1. In a suit under the Act of June 25, 1929, for an accounting,
etc., between the United States and the Northern Pacific Railway
Company, with respect to the land grants made by the United States
to that company's predecessor, decision on the following
propositions of the Government, each advanced as a defense to
Page 311 U. S. 318
any relief for the company, are reserved, eight Justices who
heard the case being equally divided in opinion concerning them,
viz.:
(a) That the obligations of the United States under the Act of
July 2, 1864, were avoided by the alleged failure of the grantee to
obtain
bona fide subscriptions to its stock and payments
thereon, as the Act required. P.
311 U. S.
335.
(b) That the grantee failed to build its whole railroad as
required by that Act, inasmuch as it did not locate or construct it
between Wallula and Portland, a distance of 225 miles, but instead
secured running rights over tracks of another company connecting
those two places. P.
311 U. S.
336.
(c) That the grantee, by diverting to the building and support
of allegedly unjustified and unprofitable branch lines, funds which
it should have used to complete its main line, broke its contract
with the United States, and thereby lost the right to make further
lieu selections of land. P.
311 U. S.
336.
(d) That the grantee broke its contract with the United States
by refusing to open land granted it by the Resolution of 1870 to
settlement and preemption at $2.50 per acre, and is therefore not
entitled to any relief in this case. P.
311 U. S.
337.
(e) That, through unauthorized preliminary withdrawals of place
and indemnity lands made by the Secretary of the Interior in the
interest of the grants, the grantee and its successor received
benefits, lands, and values to which they were not entitled,
precluding any award to the railroad company in this case. P.
311 U. S.
339.
(f) That foreclosures and reorganizations affecting the railroad
company and its property debarred the company from selecting more
lieu lands. P.
311 U. S.
340.
-----
2. Under the Act of July 2, 1864, and the Joint Resolution of
May 31, 1870, granting land to the Northern Pacific Railroad
Company, land in the indemnity limits was not subject to selection,
in lieu of land lost in the place limits, until identified as
odd-numbered sections by an official survey; nor could mineral land
be selected. P.
311 U. S.
342.
3. In determining the existence and extent of deficiencies in
these grants on the dates of withdrawals by the Government of land
in the indemnity limits for forestry and other purposes, tracts
unsurveyed or classified as mineral are not to be counted as then
available for selection by the railroad. P.
311 U. S.
342.
Page 311 U. S. 319
4. The fact that, by the terms of the granting Acts, the land in
the indemnity limits was, before survey, subject to be taken by
preemptors and settlers, whereby ultimate satisfaction of the
grants might be defeated, did not justify the government in
reserving such land to itself, and thus rendering it impossible for
the company to obtain it.
United States v. Northern. Pacific
Railway Co., 256 U. S. 51. P.
311 U. S.
344.
5. The right of the railroad company, under the Act of June 25,
1929, to be indemnified for deficiencies in its grants caused by
governmental reservations of land within the indemnity limits does
not depend upon proof being made by the company that, but for the
withdrawals, it would have selected tracts so reserved, and what
tracts it would have selected. P.
311 U. S.
346.
The company's right of selection, to the extent of the
deficiencies in the grants, remained available as to the withdrawn
lands provided the lands selected were such as are defined in the
grants. The Government's contention that no one can say how soon
the lands would have been surveyed and selected if they had not
been withdrawn and reserved, or what areas would have been taken up
by settlers and preemptors if there had been no withdrawals or
surveys, does not avail to abrogate or qualify the company's right
to exercise its privilege of selection notwithstanding the
withdrawals. Moreover, the argument ignores the repeal of the
preemption laws by the Act of March 3, 1891. P.
311 U. S.
347.
6. The Indian Treaties of September 17, 1851 (Fort Laramie), and
October 17, 1855 (Blackfeet), which purport to "reserve" vast
tracts of the Indian Country, did not create technical
reservations, but merely demarked the areas to be occupied by the
respective tribes, the object being to promote peace among them and
between them and the United States. The status of the land as
"Indian Country," owned by the United States subject to the Indian
right of occupancy, was not altered. P.
311 U. S.
347.
7. Land along the definite location of the Northern Pacific
where it traversed areas described in these treaties was not
"reserved" within the meaning of § 3 of the Act of 1864, and
the undertaking of the United States to extinguish the Indian title
(§ 2 of that Act) applied not only to the right-of-way, but
also to the lands in the place and indemnity limits. P.
311 U. S.
348.
8. The allegations of the Government bill do not support its
contention that the railroad company should be charged in this case
with a large amount of land alleged to have been obtained
illegally,
Page 311 U. S. 320
as a result of the company's having adopted an unnecessarily
circuitous route between certain points of its line in the
Territory of Washington. P.
311 U. S.
349.
9. The Railroad was entitled, under the Act of 1864 and the
Resolution of 1870, to make selections of land in the second
indemnity limits in Montana in lieu of place sections lost to it as
a result of the creation, in 1868, out of country described in the
Treaty of 1851,
supra, of the Crow Reservation -- a
typical Indian Reservation. P.
311 U. S.
352.
10. The addition of lands in the Railroad's indemnity limits to
the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation in Montana, by Executive
Order of March 19, 1900, confirmed by Act of Congress of June 3,
1926, was a withdrawal of such lands as a "Government reservation"
and for "governmental purposes" within the intent of the Act of
June 25, 1929, and, within the meaning of that Act, such lands
were, on June 5, 1924, lands embraced within the exterior
boundaries of a Government reservation, for which the Railroad is
entitled to claim compensation. P.
311 U. S.
353.
11. Lands in the Northern Pacific indemnity limits which, after
being reserved by the Government for forestry and other purposes,
were filed upon by homesteaders before June 5, 1924, and were
patented to them after that date, are lands for which the Act of
June 25, 1929, awards indemnity, as lands which, on June 5, 1924,
were embraced in a Government reservation and which, in the event
of a deficiency of the Railroad's grants on the date of withdrawal
for governmental purposes, "would be, or were" available for
selection. P.
311 U. S.
354.
2. Under the Act of February 26, 1895, Government Commissioners
undertook to examine and to classify as mineral or non-mineral all
lands within the place and indemnity limits of the Northern Pacific
Railroad in four land districts of Montana and Idaho, and made
their reports, which were accepted and approved by the Secretary of
the Interior. In lieu of place sections so classified as mineral,
the Railroad obtained patents for much indemnity land, and in this
suit claims credit for more. The Government alleges, and the
Railroad denies, that the Commissioners were persuaded by
fraudulent practices of the Railroad to classify, as mineral, lands
of little value, so that the Railroad could select more valuable
tracts in lieu.
Held:
(1) Under the Act of June 25, 1929, this issue of fraud should
go to trial. P.
311 U. S.
355.
Page 311 U. S. 321
(2) Although it was alleged, and found by the court below, that
the Commissioners could not possibly examine and classify the lands
within the time limited by the Act of 1895, their reports and the
approval and acceptance of them by the Secretary of the Interior,
create a
prima facie showing in favor of the
classification and of the Railroad's indemnity selections based
thereon. P.
311 U. S.
358.
(3) The burden of proving the fraud alleged is on the United
States. P.
311 U. S.
358.
(4) The United States is not barred by laches or estoppel from
asserting and proving the alleged fraud, and from having the
Railroad charged with any lands or values received as a result of
it. P.
311 U. S.
358.
13. The "agricultural" land which the Railroad was entitled to
select under the Act of 1864 in lieu of mineral land is such land
as, by Land Office practice and public land laws, would have been
available to individuals for clearing and subsequent cultivation,
or for grazing, or for any other purpose commonly classified by the
Land Office as coming within the preemption and homestead laws; but
it does not include land valuable solely for timber. P.
311 U. S.
358.
14. The United States is liable to account to the Railroad for
lands in indemnity limits which the Railroad could have selected if
and when surveyed, had they not been withdrawn by the Government.
P.
311 U. S.
364.
15. Inasmuch as, under the Act of 1929, the Railroad's right to
compensation depends upon the availability of lands on the dates of
the withdrawals for governmental purposes, the claim of the
Government that subsequent restorations of withdrawn lands to the
public domain, sufficient in area to make up the deficiency created
by the withdrawals, defeated the Railroad's claim to choose lands
within the withdrawal areas, is not sustained in the light of the
facts. P.
311 U. S.
365.
16. For any financial detriment to the United States or
financial benefit to the company that the Government may prove to
have resulted from the action of the Department of the Interior in
prematurely withdrawing lands in the place and indemnity limits
from settlement and preemption, the company should be charged, and
the United States credited, under § 6 of the Act of June 25,
1929. P.
311 U. S.
366.
17. The proviso of the Resolution of 1870, requiring that
granted lands be opened by the company to settlement and
preemption,
Page 311 U. S. 322
applies only to the additional lands granted by that Resolution,
and not to lands acquired under the grant of 1864. P.
311 U. S.
367.
18. The company was not a trustee of such lands for the United
States, either in its own right or in behalf of possible settlers.
It results that the Government cannot call upon the company to
account as a trustee for the proceeds of sale of the lands. P.
311 U. S.
368.
19. The proviso of the Resolution of 1870 required the company
to open the lands granted by the Resolution to preemption and
settlement at the expiration of five years from the completion of
the entire road in 1887, whether the lands were then subject to
mortgage or not; its failure so to do was a breach of its contract
with the United States, and the Government is entitled to prove, if
it can, any damage to it, or advantage to the company, which
resulted from this breach of contract. P.
311 U. S.
368.
20. The company's right to receive patents for indemnity lands
outside of the reserves for which selections were filed with the
Department of the Interior prior to June 5, 1924, cannot be
attacked in this suit upon the ground that the bases were
fraudulently classified as mineral, for the reason, amongst others,
that the bill prays no affirmative relief in respect of such
alleged fraudulent classification. P.
311 U. S.
369.
21. The Government objected to a part of the decree below
directing that the company receive patents to certain indemnity
lands selected prior to June 5, 1924, basing the objection on the
ground that the company had not assigned bases for selections.
Held, that the point is not open for argument, it not
having been preserved in the record. P.
311 U. S.
370.
22. The Resolution of 1870, in authorizing location and
construction of the Northern Pacific line from Portland to Tacoma
"under the provisions and with the privileges, grants and duties
provided for in its [the company's] act of incorporation," made a
new grant with place and indemnity limits of the same width as
those prescribed for the railroad built under the charter Act of
1864. P.
311 U. S.
372.
23. The Land Office construed the Resolution of 1870 as
requiring the laying down of second indemnity limits for the
Portland-Tacoma line. P.
311 U. S.
375.
24. Such grants are not quantity grants, but grants of lands "in
place" or by description. P.
311 U. S.
375.
25. The lands in place limits, granted to the Northern Pacific
under the Act of 1864 in aid of its "Cascade Line," which are
embraced
Page 311 U. S. 323
also in the place limits of the grant made to the same company
by the Resolution of 1870 in aid of the later Portland-Tacoma line,
are not lands "granted or disposed of by the United States" prior
to the later grant for which the company was entitled, by that
Resolution, to make indemnity selections. P.
311 U. S.
376.
Affirmed in part; reversed in part.
These were cross-appeals under a special Act of May 22, 1936,
from a decree of the District Court, in a suit brought by the
Attorney General pursuant to an Act of June 25, 1929, to determine
all controversies between the United States and the Northern
Pacific Railway Company and to obtain an accounting, etc., in
respect of the land grants made to that company's predecessor in
aid of the construction of the railroad. The Bill named as parties
defendant Northern Pacific Railway Company, Northern Pacific
Railroad Company, "Northern Pacific Railroad Company, as
reorganized in 1875," Northwestern Improvement Company, Bankers
Trust Company, Guaranty Trust Company, and City Bank Farmers Trust
Company. The Guaranty Trust Company disclaimed.
