1. The Act of Congress of February 18, 1888, and the amending
Act of February 13, 1889, authorizing a railroad company to locate
and construct a railroad across a portion of the Indian Territory
then still held in trust for the Creek Indians, but which was
afterwards acquired from them by the United States and opened to
settlement, did not make a grant
in praesenti of a right
of way, but granted only a franchise, and authorized a taking of
land only upon compensation secured or made. Pp.
297 U. S. 489,
297 U. S.
494.
2. Subsequent related legislation examined, and found not to
require a different conclusion. P.
297 U. S.
491.
3. In view of the nature of the title of the Indians, an
intention to grant or impose a servitude upon their lands without
compensation to them cannot be imputed to Congress. P.
297 U. S.
493.
4. Even if it be assumed that the Act of 1888 granted the
railroad a base or limited fee, title nevertheless could not have
vested until plats of the location of the line were filed with the
Secretary of the Interior for his approval, as required by the Act,
and therefore the mere staking of a location of a proposed line was
ineffectual to prevent the acquisition of superior rights by
settlers and occupants under the homestead and townsite laws. P.
297 U. S.
494.
5. The provisions made by 43 U.S.C. 912 for transfer of title of
abandoned railroad lands relate to such lands as were granted to
the railroad by the United States, and do not apply to land which
was conveyed to the railroad, subject to reverter, by an entryman
who acquired title under the public land laws. P.
297 U. S.
495.
6. Whether a
habendum clause in a private deed to a
railroad operated to revest title in the grantor's heirs upon
abandonment of the railroad
held a question not of
federal, but of state, law, to be decided by the state court. P.
297 U. S.
495.
172 Okla. 182;
44 P.2d 135,
reversed.
Certiorari, 296 U.S. 560, to review a judgment of the state
supreme court which affirmed judgments of the trial
Page 297 U. S. 482
court in favor of the city in two cases involving title to
lands.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS delivered the opinion of the Court.
These were actions in ejectment tried in a state court. The
petitioners in No. 335 sued as the heirs of Naoma Noble, the
petitioners in No. 336 as the heirs of Robert W. Higgins. Title to
a town lot and a portion of another parcel of land located in the
respondent city was in dispute.
The tracts formerly were part of the tribal lands of the Creek
Indians. Pursuant to treaties, the Creeks removed from east of the
Mississippi river to a large area in Indian Territory, now in the
Oklahoma, [
Footnote 1] and a
patent was issued by the President of the United States granting
them the lands "to have and to hold . . . so long as they shall
exist as a Nation and continue to occupy the Country hereby
conveyed to them." [
Footnote 2]
By the Treaty of Washington, [
Footnote 3] the tribe ceded to the United States the
western half of their domain, which included the site of what is
now Oklahoma City, in trust, to be sold and used as homes for
civilized Indians whom the United States might desire to settle
thereon. This and a prior treaty vested in Congress power to grant
railroad rights of way through the Creek country. The United
Page 297 U. S. 483
States did not sell any portion of the ceded area to Indians or
permit white settlement in the region of Oklahoma City, and the
land remained vacant.
By Act of February 18, 1888, [
Footnote 4] Congress authorized the Choctaw Coal &
Railway Company to locate and construct a railroad traversing the
southeastern portion of the Indian Territory through lands of the
Choctaw Nation whose title was similar to that of the Creek Nation.
[
Footnote 5]
The President, on January 19, 1889, negotiated a treaty with the
Creeks [
Footnote 6] by which
they ceded to the United States full and complete title to the
entire western half of their lands, thus freeing the area from the
trust under which it had theretofore been held. This treaty was
subject to ratification by the council of the tribe and by
Congress. It was confirmed by the former January 31, 1889.
Pending the ratification of the treaty, Congress, on February
13, 1889, amended the Act of February 18, 1888, to authorize the
railway company to construct a branch extending from its main line
northwestwardly through Choctaw and Creek country. [
Footnote 7] The road so authorized now
traverses Oklahoma City. The Creek Tribe then owned the eastern
portion of the Creek country through which the branch line was to
run, and retained an interest in the western portion. March 1,
1889, Congress ratified the treaty of January 19, 1889, and, in the
act of ratification, provided that "the lands acquired by the
United States under said agreement shall be a part of the public
domain." [
Footnote 8]
By Act of March 2, 1889, [
Footnote 9] Congress directed that the lands acquired from
the Creek Nation should be disposed
Page 297 U. S. 484
of to actual settlers under the homestead laws, but that no
person should be permitted to enter thereon until the territory was
opened for settlement. The release, conveyance, and extinguishment
of the Indians' rights was not to inure
"to the benefit of or cause to vest in any railroad company any
right, title, or interest whatever in or to any of said lands . . .
and all grants or pretended grants of said lands or any interest or
right therein now existing in or on behalf of any railroad company,
except rights of way and depot grounds,"
were declared forfeited for breach of condition.
