State of New York in the act ceding jurisdiction, the exclusive
authority of the United States over the land covered by the lease
was at least suspended whilst the lease remained in force."
It is apparent that the Court intended to leave open the
question whether, had the cession of jurisdiction been complete and
without limitation, the United States would have retained its
exclusive jurisdiction.
Counsel for the plaintiffs in the present case insist that the
United States has the constitutional authority to maintain
exclusive jurisdiction over the tract here in question
Page 278 U. S. 454
as a national park, and that, as the government undoubtedly may
use its control over all land within its exclusive jurisdiction to
provide national parks, it may, where land is ceded by a state to
the exclusive jurisdiction of the national government, treat land
thus ceded by the state for such a purpose as it would treat
national public land which had never come within the jurisdiction
of the state; that as, by virtue of Article IV of the Constitution,
§ 3, Congress has power to dispose of and make all needful
rules and regulations respecting the territory or other property
belonging to the United States, it may treat land ceded to it by a
state for the purposes of making a national park exactly as it
would treat land which had always been within its exclusive
jurisdiction and subject to its disposition for park purposes. This
issue may in the future become a subject of constitutional
controversy, because some twenty or more parks have been created by
Congress, in a number of which exclusive jurisdiction over the land
has been conferred by act of cession of the state.
We do not find it necessary, however, now to examine this
question. We think that the history of this Hot Springs National
Park, as shown by the legislation leading to its establishment and
circumstances which the court may judicially notice, is such that
the small tract whose jurisdiction is here in question may be
brought within the principle of the
Lowe case and other
cases already cited.
The Hot Springs are mentioned as remarkable by Thomas Jefferson
in a message to Congress on February 19, 1806, in which he
transmitted a report containing a description of them. Messages,
Reports, etc., 1st Sess. 6th Cong. 1806, pp. 202, 344. Their known
value for remedial purposes and the appreciation of that value by
Congress were shown in the Act of 1832, already cited, by which the
land surrounding them was reserved for the future disposal of the
United States. The purpose was evidently to make use of them for
national public needs.
The analysis of the 44 springs indicated that
Page 278 U. S. 455
these waters were of a special excellence with respect to
diseases likely to be treated in a military hospital. Therefore it
was that, in 1882, an appropriation of $100,000 was made for the
construction of an adequate hospital under the War Department .
That hospital has been enlarged by appropriations from time to time
since its original establishment. It was certainly a wise prevision
which with the consent of the state brought within exclusive
national jurisdiction the hospital buildings and accessories and
all the 44 springs from which the healing waters came, in order to
secure to the government their complete police protection,
preservation, and control. This justified acquisition of the
springs and hospital for the exclusive jurisdiction of the United
States under Clause 17, § 8, Article I, of the Constitution.
Nor is the constitutional basis for acquisition any less effective
because the springs thus kept safely available for the federal
purpose do, in the abundance of their flow, also supply water
sufficient to furnish aid to the indigent and to those of the
public of the United States who are able to pay for hotel
accommodation on the little park surrounding the hospital and the
springs.
Benson v. United States, supra, and
Williams
v. Arlington Hotel Co., 22 F.2d 669.
The cases relied on by the defendant are clearly
distinguishable.
Williams v. Arlington Hotel Co., 15 F.2d
412, was overruled by the circuit court of appeals, as above. In
Crook, Horner & Co. v. Old Point Comfort Hotel Co., 54
F. 604, there was an express reverter clause in the act of cession
which limited the use of the land to defensive purposes.
Renner
v. Bennett, 21 Ohio St. 431, and
State v. Board of
Commissioners, 153 Ind. 302, were cases where Congress had
receded jurisdiction to the state. In
La Duke v. Melin, 45
N.D. 349, there had been complete abandonment of a military
reservation which by act of Congress had been opened to
homesteaders.
Affirmed.