Page 311 U. S. 324
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The cause brought here by these appeals involves the correlative
rights of the United States and the Northern Pacific Railway
Company arising out of the land grants in aid of the Northern
Pacific Railroad Company.
By an Act of July 2, 1864, [
Footnote 1] designated persons were created a body
corporate, Northern Pacific Railroad Company, which was authorized
and empowered to lay out, locate, construct, and maintain a
continuous railroad and telegraph line from a point on Lake
Superior to Puget Sound, with a branch via the valley of the
Columbia River, to a point at or near Portland, Oregon. (§
1.)
The Act granted a right of way through the public lands, with
additional lands for stations, etc., and the United States agreed
that it would extinguish, as rapidly as consistent with public
policy and the welfare of the Indians, the Indian title to all
lands falling under the operation of the Act and "acquired in the
donation to the [road]." (§ 2.)
In aid of construction, and to secure transportation of mail,
troops, munitions, and public stores, every alternate section of
public land, not mineral, was granted to the amount of twenty
sections per mile on each side of the line through territories, and
ten sections per mile through states. In case any of these sections
had been granted, sold, occupied by homestead settlers, or
otherwise disposed of at the time of definite location of the
railroad opposite such sections, the company was to be entitled to
select, in lieu thereof, alternate odd-numbered sections not more
than ten miles beyond the limits of the grant. In lieu of mineral
lands, the company might
Page 311 U. S. 325
select a like quantity of agricultural lands "nearest to the
line of said road and within fifty miles thereof." (§ 3.)
Whenever twenty-five consecutive miles of any portion of the
railroad and telegraph became ready for service, the President was
to appoint three Commissioners to examine the same and, upon their
favorable report, patents were to be issued to the company for the
lands opposite the completed sections. This procedure was to be
repeated as each section of twenty-five miles was completed.
(§ 4.)
The grant was subject to the conditions that the company should
commence work within two years and complete not less than fifty
miles per year after the expiration of the second year, and
complete and equip the whole road by July 4, 1876. (§ 8.) In
the event of a breach of these conditions, not cured within one
year, the United States might "do any and all acts and things which
may be needful and necessary to insure a speedy completion of the
said road." (§ 9.)
The capital stock was to be publicly offered to the people of
the United States; no mortgage or construction bonds were to be
issued, or any mortgage lien created, except with the consent of
Congress. (§ 10.) The road was to be a post and military road,
for the use of the United States, subject to regulations imposed by
Congress restricting the charges for such use. (§ 11.)
The acceptance of the terms of the Act was to be signified in
writing by the board of directors of the company within two years
after the passage of the Act. (§ 12.)
Unless the company should obtain
bona fide
subscriptions to its stock in the amount of $2,000,000, with ten
percent. paid, within two years from the approval of the Act, the
Act was to be null and void. (§ 19.)
Page 311 U. S. 326
Congress reserved power "at any time, having due regard for the
rights of said Northern Pacific Railroad Company," to "add to,
alter, amend, or repeal" the Act. (§ 20.)
The company claimed to have been duly organized, and the
incorporators filed the acceptance provided for in § 12 within
two years.
The belief that the road could be financed by popular stock
subscriptions proved unfounded. The time for commencing and
completing the road was twice extended. [
Footnote 2] The date ultimately fixed for final
completion was July 4, 1879. The tentative route adopted by the
company showed a line reaching to Puget Sound via the Yakima River.
Ultimately, the line was so definitely located and constructed. In
1869, Congress gave consent to the issue of mortgage bonds,
[
Footnote 3] and also
authorized the company to extend a branch line from a point at or
near Portland to a suitable point on Puget Sound and to connect the
branch with the main line west of the Cascade Mountains, but made
no land grant except for the right of way. [
Footnote 4] The company did not avail itself of either
of the privileges granted. May 31, 1870, Congress again authorized
the company to issue bonds to aid in the construction and equipment
of its road, to be secured by mortgage on all of its property,
railroad, land grant, and franchise to be a corporation. It further
authorized the location and construction of the main railroad via
the valley of the Columbia River to Puget Sound, and of a branch
from the main line across the Cascade Mountains to Puget Sound, and
made a grant of land in connection with the construction authorized
between Portland and Puget Sound, on the same terms as the original
grant. It also provided a second indemnity belt
Page 311 U. S. 327
extending ten miles beyond the first on either side of the right
of way. [
Footnote 5]
Pursuant to this authority, the company created bonds, secured
by mortgage of the railroad and land grant. By December 30, 1871,
the line was completed from Carlton, Minnesota, to the Red River at
Moorhead; by the spring of 1873, it was completed to the Missouri
River at Bismarck, a total distance of four hundred and twenty-four
miles. During the same period, the road from Portland to Puget
Sound was constructed from Kalama, Washington, to Tacoma, a
distance of one hundred and six miles. The land grant concomitant
to this construction amounted to approximately 10,000,000
acres.
The panic of 1873 caused cessation of construction; the company
was short of funds; a receiver was appointed, and a reorganization
effected whereby a bondholders' committee purchased at foreclosure
sale, and, jointly with the receiver, reconveyed the property to
the company.
Construction was resumed in 1879, and reached the Yellowstone
River in Montana in 1880. In 1879, the company began building
eastward at Ainsworth in Washington Territory. The road from
Carlton, Minnesota, to Ashland on Lake Superior was completed in
1883. Eastward and westward extensions met at a point in Montana in
August, 1883. The Cascade Branch from Pasco to Tacoma was completed
in 1887. The company, by contract with the Oregon Railroad and
Navigation Company, obtained the right to use the line of the
latter from Wallula to Portland, where it connected with the line
to Puget Sound. As sections of twenty-five miles were completed,
Commissioners were appointed, examined the road, reported
favorably, and the construction was accepted by the President.
Page 311 U. S. 328
The corporation chartered by Congress operated the road until
receivers were appointed in 1893. Pursuant to foreclosure
proceedings, the Northern Pacific Railway Company acquired title to
the railroad, the land grant, and all other property of the
original corporation, and has since operated the road and obtained
patents for millions of acres under the land grants.
The grant of 1864 was of the ten nearest alternate odd-numbered
sections of public land, not mineral, on each side of every mile of
the line as definitely located, in a state, and of twenty such
sections in a territory. This grant was
in praesenti.
[
Footnote 6] The lands thus
granted are spoken of as "place lands." They were in two belts,
each twenty miles wide in states, and forty in territories,
parallel to the right of way.
Excepted from the grant were lands reserved, granted,
appropriated, preempted, or subject to other claims and rights at
the date of definite location. These exempted lands are spoken of
as "lands lost to the grant." In lieu of such lost lands, the Act
provided that other lands were to be selected by the company, under
the direction of the Secretary of the Interior, from odd-numbered
sections not more than ten miles beyond the place lands, on each
side of the road. The two ten-mile strips thus defined are spoken
of as "the first indemnity belts" or "the first indemnity
limits."
The Resolution of May 31, 1870, granted, as respects the
additional line authorized between Portland and Puget Sound, place
and indemnity lands as granted for the original line by the Act of
1864. It also authorized what are spoken of as "second indemnity"
belts ten miles wide, on either side of the original indemnity
limits, in any state or territory in which the company could not
obtain the number of sections intended for it by its
Page 311 U. S. 329
charter. This additional grant, however, was conditioned that
lieu lands in the second indemnity limits might be chosen only in
the same state or territory in which place lands were lost to the
grant.
Mineral lands are excepted from both grants. In lieu of lands
lost because of their mineral character, the legislation permits
selection of agricultural lands within fifty miles on either side
of the right of way. These fifty-mile strips are known as "the
mineral indemnity belts." Their exterior limits coincide with the
exterior limits of the first indemnity belt in territories, and lie
ten miles beyond the exterior limits of the second indemnity belts
in states.
"The ultimate obligation of the Government in respect of the
indemnity lands is on the same plane as that respecting the lands
in place. The only difference is in the mode of identification.
Those in place are identified by filing the map of definite
location, and the indemnity lands by selections made in lieu of
losses in the place limits. [
Footnote 7]"
Since the grant excluded mineral lands and gave agricultural
lands in lieu thereof, but made no provision for the determination
of the character of the lands, Congress passed an Act of February
26, 1895, [
Footnote 8] which
directed that the mineral character of the lands should be
ascertained by a classification by commissioners appointed by the
President, which, when approved by the Secretary of the Interior,
should be final except in case of fraud. Such a classification was
made, whereby approximately 3,782,377 acres of place lands and more
than 1,000,000 acres of indemnity lands, were ascertained to be
mineral.
Between March 1, 1898, and May 15, 1924, 1,103,424 acres in the
first indemnity limits under the 1864 grant,
Page 311 U. S. 330
and 961,992 acres in second indemnity limits of the same grant,
were withdrawn and placed in national forests and other Government
reservations. During the same period, 155,727 acres from the first
indemnity limits of the grant of 1870 and 213,001 acres from the
second indemnity limits laid down under that grant were withdrawn
for the same purposes. This action was taken, in the main, pursuant
to an Act of March 3, 1891. [
Footnote 9]
The company sought to select indemnity lands within the
reservations, but the Secretary of the Interior would not accept or
approve the selections, and the company was unable, by litigation,
to compel action favorable to it. [
Footnote 10] In 1905, however, the company filed a
selection list for over five thousand acres of surveyed lands in a
Government forest reserve in Montana. The list was approved, and
the Secretary of the Interior issued patents. Subsequently, upon
discovering that these lands were within the forest reserve, the
United States brought suit to cancel the patents. The case reached
this court, [
Footnote 11]
which held that the Act of 1864 and the Resolution of 1870 embodied
an offer that, if the company would construct and operate the
railroad, it should receive the granted lands; that this offer had
ripened into a contract by the company's acceptance and
performance; that the promise of indemnity for granted lands not
available to the company was a vested right protected from
destruction; that, though the lands in the indemnity belts were
open to acquisition by settlers before survey, they were open to
selection by the company only after survey; and, finally, that
withdrawals of indemnity lands for governmental purposes were
invalid unless, at the time of withdrawal, there remained
non-mineral lands available for selection sufficient to satisfy
prior losses to the company
Page 311 U. S. 331
from the grant. The measure of the grant was held to be the
aggregate of the odd-numbered sections within the place limits,
subject to certain deductions not here material. Although a
stipulation had been filed as to the measure of the grant, the
court held that, since the evidence did not disclose that certain
necessary deductions from the grant had been made to ascertain the
net amount of land to which the company was entitled, the case was
not ripe for judgment. Accordingly, the cause was remanded for a
determination of the alleged deficiency in the grant and for
further proceedings dependent upon such determination.
The Department of Agriculture, which was charged with the
administration of the forest reserves, realized that, if the
company's claims as to the deficiency in the grant, with consequent
right of selection of withdrawn lands as indemnity, were sustained,
much of the land in the forest reserves would be diverted from the
purpose intended by their reservation. The Forester of the United
States called the situation to the attention of the Secretary of
the Interior and suggested that the latter should investigate a
number of questions affecting the company's claims. The Land
Office, with the cooperation of the company, undertook an
adjustment of the grant, and a tentative adjustment was prepared.
The Forester raised many objections. Ultimately the Secretary of
Agriculture and the Secretary of the Interior called the situation
to the attention of the President, and he and they communicated
with Congress. As a result, that body adopted a Joint Resolution on
June 5, 1924, [
Footnote 12]
directing the Secretary of the Interior to withhold approval of any
adjustment of the company's land grants and to withhold the issue
of further patents, and appointing a Joint Committee to make an
investigation of the grants and to report its conclusions and
recommendations
Page 311 U. S. 332
to Congress. This Committee held protracted hearings at which
the Government departments and the company were represented, and
presented evidence amounting to over five thousand printed
pages.