March 23, 1889, the President issued a proclamation opening a
portion of the lands to settlement at noon April 22, 1889. Before
the latter date, the railway company had surveyed the line of its
proposed railroad through what is now Oklahoma City, and marked it
by stakes along the centerline of the right of way and by signs
warning that the land was claimed for right of way and station
purposes. It appears to have been then known that a townsite would
be laid out on the quarter-section in which the Noble tract is
located. Prior to the opening of the land, a plat had been made,
and, at 12 o'clock, April 22, 1889, surveyors began to run lines
and drive stakes to locate the lots and blocks of the townsite. On
that day, many settlers, amongst whom was Naoma Noble, arrived and
staked and occupied lots. As the survey proceeded, they adjusted
their claims and boundaries to the survey lines. In surveying and
staking out lots, both the surveyors and the ancestor of the
petitioners in No. 335 disregarded the right of way marks. All the
lots in the original townsite, comprising the quarter-section in
which the Noble land is situated, were occupied on the day of
opening. On the same day, Robert C. Higgins, the ancestor through
whom the petitioners in No. 336 claim, settled upon the
quarter-section adjoining the
Page 297 U. S. 485
townsite on the west, and undertook to file a homestead entry
thereon.
July 13, 1889, the railway company filed with the Secretary of
the Interior a map of definite location of its line as staked out
through Oklahoma City. The road ran diagonally through the town
site quarter-section, included the whole of the Noble lot, and
traversed diagonally Higgins' adjoining quarter-section.
The Act of May 2, 1890, [
Footnote 10] organizing the territory of Oklahoma,
provided that:
"No part of the land embraced within the Territory hereby
created shall inure to the use or benefit of any railroad
corporation, except the rights of way and land for stations
heretofore granted to certain railroad corporations. Nor shall any
provision of this act or any act of any officer of the United
States, done or performed under the provisions of this act or
otherwise, invest any corporation owning or operating any railroad
in the Indian Territory, or Territory created by this act, with any
land or right to any land in either of said Territories, and this
act shall not apply to or affect any land which, upon any condition
on becoming a part of the public domain, would inure to the benefit
of, or become the property of, any railroad corporation."
Not until May 14, 1890, [
Footnote 11] did Congress pass a townsite act applicable
to Oklahoma. In the meantime, the citizens had established a form
of government and elected officials. A plan of the townsite was
filed in the office of the city recorder, and provision made by
ordinance for recording transfers of the plotted property. The
recorder issued certificates to the occupants of lots, and
transfers were made by quitclaim deeds. After the passage of the
townsite act, trustees were appointed, and the entire
quarter-section constituting the original townsite was patented to
the trustees
Page 297 U. S. 486
without exception, limitation, or reservation. In due time, the
trustees issued their deeds for the various lots, including the
Noble tract.
From 1889 to 1893, the railway company and the lot claimants
were in disagreement, the former contending that the acts of
Congress vested it with title to the right of way, the latter
insisting that their occupation before the filing of the company's
plot with the Secretary of the Interior gave them the superior
title. The dispute was amicably settled by the company's
relinquishing its claim to the diagonal 300-foot right of way as
plotted, and relocating it, 100 feet wide, parallel to the streets
and alleys shown on the city plan. The lots or portions of lots
required for the relocation were obtained from the owners by deeds
or condemnation. March 28, 1891, Naoma and George Noble executed a
deed to the railway company containing the following clause:
"Being intended for the use and occupation of said party
[grantee], its successors and assigns, as and for its right of way
for the constructing, operation, and maintenance of its railroad
and business at or upon the land hereby released and quit-claimed:
Provided, that, in case of abandonment of said premises by said
second party, its successors, or assigns for the purposes
above-mentioned, the same shall revert to the grantors, their
heirs, or assigns."