In April, 1929, the Committee rendered its report [
Footnote 13] recommending passage of
a bill authorizing the institution of proceedings by the Attorney
General to procure
"a final and complete determination of the respective rights of
the United States and the Northern Pacific Railway Co. to the end
that the grants shall be finally adjusted and the interests of the
United States, and the grantee shall be fully protected."
The result was the Act of June 25, 1929. [
Footnote 14] The title indicates that the
purpose of the Act was to alter and amend the Act of July 2, 1864,
and the Resolution of May 31, 1870; "to declare forfeited to the
United States certain claimed rights asserted" by the company, and
"to direct the institution and prosecution of proceedings looking
to the adjustment of the grant."
The Act retains for the United States, free of claim by the
company, and removes from the grant any lands within the indemnity
limits which, on June 5, 1924, were within the boundaries of any
national forest or other Government reservation and which, on the
date of withdrawals for governmental purposes, would be or were
available to the company, by indemnity selection or otherwise, in
satisfaction of any deficiency, and directs that the company shall
have from the United States such compensation, if any, as the
courts hold due for the loss of such lands. (§ 1.)
It declares that all unsatisfied indemnity selection rights, if
any exist, claimed by the company are forfeited to the United
States. (§ 2.) It reserves the right to amend and repeal the
charter act and supplementary
Page 311 U. S. 333
resolution and asserts the adherence of Congress to the original
policy with respect to the company's disposition of granted lands.
Right of way lands and those in good faith employed in the
operation of the railroad are excluded from the declared
forfeiture. (§§ 3, 4.)
It directs the Attorney General to bring suit to remove the
cloud of the company's claims upon any lands of the United States;
to determine all controversies between the United States and the
company, and to obtain a full accounting of what the company may be
entitled to recover, and what the United States may be entitled to
recover; to find and determine the extent of the performance by the
United States, and by the company, of the terms of the granting
Acts and what lands, if any, have been patented or certified as a
result of fraud, mistake of law or fact, or legislative or
administrative misapprehension; and, finally, to determine all
questions of law and fact germane to a complete adjudication of the
respective rights under the granting act and resolution, and all
other questions of law and fact presented to the Committee. (§
5.)
It lays down, in general terms, the considerations which are to
govern in the mutual account to be taken between the United States
and the company, and empowers the court to render such judgments
and decrees as law and equity may require. (§ 6.)
It establishes the venue for the trial of the suit, and for
appeal, and provides that a reasonable time shall be fixed by the
court within which Congress may adopt appropriate legislation to
meet the requirements of the judgment. (§ 7.)
It requires reports to Congress from time to time from the
Attorney General as to the decisions rendered in the proceeding.
(§ 8.)
It provides for the withholding of the approval of the
adjustment of the land grants by the Secretary of the
Page 311 U. S. 334
Interior and for the withholding of patents until the
determination of the litigation. (§ 9.)
Pursuant to the Act, the Attorney General caused a bill to be
filed, on behalf of the United States, in the District Court for
Eastern Washington. The company and the trustees under certain of
its mortgages filed answers and motions to dismiss the whole bill
and each paragraph. The court referred the motions to a special
master. He reported that they should be sustained as to certain
paragraphs of the bill. The court overruled exceptions to his
report. The case was then again referred to the master, before whom
testimony was taken upon the issues raised by the answers to those
portions of the bill which had not been dismissed. The master
reported that the company should be awarded compensation for the
loss of the right of indemnity selection in the withdrawn lands,
and submitted his calculation of the acreage involved.
The court, after sustaining certain of the plaintiff's
exceptions and dismissing almost all of the defendants', found the
company entitled to patents for certain lands outside the reserves
and to compensation for the loss of 1,453,061 acres of land within
them. The court reserved for future decision the contentions of the
mortgagees that they are purchasers for value whose rights cannot
be affected by the Government's claim, and also ascertainment of
the amount to be awarded to the company.
At this stage of the litigation, Congress adopted the Act of May
22, 1936, [
Footnote 15]
authorizing a direct appeal from the decree of the District Court
to this Court. Pursuant to that statute, the present appeals by the
United States and the company were taken. As to many of the issues,
the parties have accepted the decision of the District
Page 311 U. S. 335
Court. Errors are, however, assigned to the decree below by both
the Government and the company.
The Government concedes that the Act of 1929,
supra, is
not a declaration of forfeiture for breach of conditions imposed by
the Act of 1864 and the Resolution of 1870, but a reference to the
courts of all questions as to performance and breach of the
contracts created by the Act and the Resolution, to the end that
the respective rights and liabilities of the parties may be
determined and enforced. The company asserts that the Act of 1929
is an exercise of the power of eminent domain whereby the company
is deprived of further right to select indemnity lands, and is to
be paid just compensation for the right so taken. But the company
does not deny that, in ascertaining the amount due it, the
Government may offset the amount of any claims it may now be
entitled to assert by reason of the company's breaches of
contract.
The Government urges that the breaches of covenant by the
company have been so substantial that it cannot call for further
performance by the United States, and is therefore not entitled to
further selection rights or to any money compensation for their
abrogation. Reliance is placed upon the following alleged
breaches.
1.
The alleged failure of the company to obtain bona
fide
subscription to its stock and payments thereof required by
the Act of 1864.
Section 19 of the Act of 1864 provides that, unless, within two
years of its approval, the company shall obtain
bona fide
stock subscriptions to the amount of two million dollars, with ten
percent. paid, the Act shall be null and void.
Paragraph VI of the bill alleges that although, within the two
years, pretended subscriptions and payments were made, the
pretended payments were sham and a
Page 311 U. S. 336
fraud upon the corporation and the United States; that the Act
thus became void, and the company is not entitled to any
compensation in the present suit.
The master recommended that the motion to dismiss this paragraph
should be granted, and the District Court so ordered.
2.
The alleged failure of the company to perform the
condition of the grant that it complete the whole
railroad.
Section 8 of the Act of 1864 provides that
"each and every grant, right, and privilege herein are so made
and given to, and accepted by, said Northern Pacific Railroad
Company upon and subject to the following conditions, namely: that
the said company shall commence the work on said road within two
years from the approval of this act by the President, and shall
complete not less than fifty miles per year after the second year,
and shall construct, equip, furnish, and complete the whole road by
the fourth day of July, anno Domini eighteen hundred and
seventy-six."
The time for the completion of the road was extended by Congress
to July 4, 1879. It is undisputed that the company never definitely
located or built that portion of its line embracing the two hundred
and twenty-five miles between Wallula and Portland. Instead, it
made a contract for running rights over the tracks of the Oregon
Railway & Navigation Company.
In paragraphs XIV and XXVI of the bill, the United States
alleges that the road was never completed. The master recommended
that the company's motion to dismiss these paragraphs be granted.
The court so ordered.
3.
The claim that diversion of funds in the building of
branch lines disentitles the company to select further
lands.
Paragraph XIV of the bill alleges that, through various
described contracts and transactions, the funds of
Page 311 U. S. 337
the Northern Pacific Railroad Company were used in the building
of branch lines which were unjustified and unprofitable, and that
further funds were, under contract, advanced to such branch lines
to keep them in operation. It is alleged that these things were
done at a time when the company had not completed its main line
from Wallula to Portland. The bill charges that the illegal and
fraudulent conduct it describes resulted in the branch lines'
receiving unconscionable and illegal profits at the cost of the
Northern Pacific when the latter's funds should have been used to
complete its main line, all in violation of the contract between
the United States and the Northern Pacific created by the Act of
1864 and the Resolution of 1870. The master recommended that this
paragraph be dismissed in the view that the transactions in
question did not disentitle the company to exercise indemnity
selection rights in connection with the grant so far as concerns
the road actually constructed. The court dismissed the
paragraph.
4.
The claim that the company failed to perform its contract
by refusing to open lands granted it by the Resolution of 1870 to
settlement and preemption at $2.50 per acre.
Section 10 of the Act of 1864 provides that
"no mortgage or construction bonds shall ever be issued by said
company on said road, or mortgage, or lien made in any way, except
by the consent of the congress of the United States."
An additional line was authorized by the Joint Resolution of
1870, and a land grant made therefor. The Resolution empowered the
company to issue bonds in aid of construction and equipment, and
to
"secure the same by mortgage on its property and rights of
property
Page 311 U. S. 338
of all kinds and descriptions, real, personal, and mixed,
including its franchise as a corporation."
The Resolution further provided
"that all lands hereby granted to said company which shall not
be sold or disposed of or remain subject to the mortgage by this
act authorized at the expiration of five years after the completion
of the entire road shall be subject to settlement and preemption
like other lands at a price to be paid to said company not
exceeding two dollars and fifty cents per acre."
Paragraph XIII of the Bill refers to these provisions of the
Joint Resolution, and alleges that, among the place lands granted,
there are many million acres the quantity and description of which
are known only to the company, or its predecessor, which should
have been opened to settlement and preemption, whereas they were,
subsequent to July 4, 1884 (five years from the date finally fixed
for completion of the road), sold at such prices and on such
conditions as to the company seemed best, and that this was a
breach of the company's contract with the United States, and
defeated the policy of the United States. The master reached the
conclusion that the motion to dismiss paragraph XIII should be
sustained, and the court so ruled.
The Government insists that the Resolution required the company
to hold the lands open for settlement at the price and in parcels
as specified, after five years, whether mortgaged or not; that it
failed to do so, and sold the lands at higher prices and in larger
parcels than the Resolution required, and that its breach of
covenant defeats its right to any award. The company contends that
the intent of the Resolution was to permit it to mortgage all its
property rights; that, if at the expiration of five years from the
completion of the road, any of the granted lands were undisposed
of, or were
Page 311 U. S. 339
not subject to mortgage, those lands were open to preemption;
that, whether or not the existence of a mortgage prevented
settlement of the lands, after five years, there was no duty on the
company to dispose of them to settlers, and that the company has
not broken any covenant in respect of the lands in question.
5.
The claim that unauthorized withdrawals of place and
indemnity lands preclude any award to the company.
Section 3 of the Act of 1864 grants place lands "on each side of
said railroad line, as said company may adopt," and fixes the date
of passage of title to the company as "the time the line of said
road is definitely fixed." Section 6 provides that the President
shall cause the place lands to be surveyed "after the general route
shall be fixed."
Pursuant to preliminary surveys, the Railroad Company filed with
the Secretary of the Interior a map showing the general route of
the proposed line. Thereupon the Secretary caused place limits to
be laid down on either side of the proposed general route, and
withdrew from sale or entry the odd-numbered sections within those
limits. In 1903, this court held that title to the granted place
lands did not vest in the company until the filing of a map of
definite location, and that, consequently, the withdrawal of the
lands by the Secretary prior to that time and coterminous with the
general route was unauthorized. [
Footnote 16]
After the company had filed its maps of definite location, the
Secretary mapped the indemnity limits specified by the Act of 1864
and withdrew the lands comprehended within those limits from sale
or entry. In 1888, the then Secretary held that land within in the
indemnity limits was open to preemption under the homestead
Page 311 U. S. 340
laws and that such preemption, even before actual survey of the
lands, deprived the company of the right to select the lands
preempted. This view was adopted by this court in 1901. [
Footnote 17]
Paragraph XXXII of the bill recites these facts and alleges
that, by virtue of the withdrawals, the Railroad Company and the
Railway Company have received benefits, lands, and values to which
they were not entitled, to the injury of the United States. The
master recommended that the motion to dismiss the paragraph be
sustained, and the court so decreed.
6.
The claim that the foreclosures and reorganizations of
the railroad and its property disentitle the company to select
further lands.
The Resolution of 1870 authorized the railroad company to issue
its bonds and secure the same by mortgage on its property of every
kind, and provided that, if the mortgage authorized should at any
time be enforced by foreclosure or other legal proceeding, or the
mortgaged lands granted by the Resolution, or any of them, should
be sold by the mortgage trustees, upon default,
"such lands shall be sold at public sale at places within the
States and Territories in which they shall be situate, after not
less than sixty days' previous notice, in single sections or
subdivisions thereof, to the highest and best bidder. . . ."
The bill alleges that two reorganizations occurred -- one in
1875 and the other in 1896. As respects the first, it is charged
that, pursuant to court order, the trustees of the mortgage
conveyed the mortgaged railroad and property in a block to certain
individuals who thereupon re-transferred to the railroad company
under an arrangement whereby mortgage bondholders received
preferred stock in lieu of their bonds, such preferred stock to
be
Page 311 U. S. 341
redeemed from the proceeds of the sale of the company's lands.
With respect to the latter foreclosure, it is alleged that the
company, after reorganization, created a number of mortgages which
were foreclosed, and that, in the course of the foreclosure, sales
of the mortgaged lands, while made in the respective states and
territories where they lay, and although made section by section,
were all, by prearrangement, purchased by, or in behalf of, a new
company, whereas it was the intent of Congress that they should be
so sold as to give individuals an opportunity to acquire them.
Paragraphs IX, X, XI, XII, XVI and XVIII describe the
transactions in great detail, and charge that what was done was in
the teeth of the policy of the United States and to its injury. The
master recommended dismissal of these paragraphs, and the court
adopted his recommendation. The United States insists that what was
done constitutes a breach of the company's obligation under the
Resolution of 1870 so substantial as to disentitle it to any
further performance of the land grants. The company asserts that
the reorganization of 1875 involved no sale of the mortgaged lands
within the contemplation of the statute, but a mere device for
reinvesting the company with its lands, freed of the mortgage, and
that the foreclosure sales made in the reorganization of 1896 were
made in strict and exact accordance with the provisions of the
Resolution of 1870.
-----
The Government asserts that none of the paragraphs referred to
above should have been dismissed. It says that each of the breaches
charged was so substantial as to disentitle the company to further
performance by the United States. But, in any event, it says that
all of them, taken together, certainly require this conclusion.
Page 311 U. S. 342
The company, on the other hand, contends that, as to some of the
matters charged, the allegations of the bill do not show any
breach, and that, as to others, if a breach is sufficiently
alleged, it was not such as, in the light of the history of the
grants and the performance received by the United States, would
disentitle the company to all further performance.
If the Government's position is sound, the decree below should
be reversed and the cause remanded with instructions to enter a
judgment against the company and in favor of the United States.
The justices who heard this case are equally divided in opinion
upon these issues. No opinion is expressed upon them, and they are
reserved, in view of the fact that our rulings on other issues may
be dispositive of the entire controversy.
-----
The Government puts forward certain further claims which, if
sustained, would preclude any recovery by the company.
7.
The claim that no compensation should have been awarded
because unsurveyed public lands were available for selection, and
the company failed to show that it would, or could, have selected
and obtained all of the withdrawn lands.
The District Court found that at March 1, 1898, just prior to
the first forest withdrawal, the company had unsatisfied losses of
5,946,664 acres under the 1864 grant and that the total lands
available for selection at the date were 1,137,508 acres, leaving a
deficiency in the grant of 4,809,156 acres, and the deficiency in
the 1870 grant, excluding available land in second indemnity limits
at March 1, 1898, was 593,656 acres, and there has been, ever
since, a deficiency in respect of that grant.
Page 311 U. S. 343
In these findings, the court computed as lands available for
selection only non-mineral surveyed vacant land. The company
asserts that, in this, the court was right. The Government insists
that vacant unsurveyed lands were "available" as indemnity to the
company notwithstanding the concession that, as lands selected must
be identified, the company cannot select them until they have been
so identified by survey. [
Footnote 18] It says the company failed to show that
there were not ample unsurveyed lands within the indemnity limits
to set off losses in the place limits at the time of the
withdrawals, and adds that, inasmuch as homesteaders might, in the
interim, obtain prior rights by actual settlement of these
unsurveyed lands, [
Footnote
19] it is a matter of pure speculation whether the company
would ultimately have obtained adequate indemnity even if
unsurveyed lands had not been withdrawn for forest reserves. It
further claims that, if the court below had treated unsurveyed
lands as available for indemnity selection, there would have been
no deficiency at the dates of withdrawal.
These contentions cannot be sustained.
Decision turns on the inquiry as to what lands were available to
the company for selection at the time of the respective
governmental withdrawals.
It is, of course, evident that the company could not select
mineral lands as indemnity. It follows that all lands classified as
mineral were excluded from selection.
By Sec. 3 of the Act of 1864, it is provided that, whenever any
of the place lands granted to the company
Page 311 U. S. 344
shall have been, prior to the time of definite location of the
road,
"granted, sold, reserved, occupied by homestead settlers, or
preempted, or otherwise disposed of, other lands shall be selected
by said company in lieu thereof, under the direction of the
Secretary of the Interior, in alternate sections, and designated by
odd numbers. . . ."
The fact that the lands in the indemnity limits are, before
survey, subject to be taken by preemptors and settlers, and thus
ultimate satisfaction of the railroad company may be defeated, does
not justify the Government itself in reserving lands contained
within those limits, and thus rendering impossible the company's
obtaining them. This was definitely held in the
Forest
Reserve case. [
Footnote
20]
Much was said in argument as to the meaning of the phrase "lands
available as indemnity" as used in that case. It seems clear that
unsurveyed lands are not available to the company under the Act of
1864. It will be observed that the company must select indemnity
lands under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior. That
officer has invariably ruled that no selection can be made or
approved until the lands in question are surveyed. [
Footnote 21]
This ruling was necessitated by the very terms of the Act of
1864, which requires selection of alternate sections designated by
odd numbers. Obviously, until surveyed, no odd-numbered sections
could exist. Unsurveyed lands are not public lands. [
Footnote 22]
Page 311 U. S. 345
The decision in the
Forest Reserve case,
supra, did not suggest any different view. The allegation
of deficiency in indemnity lands in that case, found in the
stipulation of the parties, was that the lands were those
odd-numbered sections which the defendant was entitled to select
under the regulations of the Land Department. This could only mean,
and the decision could only have gone upon the view that it meant,
that the surveyed lands within the indemnity limits were deficient
to meet the selection rights of the railroad company. The case is
not an authority, as the Government contends, for the proposition
that unsurveyed vacant lands within the indemnity limits are to be
considered as available to the company in ascertaining whether the
Government has reserved to itself lands as to which the company has
selection rights. Under the doctrine of the
Forest Reserve
case, the challenged withdrawals for forest and other governmental
purposes left the indemnity lands available to the company
deficient to satisfy its rights of selection.
The holding was that the withdrawals were void, and the
company's rights remained as if the withdrawals had never been
made. If and when any of the withdrawn lands were surveyed, the
company was entitled to select them, as it did in the
Forest
Reserve case.
It would appear, however, that the Government's contention is
moot as respects all but 23,364 acres of lands in Idaho second
indemnity limits for which the company was awarded compensation by
the District Court's decree. If unsurveyed vacant lands remaining
within the indemnity limits after a government withdrawal are to be
treated as available to the company for selection, then the grant
was not deficient as respects second indemnity limits in Idaho, and
the company should not have been awarded compensation for the
acreage mentioned.
Page 311 U. S. 346
As respects withdrawals from first indemnity limits of the 1864
grant, and withdrawals from the limits of the 1870 grant, it
appears to be undisputed that, other contentions of the Government,
such as that with respect to the noncompletion of the entire road,
being laid to one side, the withdrawals left the grants deficient
even though unsurveyed lands remaining within the limits after the
withdrawals be counted as available to the company. And the same
conclusion would seem to be required respecting lands within the
second indemnity limits in Montana with the exception of 4004.38
acres withdrawn on July 14, 1899.
Thus, the issue becomes, to a large extent, moot, but, as
respects approximately 30,000 acres above referred to, we think
what has been said on the subject of the availability of unsurveyed
lands sustains the decree of the District Court.
The Government, however, argues that, even though the
withdrawals for governmental purposes created such a deficiency of
lands available for selection that, to satisfy the grant, the
company would have been compelled to select lands within the
withdrawn reserves, nevertheless, in order to obtain indemnity for
the deficiency so created, the company is bound to prove that it
would have selected lands within the reserves, and what lands it
would have selected, before it can claim compensation from the
Government for the deprivation of its right to select. A majority
of the justices who heard the case think the position is
untenable.
Under the ruling in the
Forest Reserve case, it was the
obligation of the Government to refrain from any action which would
deprive the company of its right of selection in accordance with
the terms of the grant. When the United States withdrew the lands
for forest and other reserves, it signified its purpose to retain
them for its own use, and not to allow the company or anyone
Page 311 U. S. 347
else to obtain them, any law or contract to the contrary
notwithstanding. We think the company's right of selection, to the
extent of the deficiency in the grant, remained available as to the
withdrawn lands, provided the lands selected were such as are
defined in the grant. The Government's contention that no one can
say how soon the lands would have been surveyed and selected if
they had not been withdrawn and reserved, or, if they had remained
unsurveyed and not withdrawn, that areas would have been taken up
by settlers and preemptors, does not avail to abrogate or qualify
the company's right to exercise its privilege of selection
notwithstanding the withdrawals. Moreover, the argument ignores the
repeal of the preemption laws by the Act of March 3, 1891 [
Footnote 23]
8.
The claim that the company should be charged with
13,300,000 acres wrongfully received because lying within Indian
reservations.
Paragraph XXIX of the bill alleges that, by treaties of
September 17, 1851, and October 17, 1855, [
Footnote 24] the United States "reserved"
certain lands for Indian tribes. The paragraph alleges that the
place and indemnity belts established by the Act of 1864 crossed
certain of the lands reserved by the treaties, and that, by mistake
and without lawful authority, the company received from the United
States lands comprised in the reservations amounting to about
12,000,000 acres in place and first indemnity limits and 1,300,000
acres in second indemnity limits; that for all of them it had
obtained patents to which it was not entitled, as it should have
known.
In accordance with the master's recommendation, the court below
sustained the motion to dismiss paragraph XXIX on the ground that
the lands in question were
Page 311 U. S. 348
granted to the company by the Act of 1864 and the Resolution of
1870. We think the court was right.
By an Act of June 30, 1834, [
Footnote 25] all lands lying west of the Mississippi
River, not within the States of Missouri and Louisiana or the
Territory of Arkansas, were designated as Indian Country. The fee
of all this territory was in the United States, subject to the
Indian right of occupancy. The treaties of 1851 and 1855 did not
alter the status of the lands described in them. The purpose of
those treaties was to establish peace and amity between warring
Indian tribes
inter sese and between the tribes and the
United States. To this end, the country or territory of each tribe
was described and the tribes agreed to respect the boundaries named
in the treaties. No alteration in the status of the lands had
occurred up to the date of definite location of the Northern
Pacific's line. About seven hundred miles of the railroad traversed
the area embraced in the treaties.
By § 2 of the Act of 1864, it was provided that
"The United States shall extinguish, as rapidly as may be
consistent with public policy and the welfare of the said Indians,
the Indian titles to all lands falling under the operation of this
act, and acquired in the donation to the [road] named in this
bill."
The Government now contends that this section is inapplicable to
any but right-of-way lands lying within the areas described by the
treaties. The contention was not made or considered below, and we
think, if it were open here, the plain language of the section
renders it untenable.