The right of Higgins to make a homestead entry being involved in
a land office contest, the company constructed its road across his
quarter-section, and was operating trains thereover in 1892. After
the contest eventuated in his favor, he conveyed to the railroad,
in 1898, for a pecuniary consideration, a strip of land 100 feet
wide across his quarter-section "for a right of way for its
railroad, Telegraph and Telephone Lines, and for Railroad or
Station purposes." The
habendum clause was:
Page 297 U. S. 487
"To have and to hold the same by the said Choctaw, Oklahoma, and
Gulf Railroad Company, together with all and singular the rights,
privileges, and appurtenances thereunto belonging and all the
rights and privileges which said company is authorized to have,
hold, and exercise under and by virtue of the Act of Congress
granting the Choctaw Coal and Railway Company a right of way
through the Indian Territory, approved February 18th, 1888, and
subsequent Acts of Congress amending and extending said Act,
together with all the rights and privileges granted unto said
Choctaw, Oklahoma, and Gulf Railroad Company by an Act of Congress
approved August 24th, 1894, and the Act of Congress approved April
24th, 1896, and unto its successors, and assigns forever."
The road constructed on the right of way so acquired in Oklahoma
City was operated by the railway and its successors until December
4, 1930. Pursuant to an agreement made with the city, the then
owner and operator secured the approval of the Interstate Commerce
Commission of the abandonment of the line, [
Footnote 12] and executed a quitclaim deed to
the city for the abandoned portion. A decree was obtained from the
United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma
adjudging that the land had been abandoned for railroad purposes,
and that the company's title had passed to the city under an Act of
Congress of March 8, 1922. [
Footnote 13] None
Page 297 U. S. 488
of the petitioners was a party to this proceeding. The city took
possession, and has since held the strip. These suits were filed
shortly thereafter. Petitioners asserted that the Act of February
18, 1888, and the amending Act of February 13, 1889, made no grant
in praesenti of a right of way but merely authorized the
company to acquire one by purchase or condemnation; that these
statutes applied only to Indian country and not to the public
domain, and that, on February 13, 1889, the land in question was
Creek Indian land and the only title the company acquired to its
right of way, so far as the tracts in controversy are concerned,
was that conveyed by the deeds of petitioners' ancestors under both
of which the title, on abandonment for railroad purposes, reverted
to their heirs and assigns. The defense to this claim was that the
acts presently invested the railway with title to the right of way
subsequently located, obtained, and used, which, upon abandonment
of the use, reverted to the United States and was, by the Act of
March 8, 1922, conveyed to the respondent.
Petitioners further urged that, even if the acts of Congress
operated as grants
in praesenti, the estate of the
Page 297 U. S. 489
company endured only so long as the land was devoted to railroad
use, with a right of reverter, either vested in the Creek Tribe and
conveyed to the United States by the cession effective March 1,
1889, or vested directly in the United States, and the right of
reverter passed from the United States by patent to the
petitioners' ancestors, and from them, by deed and inheritance, to
the respective petitioners. Upon the extinguishment of the
railroad's estate by abandonment, full title, so they claimed,
reverted to them. They alleged the Act of March 8, 1922, does not
apply in the circumstances, and, if held applicable, is
unconstitutional as depriving them of property without due
process.
The trial court entered judgments in favor of the city, and, on
appeal, the Supreme Court of Oklahoma consolidated the cases for
hearing and affirmed the judgments. [
Footnote 14] In their applications for certiorari, the
petitioners asserted that the state court's construction of the
acts of 1888 and 1889 conflicts with the decision of a federal
court in respect of an act identical in terms, [
Footnote 15] and stressed the importance of
a final adjudication as affecting not only their titles, but many
others in Oklahoma City the subject of threatened suits in state
and federal courts. On this showing, the writ was granted.