Section 3 limits the land grant to lands as to which the United
States
"have full title, not reserved, sold, granted, or otherwise
appropriated, and free from preemption, or other claims or rights
at the time the line of said road is definitely fixed. . . ."
The Government contends that this section excludes lands
embraced
Page 311 U. S. 349
within the treaty limits for the reason that the treaties
"reserve" all the lands described in them for the signatory Indian
tribes. We think the contention is unsound.
As we have noted, the treaties did not create technical
reservations, as have many other treaties and acts of Congress.
They did not set aside a defined territory for the exclusive use of
a tribe, nor contain the usual provisions for an Indian Agent for
schools, assistance in farming operations, etc. The county
described in the Treaty of 1851 amounts to 163,000,000 acres, and
that described in the Treaty of 1855 to 37,000,000 acres. In the
case of one of the tribes, if the treaty were considered to create
a technical reservation, it would have allotted to each man, woman,
and child in the tribe more than eighteen square miles.
The Department of the Interior, as is evidenced by the patents
issued, has consistently treated the lands in question as included
in the grant. This court has repeatedly passed upon the question;
has held the lands were Indian country, subject only to the
Indians' right of occupancy, were within the grant made by the Act
of 1864, and that, by § 2 of the Act, the United States
assumed the obligation of extinguishing the Indian title in favor
of the company. [
Footnote
26]
-----
We come now to the contentions of the Government which go to the
quantum of the award.
9.
The claim that the company should be charged with
approximately 1,400,000 acres received as the result of adoption of
an unnecessarily circuitous route.
Section 1 of the Act of 1864 empowered the company to locate and
construct a continuous railroad line from
Page 311 U. S. 350
a point on Lake Superior
"westerly by the most eligible railroad route, as shall be
determined by said company, . . . to some point on Puget's Sound,
with a branch, via the valley of the Columbia River, to a point at
or near Portland. . . ."
The Resolution of 1870 authorized the company to construct its
main line to a point on Puget Sound via the valley of the Columbia
River, with the right to locate its branch from a point on the main
line, across the Cascade Mountains, to Puget Sound.
Paragraph XXVI alleged that the company was required to
construct its railroad to the western terminus upon the most direct
and practicable line without unnecessary deviations, but that,
instead of doing so, the company built the road from Lind,
Washington, to Ellensburg, Washington, by an unnecessarily
circuitous route southwestward to Pasco on the Columbia River and
thence northwestward via the valley of the Yakima, whereas it could
have constructed the line nearly due westward from Lind to
Ellensburg and have saved about eighty-two miles; that, by reason
of this unnecessary circuity, approximately 1,400,000 acres were
added to the lands within the limits described in the grant over
and above the amount which would have been included had the more
direct route been followed. The allegations of the paragraph are
that, after filing general route maps, the company ultimately filed
definite maps of location, and thereupon the Department of the
Interior surveyed and patented to it lands lying along the line;
that this was an error, as the Department should have refused to
patent place lands or allow selection of indemnity lands
coterminous with the circuitous route. The paragraph contains no
averment that the route was selected by the company
fraudulently
Page 311 U. S. 351
in order to obtain additional lands, or that it was not in good
faith thought to be the most eligible route. The paragraph refers
to the fact that, subsequently, the Chicago, Milwaukee, and St.
Paul Railway located its line from Lind to Ellensburg by the more
direct route. The master recommended that the motion to dismiss the
paragraph be sustained, and the court so ordered. We think there
was no error in this disposition of the matter.
The Joint Resolution of 1870 called for the main line to run via
the valley of the Columbia River to Puget Sound, with a branch line
from a convenient point on the main line across the Cascade
Mountains to Puget Sound. In pursuance of this requirement, the
company filed a map of definite location and constructed its route
between Spokane and Wallula on the Columbia River. At that point,
it was able to make a connection with the Oregon Railway &
Navigation Company. In 1880, it therefore entered into a contract
for running rights over the line of that railroad, and has used its
line for traffic into Portland. It was natural, in this situation,
to lay out the authorized branch line over the Cascade Mountains
from the main line at Pasco. Maps of the line from Pasco to Tacoma
were approved by the Secretary of the Interior between June, 1883,
and December, 1884. Inspection reports in 1879 and 1880, made to
the Secretary of the Interior, show that the Department was
familiar with the line the company was building.
On March 3, 1893, Congress ratified an agreement for the payment
to the Yakima Indians for right of way through their reservation
provided the company should, within sixty days, pay the necessary
money therefor into the Treasury of the United States. [
Footnote 27] This action shows that
Congress was fully informed of the adopted route and cooperated in
making its construction feasible.
Page 311 U. S. 352
The master and the court below judicially noticed that the route
via the Yakima valley was a much more advantageous one in respect
of the country traversed and the probable available traffic, than
the more direct route between Lind and Ellensburg. The total
population along the latter is said to be less than a thousand
persons, and the traffic originating thereon practically nil. On
the other hand, the Yakima valley is one of the most fertile and
productive agricultural sections in the Northwest.
The circuity is not such as to be an obvious evasion of the
terms of the grant, and, in the absence of any charge of fraud, it
must be taken that the directors of the company considered the line
laid out the most eligible one. We think the allegations of the
paragraph do not support the contention that the company illegally
acquired place and indemnity lands contiguous to this portion of
its line.
10.
The claim that the company should have been charged with
1,198,000 acres received as indemnity in the second indemnity belt
in Montana, and should not have been awarded compensation for
170,000 acres in the same belt.
Under the Act of 1864, losses of land in the place limits could
be supplied only in the first and the mineral indemnity limits. The
Resolution of 1870 added a second indemnity belt in which
selections could be made only for losses in the same state or
territory occurring through reservation, preemption, or other
disposition subsequent to the passage of the Act of 1864.
As has been stated under
311 U. S.
supra, the Land Office properly treated the lands within
the boundaries described by the treaty of 1851 [
Footnote 28] as available under the grant.
By the Crow Treaty of 1868, [
Footnote 29] a distinct and
Page 311 U. S. 353
exclusive reservation for that tribe was carved out of the
larger territory designated in the earlier days as the Crow
country. The Land Office treated the lands thus specifically
reserved as lost to the grant and permitted indemnity selections
from the second indemnity belt in Montana, in which State the loss
occurred.
It appears that, by virtue of withdrawals chiefly for forest
reserves in Montana, the company has been deprived of the right to
select about 170,000 acres of lieu lands, about 64,000 acres of
which losses were due to the creation of the Crow Reservation. In
its computation of the lands for which the company was entitled to
indemnity and compensation in this suit, the court below included
this entire acreage.
The Government contends that the court should have charged the
company with the indemnity lands received in second indemnity
limits in Montana due to alleged losses from the creation of the
Crow Reservation and that it should not have awarded any further
compensation for the loss of selection rights in that belt
resulting from the creation of the Crow Reservation, or otherwise,
as the company had already received more than was proper. We think
the position cannot be maintained.
As shown under
311 U. S.
supra, no lands were removed from the operation of the
grant by the Treaties of 1851 and 1855. On the other hand, the
creation of the Crow Reservation -- a typical Indian reservation --
in 1868, removed the lands in that reservation from the grant
within the intent and meaning of the Act of 1864, as supplemented
by the Joint Resolution of 1870, and conferred the right to
indemnity selections from the second indemnity belt within the same
state.
11.
The credit to the company for lands within the Northern
Cheyenne Indian Reservation.
The court below, in its award, treated the company as entitled
to select indemnity lands in first and second
Page 311 U. S. 354
indemnity limits where these limits lay within the Northern
Cheyenne Indian Reservation in Montana. The area in question was
part of the Crow country recognized by the Treaty of September 17,
1851. [
Footnote 30] When, in
1868, the Crow Reservation was created, the Crow Nation ceded all
its right and title in other lands embraced within the treaty area
to the United States. By an Executive Order of March 19, 1900, the
lands in question became part of the Northern Cheyenne Reservation.
This action was confirmed by Congress June 3, 1926, [
Footnote 31] which declared that the lands
were the property of the Northern Cheyennes, authorized allotments,
etc.
The Government contends that these lands were not, on June 5,
1924-the pivotal date mentioned in the Act of June 25, 1929 --
"embraced within the exterior boundaries of any national forest or
other Government reservation."
We think that, under the terms of the Act, these lands had been
withdrawn as a "Government reservation" and for "governmental
purposes," and the Act which authorized this suit contemplated that
compensation should be awarded for lands so withdrawn, which, but
for the withdrawal, would have been available to the company as
indemnity.
12.
The award for land within the reservations on which
homesteaders filed prior to June 5, 1924, and for which they
received patents after June 5, 1924.
After the withdrawals had been made, homesteaders filed on
certain of the lands within the forest reserves. These filings were
prior to June 5, 1924. Subsequent to that date, patents were issued
under the forest homestead laws. The court below, we think
properly, treated these
Page 311 U. S. 355
lands as having been available for indemnity selection by the
company at the date of withdrawal and awarded the company
compensation for the abrogation of its right to select them. The
Government asserts that this was error, in the view that the Act of
1929 awarded compensation only for those lands which would be, or
were, available for selection on June 5, 1924. The Act, however,
does not so provide. It awards indemnity for lands which, on June
5, 1924, were embraced in any reservation, and
"which, in the event of a deficiency in the said land grants to
the Northern Pacific Railroad Company upon the dates of the
withdrawals of the said indemnity lands for governmental purposes,
would be, or were,"
available for selection.
13.
The claim that, as to more than a million acres, the
award rests upon a fraudulent mineral classification which will not
support indemnity selection rights.
Section 3 of the Act of 1864, granting odd-numbered sections,
excluded mineral lands from the grant. The section provides that
iron or coal lands are not to be classed as mineral. In lieu of
mineral lands, the company is given the right to select a like
quantity of
"unoccupied and unappropriated agricultural lands, in odd
numbered sections, nearest to the line of said road and within
fifty miles thereof. . . . "
One of the contentions strongly pressed by the Department of
Agriculture before the Joint Committee acting under the Resolution
of June 5, 1924, was that, due to the company's fraud, great
quantities of place lands had been improperly classified as
mineral, with the result that the company had been allowed to
select, and had received patents for, over a million acres of land
in lieu of those so classified. The company resisted this
contention.
Page 311 U. S. 356
By the Act of June 25, 1929, this matter was remitted to the
courts for adjudication. Section 5 directs that, in the judicial
proceedings contemplated, there shall be presented, and the court
shall consider, make findings relating to, and determine, to what
extent the terms, conditions and covenants of the granting acts
have been performed by the United States and the company, including
the question what lands, if any, have been wrongfully or
erroneously patented or certified as the result of fraud. Section 6
requires that, in fixing the amount of compensation to be received
by the company on account of the retention by the United States of
indemnity lands for national forests or Government reserves, the
court shall determine what quantities in lands or values the
company and its predecessors have received as a result of fraud,
and that such excess lands and values, if any, shall be charged
against the company in the judgment of the court.
Paragraph XXVIII of the complaint refers to the Act of February
26, 1895, [
Footnote 32]
providing for the examination and classification, as mineral or
non-mineral, of place and indemnity lands within four land
districts in Idaho and Montana; recites the appointment and
functioning of the Commissions authorized by the Act; alleges that
the Commissioners undertook to classify approximately 11,500,000
acres of land, and pretended to classify the same; filed their
reports which, with minor exceptions, were approved by the
Secretary of the Interior; asserts that 3,782,377 acres, more or
less, were classified as mineral, and that the company, and its
predecessor in interest, made mineral lieu selections totaling
1,330,762 acres, more or less, and received patents therefor;
alleges that the company is claiming additional indemnity lands of
approximately 2,451,615 acres
Page 311 U. S. 357
in lieu of lands classified as mineral, and charges that the
company, and its predecessor, were guilty of fraudulent and
collusive practices whereby the Commissioners were persuaded to
classify, as mineral, lands of little value, so that the railroad
could select more valuable lands in lieu thereof, and that the
lands so selected and patented to the company were of a value in
excess of the entire 3,782,377 acres, more or less, of lands
fraudulently classified as mineral.
The company moved to dismiss the paragraph, and in its answer
denied the allegations. The master recommended that the motion be
sustained, and the court so ordered. In this we think there was
error.
The master, after considering the facts set out and matters of
which he took judicial notice, stated that he would have no
difficulty in overruling the motion to dismiss had it not been for
the position taken by the Government in argument. The master states
that a goodly portion of the nearly 4,000,000 acres classified as
mineral consisted of lands within the forest reserves, which by the
Act of June 25, 1929, the Government signified its intention to
retain, that still other lands so classified had been patented to
claimants as mineral claims, and that the Government had sold much
valuable timber from still other of such lands. The master says
that, in the light of these facts, he inquired of counsel whether
the Government desired a reclassification by reason of the alleged
fraud, and that the reply was in the negative. He reports that
counsel contended the Government's pleading was meant to meet and
defeat the company's claim, on the theory that, as to the lands
classified as mineral and the claims to lieu lands therefor, the
company must be treated as a plaintiff, and, as Paragraph XXVIII
disclosed that the company did not have clean hands, it could not
maintain its claim. The master overruled this contention, holding
that the company
Page 311 U. S. 358
was, in this case, a defendant, and that the doctrine of clean
hands did not apply to a defendant in equity.
Whatever gloss Government counsel may have put upon the
paragraph, we think the master and the court below were bound to
give full effect to the pleading, and that the master was right in
his original view that the facts set up, and the issues made by the
answer, required a trial and, if the Government succeeds in
maintaining the truth of its allegations, the company should be
charged with lands or values obtained as mineral indemnity through
the fraud of its agents and their collusion with the
Commissioners.
Although it is alleged, and the master found, that it was
impossible in the time allowed by Congress for the Commissioners to
make such a survey and classification as the legislation
contemplated, we think the reports and the Secretary's approval and
acceptance thereof create a
prima facie showing in favor
of the classification and the company's selection of indemnity
lands.
The United States pleaded the fraud which it says renders the
classification, and the actions consequent upon it, a nullity. We
think it necessarily has the burden of proof to sustain its
pleading. It is not barred by laches or estoppel from asserting and
proving the alleged fraud, and from having the company charged with
the lands or values received as a result of it.
The case must go back for a trial of the issues made by
paragraph XXVIII of the complaint and the answer thereto. It may be
that, on the trial, the Government's evidence will prove fraud on
the part of the company of such a character and extent as would
disentitle the latter to any award even though the fraud does not
extend to an acreage equal in extent to that of the selection
rights taken away by the Act of 1929.
14.
The meaning of the phrase "agricultural lands" in the
provision for selection in lieu of excepted mineral lands.
In computing the deficiency of lands available for indemnity
selection, the District Court included the nearly
Page 311 U. S. 359
two million acres of mineral losses as to which indemnity
selection had not been made at the time of the withdrawals and
treated the withdrawn lands as available for selection in respect
of mineral losses. The Government insists that this was error
because much of the withdrawn land is not agricultural, and is not
therefore available as indemnity for mineral losses. The company,
on the other hand, asserts that, in the granting Act, the word
"agricultural" is not used in its ordinary sense of tillable or
cultivable, but as meaning merely lands not mineral. It bases this
contention largely upon the alleged administrative construction and
practice of the Department of the Interior, which, so it claims,
has treated the word "agricultural" as a term of classification,
and not one of strict definition. [
Footnote 33] This was the view taken by the master and
the District Court.
Section 3 of the Act of 1864, which contains the grant to the
railroad, employs three descriptions of public lands. The place
land granted is denominated "public land, not mineral;" the lieu
lands which may be selected to make up losses in the place lands
are referred to as "other lands;" the mineral lieu lands are
designated as "unoccupied and unappropriated agricultural
lands."
The Act seems to have served as a model for other railroad
grants made shortly thereafter. Section 3 of an Act of July 27,
1866, [
Footnote 34] which
incorporated and granted lands to the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad
Company, is
Page 311 U. S. 360
in the same words except that the mineral indemnity is limited
to a distance of twenty miles from the line. Section 9 of an Act of
March 3, 1871, [
Footnote 35]
incorporating and granting lands to the Texas Pacific Railroad
Company, employs the same phraseology.
The granting clause of the Act of 1964 differed from those
theretofore commonly used. In earlier acts, indemnity selections
were required to be of lands nearest the line. By the Act of 1864,
lands in lieu of place lands previously sold, or otherwise disposed
of, might be selected from land anywhere within the indemnity belt.
In the mineral indemnity provision, however, Congress reverted to
the earlier practice of requiring that agricultural lands nearest
to the line, but within an unusually wide belt of fifty miles on
either side, should be selected. It seems obvious that this
provision was inserted in the knowledge that the mountainous
Western country would afford less opportunity to obtain good lands
by indemnity selection than the more level farming country to the
East.
It is also to be noted that the bill as it passed the House
omitted a provision found in bills earlier introduced in aid of
railroads in the far West, requiring that the lieu lands for
mineral losses should not only be those nearest the line, but
"nearest the line of the road through said mineral lands. . . ."
[
Footnote 36] In the Senate,
the grant of mineral indemnity was stricken out and mineral lands
were defined to exclude coal and iron. [
Footnote 37] The bill passed the Senate in this form,
and was sent to a Conference Committee. [
Footnote 38] The measure came from the Conference
Committee in the form in which it finally passed. The
Page 311 U. S. 361
Act thus permitted a selection of agricultural lieu lands not
only in the territory adjacent to the mineral place lands, but
within fifty miles on either side of the right of way anywhere
along the entire route of the road. It has consistently been so
construed, and the company has been allowed to select, as mineral
indemnity, lands not more than fifty miles from its right of way
opposite any part of the road and in any state traversed by the
line. [
Footnote 39]
The Government contends that "agricultural" means "presently
tillable" or "presently fit for the plough." We agree, however,
with the master and the court below that the words "mineral" and
"agricultural," as used in the Act, are not to be read strictly as
defined by the dictionary. Mineral lands, as the phrase has been
applied in the administration of public lands, embrace not only
those which the lexicon defines as mineral, but, in addition, such
as are valuable for deposits of marble, slate, petroleum,
asphaltum, and even guano. Likewise, in the administration of
preemption and homestead legislation, the terms "agricultural" and
"cultivation" have been given a liberal construction. It appears
from the record, and from the evidence before the Joint
Congressional Committee, that a preemptor or a homesteader, under
the acts requiring settlement and cultivation as a prerequisite to
a patent, have been allowed to take up forests, grazing land, and,
in fact all types of land which, in good faith, were sought for a
home, provided the lands could, be the settler's effort, be made
habitable
Page 311 U. S. 362
and used as a farm home. This has been true in spite of the fact
that the applicable acts of Congress have required cultivation as a
prerequisite to acquisition by the preemptor or homesteader.
[
Footnote 40]
Under the administrative practice, although lands containing
timber could be taken for homes in the public land states, a
certain portion of the lands had to be cleared preliminary to
cultivation. But the preemptor or homesteader has not been
permitted to take up lands valuable only for timber or for stone or
for some other use, which could not be rendered cultivable or
usable in a broad sense for farming, by clearing or other work done
thereon. Pursuant to legislation enacted years after the grants to
the company, lands unfit for a farm home could be acquired.
[
Footnote 41]
It seems to us that, inasmuch as the railroad company could not
take other mineral lands in lieu of mineral place lands lost to the
grant and, if it were confined to non-mineral lands, contiguous to
the lost mineral lands, it would probably receive lands then
considered of little or no value, Congress, by the use of the term
"agricultural," and by granting the right to select the lieu lands
anywhere along the line, intended to give the company the privilege
of taking more valuable lands than those wild forest lands
contiguous to the mineral place lands in the Western mountain
regions.
The truth seems to be that, in extending this privilege to
select more valuable lands, Congress did not have in mind a
distinction between "non-mineral" and "agricultural"
Page 311 U. S. 363
lands, in the sense that the company must select the more
valuable agricultural lands and refrain from taking less valuable
lands non-mineral but not susceptible of cultivation. As the master
well says, at the time of the grant, agricultural lands in states
eastward of the Rocky Mountains were far more valuable than the
rough mountain lands farther to the west. It is reasonable to
suppose that, at that time, neither Congress nor the company
contemplated the selection of unusable mountain lands, rather than
lands ultimately available for agriculture. Nevertheless, we are
bound to attribute some meaning to the language Congress employed.
It is obvious that, by the use of the word "agricultural," the
company was precluded from selecting other mineral lands in lieu of
mineral lands lost in the place limits. With mineral lands thus
excluded, we think the phrase "agricultural" is to be interpreted
in the light of existing legislation and conditions.
We are of the view that the word "agricultural" was not
therefore used as synonymous with "non-mineral," but as synonymous
with "land subject to be taken by preemptors or homesteaders under
the public land laws." It is conceded that much of the land in the
forest reserves which the company claims the right to select as
mineral indemnity is not such as could have been acquired by
individuals under the land laws in force at the time of the
grant.
We have already noted that, until the public lands were
surveyed, the company could not make selections, and that, in the
meantime, unsurveyed lands might be taken, under the preemption and
homestead laws, to the company's loss or detriment. No doubt if the
railroad had been more promptly built, and if the company had been
more active in paying for and procuring surveys, good lands in
various states within the mineral indemnity belt would have been
available for selection.
Page 311 U. S. 364
These, however, were taken up and removed from the company's
right of selection, with the result that the existing deficiency in
the grant must be satisfied, if at all, by selections of lands now
in the forest reserves. But, for whatever reason, the company has
lost the right to select the better lands mentioned, and we cannot
rewrite the statute to confer upon it the privilege of taking lands
of a different character than those specified.
We conclude that while the company had, at the time of
withdrawal, the right of selection of any lands which, under the
existing practice of the Land Office, a settler could have taken
under the preemption or homestead laws, it may not take lands
valuable solely for timber or for other uses which would not
justify preemption or homestead settlement under the land laws as
contemporaneously understood and administered. The company's right
of selection in the forest reserves is limited to such land as
would, under the practice of the Land Office, have been available
to individuals under the public land laws either for clearing and
subsequent cultivation, or for grazing, or for any other purpose
commonly classified by the Land Office as coming within the
preemption and homestead laws.
Since the court below has accorded the company a much broader
right of selection, its decree must be reversed and the cause must
be remanded for ascertainment of the company's selection rights as
of the dates of the withdrawals, in accordance with the views
herein expressed.
15.
The claim that the United States is liable to account to
the Railway Company only for the ascertained deficiency at the time
of withdrawal.
In its brief upon reargument, the Government takes the position
that, even if the withdrawals left the grant deficient in lands
lying in the second indemnity limits, the United States is liable
to account to the Railway
Page 311 U. S. 365
Company only for the amount of such deficiency. The District
Court held that, if a given withdrawal had the effect of leaving
within the indemnity limits an insufficient acreage to satisfy the
selection rights of the company, the withdrawal was a breach of the
Government's obligation because thereby the Government disenabled
itself to carry out that obligation. The consequence which the
District Court attached to such action on the part of the
Government was that the lands withdrawn were, notwithstanding the
withdrawal, still open to selection by the company if and when
surveyed. The court below thought that, as the company was
entitled, under the terms of the grant, to exercise its selection
rights with respect to the withdrawn lands in these circumstances,
the Act of 1929 contemplated that it should be compensated for the
deprivation of that right.