First. The Act of February 18, 1888, does not purport
to grant lands for right of way and station purposes. The title is
"An act to authorize the Choctaw Coal and Railway Company to
construct and operate a railway through the Indian Territory." By
the first section, the company is "invested and empowered with the
right of locating, constructing, owning, equipping, operating,
using, and maintaining a railway." Section 2 provides that the
corporation "is authorized to take and use" for railway, but
Page 297 U. S. 490
for no other purpose, a right of way and "to take and use" land
for station purposes. Section 3 requires that, before the road
shall be constructed through land held by any individual occupant
according to Indian usage, full compensation must be made to the
occupant, prescribes the method of securing compensation, and
creates a tribunal for ascertaining and awarding it, from whose
decision a right of appeal to a federal court is given. Section 5
lays on the company the obligation to pay to any tribe through
whose unallotted lands the line may run a fixed compensation per
mile. If the tribe be dissatisfied with the amount specified in the
act, the just measure of compensation is to be ascertained by the
same procedure as is directed in the case of an individual
allottee. The company is permitted to survey and locate its railway
immediately, and, by § 6, is required to cause maps showing
the location of its lines to be filed with the Secretary of the
Interior and with the chiefs of the nations or tribes through whose
lands they run. The section adds:
"After the filing of said maps, no claim for a subsequent
settlement and improvement upon the right of way shown by said maps
shall be valid as against said company."
The Secretary of the Interior is to approve of the location
before any construction may be begun. Section 13 enacts:
"The right of way herein and hereby granted shall not be
assigned or transferred in any form whatever prior to the
construction and completion of the road."
Except for the words just quoted from § 13 upon which
respondent relies, the act plainly grants an authority or a
franchise, rather than physical property. The expression used in
that section is not sufficient to enlarge the limited scope of the
act disclosed by the enacting sections.
The respondent and the court below refer to decisions holding
certain right of way acts to be grants
in praesenti, but
those acts not only affect the public lands of the United States
which are subject to unrestricted disposition
Page 297 U. S. 491
by the government, [
Footnote
16] but explicitly state that "a right of way is hereby
granted." [
Footnote 17]
The Act of 1888, considered in its entirety, evinces the intent
that the company is to compensate for all lands taken for its use,
whether those of individual allottees or of the tribe. No provision
for compensation to white settlers was made, because, at the date
of the passage of the statutes, none were permitted within the area
to be traversed by the railroad. The acts in question were
construed by Assistant Attorney General (now MR. JUSTICE) VAN
DEVANTER, in an opinion rendered to the Department of the Interior
in 1898, [
Footnote 18] as
not making grants
in praesenti, but conferring only the
right to locate a railroad and take the necessary land upon making
just compensation to its owners or those having an inchoate right
of ownership. A similar conclusion was announced by the Circuit
Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit [
Footnote 19] in respect of the act authorizing the
building of the Fort Smith & Western Railroad, [
Footnote 20] which is identical with that
under review except for the name of the company and the termini of
the projected railroad.
Later statutes respecting the railroad are said to support
respondent's view of the nature of the original grant. We think,
however, the subsequent legislation is, at best, of doubtful aid in
the construction of the act of 1888. The Act of February 13, 1889,
amended § 1 of the original
Page 297 U. S. 492
act by authorizing the construction of the branch line extending
westwardly and northwestwardly from the main line, which branch now
runs through the respondent city. It made no other alteration in
the provisions of the earlier legislation. The Acts of February 21,
1891, [
Footnote 21] and
January 22, 1894, [
Footnote
22] extended the time originally granted for constructing the
railroad. The latter act added:
"And, for such purpose, the said company shall have the right to
take and occupy the right of way and depot grounds heretofore
granted to it by said Acts."
We think, in the light of the clear provisions of the original
authorization, no inference favorable to the respondent's
contention is to be drawn from this phrase in the extending
act.
On the other hand, Congress has indicated its view that the
original act merely authorized the exercise of the right of eminent
domain. By the Act of August 24, 1894, [
Footnote 23] the creditors and stockholders of the
railway, which had become insolvent, were reorganized into a new
corporation, the Choctaw, Oklahoma & Gulf Railroad Company.
Section 4 provides:
"That it shall and may be lawful for such new corporation to
construct and operate branches from its said railroad and for such
purpose to take and use rights of way . . . upon making
compensation therefor as provided in the case of taking land for
its main line."
Respondent also cites a portion of § 18 of the Organic Act
for the Territory of Oklahoma, quoted
supra, to support
the claim that, by the Act of 1888, Congress intended to grant
in praesenti. For the same purpose, the court below quoted
and relied on one sentence found in the section. We think, however,
that the provision was
Page 297 U. S. 493
merely intended to preserve the
status quo, and does
not aid in the construction of previous legislation respecting the
rights of railroads in the territory.