We think that the District Court was right, and that the
Government's position that it is liable to account only for any
deficiency in the vacant lands at the time of withdrawal is not in
accord with the granting act of 1864. The
Forest Reserve
case,
supra, supports the decision below. It is clearly
there held that if, by the Government's own act in withdrawing
lands from the indemnity limits, it leaves insufficient vacant land
available for selection, the company thereby becomes entitled to
select lands within the indemnity limits. That is exactly what was
done by the company which brought about the litigation in the
Forest Reserve case. The decision is clear to the effect
that, assuming the grant was deficient (which was the matter the
court could not determine on the record then presented), the
company was entitled to select lands within the reserve.
16.
The claim that subsequent restorations of withdrawn
lands defeat the company's right of selection of lands within the
Governmental withdrawals.
What has just been said requires denial of the Government's
contention that, where withdrawn lands were
Page 311 U. S. 366
subsequently restored to the public domain in an amount
sufficient to make up the deficiency created by the original
withdrawal, the company's claim to choose lands within the
withdrawal areas was thereby defeated.
Under the Act of 1929, the company's right to compensation
depends upon the availability of lands on the dates of withdrawals
for governmental purposes. This provision of the Act of 1929 is, we
think, in strict accordance with the purpose and intent of the
granting act and resolution. If, by the withdrawals, the Government
disenabled itself to comply with its obligations to the company,
the withdrawals were unauthorized, and the company's right attached
to the withdrawn lands equally with the vacant lands remaining in
the indemnity limits.
17.
The illegal withdrawals of place and indemnity
lands.
As has been noted under
311 U. S.
supra, the action of the Department of the Interior in
prematurely withdrawing lands in the place and indemnity limits
from settlement and preemption is claimed to have the effect of
denying the company any further rights under the grants.
The further argument is made that, in any event, the company is
liable to the Government for damages consequent upon its receiving
lands which, if it had not been for the improvident withdrawals,
would have gone to settlers and preemptors. The claim is that the
court below should have permitted the Government to prove any
damages it might be able to show as a result of this incorrect
administration of the grant. A majority of the Court is of the
opinion that a good ground for a credit in favor of the United
States against the company is set up by paragraph XXXII of the
bill, and that
Page 311 U. S. 367
this paragraph is not, in this aspect, subject to the motion to
strike.
The paragraph sets up the disadvantages to the Government of the
action of the Secretary of the Interior in withdrawing lands
prematurely; that, as a consequence, the company and its
predecessor secured benefits, lands, and values to which they were
not entitled, to the injury of the United States.
The majority of the Court thinks that section six of the Act of
1929 requires a charge against the company for sums received in
lands or values in excess of that to which it was rightfully
entitled through mistake of law or fact, or through misapprehension
as to the proper construction of said grants, or as a result of
fraud, or otherwise.
The proof of these alleged advantages gained or losses suffered
may be difficult. This is for development at the hearing. The
proof, however, must be of financial detriment to the United States
or of financial benefit to the company.
18.
The company's failure to open lands granted by the
Resolution of 1870 to settlement and preemption.
The company's alleged breach in this aspect as a defense to the
company's entire claim is mentioned in
311 U.
S. supra.
The bill alleges, in paragraph XIII, the company's failure to
open the granted lands to settlement and preemption was a breach of
its contract and "in defeat of the policy of the United States with
respect to the disposition of its public domain. . . ." In
paragraph XLII, the court is asked to determine the extent to which
the company has failed to comply with the obligation imposed by the
Joint Resolution pertaining to the disposition of the lands by
settlement and preemption and to decree that the company now
perform its covenant
Page 311 U. S. 368
to the extent this is possible and, where it is found impossible
for the company to perform, the plaintiff have such relief as the
court may deem proper, and further that the court decree that any
and all moneys received by the company from or by reason of the
granted lands after the breach of its covenant be declared to have
been received by the company in trust for the use and benefit of
the United States, and that the plaintiff be awarded judgment for
the amount of such moneys. The prayer is therefore in the
alternative for damages or for an accounting, as upon a
constructive trust.
We hold, contrary to the Government's assertion, that the
proviso of the Resolution of 1870, requiring the lands be opened by
the company to settlement and preemption, applies only to the
additional lands granted by that Resolution, and not to lands
acquired under the grant of 1864. [
Footnote 42] We hold further that the company was not a
trustee of the lands for the United States, either in its own right
or in behalf of possible settlers. [
Footnote 43] It results that the Government cannot call
upon the company to account as a trustee for the proceeds of sale
of the lands.
A majority of the justices who heard this case are of opinion
that the proviso of the Resolution of 1870 required the company to
open the lands granted by the Resolution to preemption and
settlement at the expiration of five years from the completion of
the entire road in 1887, whether the lands were then subject to
mortgage or not; that its failure so to do was a breach of its
contract with the United States, and that the Government
Page 311 U. S. 369
is entitled, if it can, to prove any damage to it, or advantage
to the company, which resulted from this breach of contract. In
this view, the court below should not have dismissed paragraph XIII
of the bill, and that paragraph should be reinstated for the
purpose of permitting the Government to prove damages, and proof
should be submitted thereunder to that end.
19.
The claim that the decree below in directing patents to
issue for 428,986.68 acres of land outside the reserves was
erroneous to the extent of 44,838.60 acres of indemnity
lands.
In its brief upon reargument, the Government advances the claim
that the decree of the District Court quieting the company's title
to 428,986.68 acres of land lying outside the reserves, and
directing that patents issue upon payment of any balance of fees
due by the company, was erroneous as to 44,838.60 acres. It is
asserted that 383,808.08 of the acres in question lie within the
place limits of the grant, but 45,178.60 acres lie within indemnity
limits. Of these, the Government concedes that, by a stipulation
filed, 340 acres are to be patented to the company. As to the
remaining acreage, the contention is that the company is not
entitled to patents, although selections were filed with the
Department of the Interior prior to June 5, 1924.
It is said that, on grounds heretofore stated, the company's
breaches disentitle it to further performance on the part of the
Government. And, it is urged that, as to over 30,000 acres of the
lands in question, the company assigned losses of mineral lands as
base for indemnity selection and the alleged fraud in mineral
classification vitiates the selection of this acreage as indemnity.
The Government also asserts that some 13,000 acres of lands
selected for patent prior to the bar date are Indian lands within
the Crow reservation. The first contention
Page 311 U. S. 370
cannot prevail in view of the even division of opinion already
stated; the second cannot, since the bill prays no affirmative
relief in respect of the fraudulent classification it alleges; the
third cannot in the light of our decision stated under
311 U.
S. supra.
Secondly, the Government urges, since the District Court has
held that, in order to obtain compensation for the deprivation of
rights to select lands lying within the withdrawn Government
reserves, the company must assign base for the lands selected as to
which compensation is claimed, the same principle must apply to
selection rights exercised prior to the Resolution of June 5, 1924.
It adds that the company has failed to show that, in selecting
lands within the indemnity limits prior to the date of that
resolution, it assigned base for such selections, to which the
company replies that the Government is in error in asserting that
it did not assign such base.
The argument with respect to the selected indemnity lands, which
the District Court decreed should be patented to the company, first
emerged in this court on reargument. In its original brief, the
Government said:
"The decree quiets title to the lands from the indemnity belts
retained by the United States in the forest reserves and other
reserves, and directs the issuance of patents to the company for
428,986.68 acres, mostly in place limits of the grants. In these
and several other respects, the decree is not the subject of this
appeal."
It is now said that, despite this concession, the point was
preserved in the record below and is open here. We cannot
agree.
By its exhibits Nos. 149 to 158, inclusive, the company listed
the lands in place and indemnity limits which had been selected for
patent amounting to over
Page 311 U. S. 371
455,000 acres. By stipulation of the parties, certain of these
were eliminated. Thereafter, the Government, by its exhibits Nos.
103 (Revised) and 210 (Revised), listed the remaining lands as
chargeable to the grant. With negligible exceptions, the master
found that they were so chargeable. In its findings, the District
Court adopted the master's ruling and stated definitely in its
findings that the plaintiff took no exception to the master's
report in connection with this matter. The court found, therefore,
on the basis of the master's report, that the total of the lands
both in place and indemnity limits so selected by the company
should go to patent. The Government, while not controverting the
fact found by the court that it had taken no exception to this
portion of the master's report, points to an assignment of error
filed on the appeal to this Court asserting that the District Court
erred:
"52. In holding that the railroad is now entitled to receive
patent to any of the indemnity lands mentioned or referred to in
subdivision XVIII of the court's findings."
Subdivision XVIII is that subdivision of the findings in which
the court dealt with the whole matter of patents to be issued for
lands selected prior to the adoption of the Resolution of 1924, and
does not deal specifically or separately with indemnity lands as
contrasted with place lands.
It is obvious that the decision of the court sustaining the
Government's position that, in the claim for compensation for loss
of indemnity selection rights to lands within the reserves, the
company must assign base for the lands it alleged it lost by their
withdrawal, furnishes no justification for the claim that the
master or the District Court was asked to annul and hold
ineffectual selection rights exercised with respect to lands
outside the reserves which, but for the interposition of Congress
in the Resolution of 1924, would have gone to
Page 311 U. S. 372
patent. Moreover, it is not clear from the record whether the
company did in fact assign base in the lists of selection rights
filed, or failed to do so. The implication from the record seems to
be that the company did assign such base. In any event, we think
the point was not brought to the master's or the court's attention
in any such manner as to justify its being made the basis of a
claim of error in this court. This must have been the Government's
view when the case was first argued. In the light of its sweeping
concession above quoted, and the state of the record, we are
unwilling to disturb the District Court's decree as respects lands
to be patented to the company.
20.
The company's claim to indemnity resulting from the
Tacoma overlap.
In its appeal (No. 4), the company challenges the rejection of
its claim for loss of selection rights in second indemnity limits
appurtenant to the Portland-Tacoma line. It is urged that the Joint
Resolution of 1870, which made a grant in aid of this line,
authorized the creation of second indemnity limits, in the event
that there was a deficiency of lands in first indemnity limits, to
supply loss of place lands lying along the route. The company
insists that, when, in 1898, 1902 and 1906, 213,000 acres of land
were withdrawn and placed in national forests, these withdrawals
deprived the company of selection of odd-numbered sections in
second indemnity limits, as the 1870 grant was deficient in 1882,
the date of the definite location of the last segment of the
Portland-Tacoma line, and so remained.
For an understanding of the contention, certain facts must be
borne in mind. By the Act of 1864, the line authorized was to run
from a point on Lake Superior to some point on Puget Sound, with a
branch via the Columbia River to a point at or near Portland. By
the Joint Resolution of 1870, the company was authorized to
Page 311 U. S. 373
construct its main line to a point on Puget Sound via the valley
of the Columbia River with the right to construct its branch from a
point on its main line, across the Cascade Mountains to Puget
Sound. Thus, the resolution altered what had been the proposed main
line across the Cascade Mountains into a branch line, and the
former branch line to Portland into a section of the main line
running down the Columbia River to Portland, and thence turning
north to Puget Sound. Although, by an Act of 1869, the company had
been authorized to construct a line between Portland and Tacoma,
and a right of way had been granted therefor, no grant of lands in
aid of such construction was made until the adoption of the
Resolution of 1870. That resolution, in authorizing the location
and construction of this portion of the company's road, did so in
these words: "Under the provisions and with the privileges, grants,
and duties provided for in its act of incorporation." Obviously the
land grant was the same as that in the charter act -- namely, place
lands in a strip extending twenty miles on each side of the road in
states and forty miles on each side in territories, with an
indemnity belt ten miles in width on either side of the exterior
limits of the place grant.