Were the act of 1888 of doubtful import, the conditions existing
when it and the amending act of 1889 were adopted would be
conclusive of the legislative intent. The main line authorized by
the first act ran for the greater portion through the lands of the
Choctaw and Chickasaw Indians. The title of these tribes was
substantially similar to that of the Creeks, and while, in the
treaty by which their title was confirmed, there was provision that
rights of way for railroads might be granted through their
territory, the condition was added that full compensation should be
made for any property taken or destroyed in the construction of any
such road. The branch line authorized by the act of 1889 extended
westward through the eastern portion of the Creek lands which was
unaffected by the treaty of 1866. The treaty of 1856 with this
tribe contained a provision similar to that found in the Choctaw
Treaty securing compensation for lands taken for railroad rights of
way. The branch line also was to traverse the western portion of
the Creek Nation's territory, but, at the time the branch was
authorized (February 13, 1889), that area was not public land of
the United States, and was held in trust for the settlement of
other Indians. The restriction was not removed until March 1, 1889,
at which time these lands were declared to be part of the public
domain and intended for white settlement.
Both the original and the amending act contemplated that the
right of way would run through lands owned by Indian tribes or
claimed by Indian allottees and none other. In view of the nature
of the title of the Indians, we cannot impute to the Congress a
purpose by the Act of 1888 to grant any portion of the lands to the
company or to impose a servitude without compensation.
Page 297 U. S. 494
For these reasons, we are unable to agree with the construction
of the act by the Supreme Court of Oklahoma in the present case and
in earlier decisions. [
Footnote
24] We hold the legislation granted a franchise, authorized a
taking upon compensation secured or made, and was not a grant of
land.
Second. Assuming, for the sake of argument, that the
Act of 1888 granted the railroad a base or limited fee, as does the
general railroad act of March 3, 1875, [
Footnote 25] we think the marked similarity of this
special act to the general statute requires that they be given the
same construction. It is well settled that the title to right of
way and station lands conferred by the general railroad act does
not accrue to the company until a map of definite location is filed
with the Secretary of the Interior for his approval, or the road is
actually constructed, and the rights of one claiming by settlement
or occupancy antedating such filing or construction are superior to
those of the railroad. [
Footnote
26] Like the general railroad law, the act in question required
the filing of plats of the location of the line for the Secretary's
approval and, in addition, expressly subordinated to the railroad's
rights any claim based on a settlement subsequent to such filing.
This was a clear recognition of the principle applied to rights of
way acquired pursuant to the general law, which was that the
staking of a location of the proposed line was ineffectual to
prevent the acquirement of rights by settlers and occupants under
the homestead and town site laws. [
Footnote 27] It is not to be supposed that a different
rule was
Page 297 U. S. 495
intended by the Act of 1888. The petitioners entered upon their
tracts April 22, 1889. The company's map was not filed with the
Secretary of the Interior until July 13th of the same year.
Whatever the quality of the statutory grant to the railroad
company, its rights had their inception after the assertion of, and
were inferior to, those of the petitioners' ancestors.
Third. It follows from what has been said that the
railroad derived title to the Noble lot by the deed of Naoma and
George Noble of March 28, 1891. As no question is made but that the
reverter clause in that deed became operative upon abandonment of
the line, the Noble title is superior to that of the respondent. It
is equally true that, when Higgins made his deed to the railroad
company in 1898, he had good title to the premises conveyed, and,
by that conveyance, the railroad obtained whatever estate it had.
The petitioners insist that the
habendum clause in the
deed operated to clothe them with full title on abandonment of the
right of way. They say that the Supreme Court of Oklahoma so held.
The opinion seems to proceed on this assumption, but, in the view
the court took, a decision of the question was unnecessary, and we
find no direct ruling upon the point. We express no opinion as to
the effect of the
habendum clause, since this is a
question of state law, and appropriately may be decided by the
state court.
The grounds stated for our decision make it unnecessary to
consider or to decide the other questions raised by the
petitioners. The judgment of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma must be
reversed, and the causes remanded to that Court for further
proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
* Together with No. 336,
Higgins et al. v. Oklahoma
City. Certiorari to the Supreme Court of Oklahoma.
[
Footnote 1]
Stat. 366; 7 Stat. 417; 11 Stat. 699.
[
Footnote 2]
Vol. 4 of Indian Deeds, in the Office of Indian Affairs, pp.
446, 447.
[
Footnote 3]
June 14, 1866, 14 Stat. 785.
[
Footnote 4]
25 Stat. 35.
[
Footnote 5]
See Treaty of June 22, 1855, 11 Stat. 611.
[
Footnote 6]
25 Stat. 757.
[
Footnote 7]
25 Stat. 668.
[
Footnote 8]
25 Stat. 757, 759, § 2.
[
Footnote 9]
25 Stat. 980, 1004, 1005, § 12.
[
Footnote 10]
26 Stat. 81, 89, 91.
[
Footnote 11]
26 Stat. 109.
[
Footnote 12]
The railway was reorganized as Choctaw, Oklahoma & Gulf
Railroad Company, and the reorganized company given the same rights
as its predecessor. 28 Stat. 502; 29 Stat. 98. At the time of the
abandonment, the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railroad
Company was operating the line in question under a lease for 999
years.
[
Footnote 13]
42 Stat. 414, 43 U.S.C. § 912:
"Whenever public lands of the United States have been or may be
granted to any railroad company for use as a right of way for its
railroad or as sites for railroad structures of any kind, and use
and occupancy of said lands for such purposes has ceased or shall
hereafter cease, whether by forfeiture or by abandonment by said
railroad company declared or decreed by a court of competent
jurisdiction or by Act of Congress, then and thereupon, all right,
title, interest, and estate of the United States in said lands
shall, except such part thereof as may be embraced in a public
highway legally established within one year after the date of said
decree or forfeiture or abandonment, be transferred to and vested
in any person, firm, or corporation, assigns, or successors in
title and interest to whom or to which title of the United States
may have been or may be granted, conveying or purporting to convey
the whole of the legal subdivision or subdivisions traversed or
occupied by such railroad or railroad structures of any kind as
aforesaid, except lands within a municipality the title to which,
upon forfeiture or abandonment, as herein provided, shall vest in
such municipality, and this by virtue of the patent thereto and
without the necessity of any other or further conveyance or
assurance of any kind or nature whatsoever."
[
Footnote 14]
172 Okl. 182,
44 P.2d
135.
[
Footnote 15]
United States v. Ft. Smith & Western Railroad Co.,
195 F. 211, 214.
[
Footnote 16]
Ruddy v. Rossi, 248 U. S. 104,
248 U. S.
106.
[
Footnote 17]
See, e.g., Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co. v. Kansas Pacific
Ry. Co., 97 U. S. 491;
Railroad Co. v. Baldwin, 103 U. S. 426;
United States v. Southern Pacific R. Co., 146 U.
S. 570;
Northern Pac. Ry. Co. v. Townsend,
190 U. S. 267;
United States v. Michigan, 190 U.
S. 379. The general railroad act of 1875(18 Stat. 482)
also grants a right of way
in praesenti: Jamestown &
Northern R. Co. v. Jones, 177 U. S. 125;
Stalker v. Oregon S.L. R. Co., 225 U.
S. 142.
[
Footnote 18]
27 Land Office Decisions, 414.
[
Footnote 19]
United States v. Ft. Smith & Western R. Co., 195 F.
211, 214.
[
Footnote 20]
30 Stat. 1368.
[
Footnote 21]
26 Stat. 765.
[
Footnote 22]
28 Stat. 27.
[
Footnote 23]
28 Stat. 502, 503.
And see § 2 of the Act of April
24, 1896, 29 Stat. 98; § 2 of the Act of March 28, 1900, 31
Stat. 52.
[
Footnote 24]
United States v. Choctaw, O. & G. R. Co., 3 Okl.
404, 41 P. 729;
Churchill v. Choctaw Ry. Co., 4 Okl. 462,
46 P. 503.
[
Footnote 25]
Chapter 152, 18 Stat. 482; 43 U.S.C. §§ 934-939.
See Rio Grande Western R. Co. v. Stringham, 239 U. S.
44,
239 U. S. 47,
and cases cited.
[
Footnote 26]
Minneapolis, ST.P. & S.S.M. Ry. Co. v. Doughty,
208 U. S. 251;
Great Northern R. Co. v. Steinke, 261 U.
S. 119.
[
Footnote 27]
Ibid.