The legislative history of the resolution shows that Congress
was informed the company could not obtain, in connection with its
original grant, all that Congress intended it should have, for the
reason that, prior to selection of indemnity lands for losses in
place lands, much territory had been removed from the operation of
the Act by preemption and settlement under the land laws. In order
to compensate the company for such losses, there was inserted in
the Joint Resolution the following:
"and in the event of there not being in any State or Territory
in which said main line or branch may be located at the time of the
final location thereof, the amount of lands per mile granted by
Congress to said
Page 311 U. S. 374
company, within the limits prescribed by its charter, then said
company shall be entitled, under the directions of the Secretary of
the Interior, to receive so many sections of land belonging to the
United States, and designated by old numbers, in such State or
Territory, within ten miles on each side of said road, beyond the
limits prescribed in said charter, as will make up such deficiency,
on said main line or branch, except mineral and other lands as
excepted in the charter of said company . . . to the amount of the
lands that have been granted, sold, reserved, occupied by homestead
settlers, preempted, or otherwise disposed of subsequent to the
passage of the act of July two, eighteen hundred and
sixty-four."
The Resolution made a new grant in aid of the Portland-Tacoma
line. [
Footnote 44] The
portion of the Cascade branch (designated as main line in the Act
of 1864) entering Tacoma from the east was definitely located in
1884. This location defined the place lands granted by the Act of
1864. The line authorized by the Joint Resolution entering Tacoma
from the south was definitely located in 1874, thus earning the
grant made by the Resolution. The place limits forty miles wide to
the south of the Cascade line, and of equal width to the east of
the Portland-Tacoma line, overlap. The area of the overlap,
approximately forty miles square, contains alternate sections
totaling 637,580 acres. The company says that, under the 1864 grant
pursuant to which the Cascade line was built, title to the place
lands vested in the company on the date of definite location, as of
the date of the original grant; that these lands were thus lost to
the grant of 1870 appurtenant to the Portland-Tacoma line;
Page 311 U. S. 375
and that the company was entitled to indemnity for them. If this
is the right view, 637,580 acres must be added to the other losses
for which indemnity was needed at the date of the forest
withdrawals, and thus the deficiency in the grant required a large
quantity of lands in second indemnity limits through the withdrawn
lands, if any such limits were created in connection with the 1870
grant. The Land Office construed the Resolution of 1870 as
requiring the laying down of second indemnity limits for the
Portland-Tacoma line, and laid them down in 1906. The master and
the court below concluded that no place lands were lost to the 1870
grant by the overlap. We are of opinion that they were right.
Several decisions respecting overlaps of railroad land grants
are cited, but none is precisely in point. It seems to be conceded
that, if the Cascade branch and the Portland-Tacoma line had been
authorized by the same Act, there would have been but a single
grant of odd-numbered sections in the overlap, and the company
could not have claimed indemnity as for a grant of double aid in
the area. [
Footnote 45] And
it is settled that such a grant as that under consideration is a
grant not of lands by quantity, but of lands in place or by
description. [
Footnote 46]
Whether Congress intended, in connection with its later grant of
1870, to accord the company indemnity for failure to receive, in
aid of the Portland-Tacoma line, lands to which it would get title
in virtue of its definite location of the Cascade line is the
question. We conclude that Congress did not so intend.
Page 311 U. S. 376
It is true that the grant of 1870 was upon the same terms as
that of 1864. Unquestionably the company, in respect of the line
built under the later grant, was entitled to indemnity for lands
granted or disposed of by the United States to others prior to the
grant. Indeed, it would be entitled to indemnity for loss due to an
earlier overlapping grant to another railroad. [
Footnote 47] The grant of 1864 carried
title to the lands within the overlap to the company, and therefore
Congress could not and did not make a second grant of the same
lands in 1870. Did Congress intend to grant the company indemnity
for a preceding grant not to a stranger, but to the company itself?
In answering the question, we must bear in mind that, if the grants
had been contemporaneous, no intent to make a double grant, or a
grant of indemnity, would be inferred, and that the two grants here
in question really dealt with but a single railroad system. We
think it clear that Congress did not intend to confer a right to
indemnity upon the company which would give it lands double in
quantity at the point of intersection of two of its lines. As, in
this view, the alternate sections in the overlap granted to aid the
Cascade line by the Act of 1864 were not a loss to the grant to the
Portland-Tacoma line made by the Resolution of 1870, the latter
grant was not deficient, and no right to select lands in second
indemnity limits was infringed by Government withdrawals.
The appeal in No. 4 is without merit, but, upon the appeal in
No. 3, the judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded for
further proceedings as indicated in this opinion.
No. 4 dismissed.
No 3 reversed.
MR. JUSTICE MURPHY took no part in the consideration or decision
of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
13 Stat. 365.
[
Footnote 2]
14 Stat. 355; 15 Stat. 255.
[
Footnote 3]
15 Stat. 346.
[
Footnote 4]
16 Stat. 57.
[
Footnote 5]
Joint Resolution of May 31, 1870, 16 Stat. 378.
[
Footnote 6]
St. Paul & Pacific R. Co. v. Northern Pacific R.
Co., 139 U. S. 1,
139 U. S. 5.
[
Footnote 7]
Payne v. Central Pacific Ry. Co., 255 U.
S. 228,
255 U. S.
236.
[
Footnote 8]
28 Stat. 683.
[
Footnote 9]
26 Stat. 1095, 1103; 16 U.S.C. § 471.
[
Footnote 10]
Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. Lane, 46 App.D.C.
434.
[
Footnote 11]
United States v. Northern Pacific Ry. Co., 256 U. S.
51.
[
Footnote 12]
43 Stat. 461.
[
Footnote 13]
S.Rep. No. 5, 71st Cong., 1st Sess.
[
Footnote 14]
46 Stat. 41.
[
Footnote 15]
49 Stat. 1369.
[
Footnote 16]
Nelson v. Northern Pacific Ry. Co., 188 U.
S. 108,
188 U. S.
116-117.
[
Footnote 17]
Hewitt v. Schultz, 180 U. S. 139.
[
Footnote 18]
Atlantic & Pac. R. Co., 17 L.D. 313; Northern Pacific R.
Co., 20 L.D. 187;
Sawyer v. Gray, 205 F. 160, 163;
Douglass v. Rhodes, 280 F. 230, 231;
Cox v. Hart,
260 U. S. 427,
260 U. S.
436.
[
Footnote 19]
Hewitt v. Schultz, 180 U. S. 139;
Southern Pacific R. Co. v. Bell, 183 U.
S. 675.
[
Footnote 20]
United States v. Northern Pac. R. Co., 256 U. S.
51,
256 U. S.
66-67.
[
Footnote 21]
Atlantic & Pacific R. Co., 17 L.D. 313; Northern Pacific Ry.
Co., 20 L.D. 187, 190.
[
Footnote 22]
Hewitt v. Schultz, 180 U. S. 139,
180 U. S. 152;
United States v. Montana Lumber Mfg. Co., 196 U.
S. 573,
196 U. S. 578;
United States v. Morrison, 240 U.
S. 192,
240 U. S. 200;
Cox v. Hart, 260 U. S. 427;
Sawyer v. Gray, 205 F. 160, 163;
Douglass v.
Rhodes, 280 F. 230, 231;
Northern Pacific R. Co. v.
Lane, 46 App.D.C. 434.
[
Footnote 23]
C. 561, § 4, 26 Stat. 1097.
[
Footnote 24]
IV Kappler, 1065, 11 Stat. 749; 11 Stat. 657.
[
Footnote 25]
4 Stat. 729.
[
Footnote 26]
Beecher v. Wetherby, 95 U. S. 517;
Buttz v. Northern Pacific R. Co., 119 U. S.
55;
Bardon v. Northern Pacific R. Co.,
145 U. S. 535,
145 U. S. 542;
Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co. v. Roberts, 152 U.
S. 114,
152 U. S. 117;
Clairmont v. United States, 225 U.
S. 551,
225 U. S.
556.
[
Footnote 27]
Act of March 3, 1893, c. 209, 27 Stat. 612, 631.
[
Footnote 28]
Supra, p.
311 U. S.
346.
[
Footnote 29]
Treaty of May 7, 1868, 15 Stat. 649.
[
Footnote 30]
Supra, note
24
[
Footnote 31]
C. 459, 44 Stat. 690.
[
Footnote 32]
Supra, note 8
[
Footnote 33]
It is true that, in administration of the grant, the Land Office
approved selections upon affidavit merely that the chosen lands
were "non-mineral;" but apparently the question whether that phrase
was synonymous with "agricultural" was not raised or considered. We
think the administrative practice therefore does not strengthen the
company's argument. Moreover, Congress has not approved the
practice, but, on the contrary, has directed that errors in the
administration of the grant shall be corrected by the court's
decree.
[
Footnote 34]
14 Stat. 292, 294.
[
Footnote 35]
16 Stat. 573, 576.
[
Footnote 36]
Cf. S. 65, 35th Cong., 1st Sess.; H.R. 411, 35th Cong.,
1st Sess.
[
Footnote 37]
Cong.Globe, 38th Cong., 1st Sess. 3290.
[
Footnote 38]
Cong.Globe, 38th Cong., 1st Sess. 3459.
[
Footnote 39]
29 Op.A.G. 498, 41 L.D. 571; Hessey v. Northern Pacific Ry. Co.,
43 L.D. 302. The practice of the Land Office has been uniform in
permitting selection of mineral lieu lands in any state
irrespective of the state of loss. The same principle has governed
the right of selection of first indemnity lands for losses other
than mineral. 19 Op.Atty.Gen. 88, 94; Northern Pac. R. Co., 20 L.D.
187; Northern Pac. R. Co. v. Shepherdson, 24 L.D. 417; Hagen v.
Northern Pac. R. Co., 26 L.D. 312.
[
Footnote 40]
Act of June 19, 1834, c. 54, 4 Stat. 678; Act of June 22, 1838,
c. 119, 5 Stat. 251; Act of August 4, 1842, c. 122, 5 Stat. 502;
Act of March 3, 1843, c. 86, 5 Stat. 619, 621; Act of May 20, 1862,
c. 75, 12 Stat. 392; R.S. § 2291, 43 U.S.C. § 164.
[
Footnote 41]
Timber and Stone Act, June 3, 1878, c. 151, 20 Stat. 89; Desert
Land Act, March 3, 1877, c. 107, 19 Stat. 377. The latter Act
excluded both mineral and forest lands from its operation.
[
Footnote 42]
The legislative history is convincing:
see Cong.Globe,
41st Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 2480-85; 2569-84.
[
Footnote 43]
Compare Oregon & California R. Co. v. United
States, 238 U. S. 393,
238 U. S.
431-436.
[
Footnote 44]
United States v. Northern Pacific R. Co., 152 U.
S. 284;
Northern Pacific R. Co. v. De Lacey,
174 U. S. 622;
United States v. Northern Pacific R. Co., 193 U. S.
1.
[
Footnote 45]
See United States v. Oregon & California R. Co.,
164 U. S. 526,
164 U. S.
537.
[
Footnote 46]
Winona & St. Peter R. Co. v. Barney, 113 U.
S. 618,
113 U. S. 627;
Barney v. Winona & St. Peter R. Co., 117 U.
S. 228,
117 U. S.
231-232;
cf. Wisconsin Central R. Co. v.
Forsythe, 159 U. S. 46,
159 U. S.
59-60.
[
Footnote 47]
United States v. Oregon & California R. Co.,
176 U. S. 28,
176 U. S.
50.