It has always been a cherished policy with the government of the
United States to appropriate the section numbered sixteen in every
township of land for the use of schools.
Reservations were made in the sale of other lands which
contained salt springs or lead mines, but not in the appropriation
of section sixteen for schools.
When the State of Michigan was admitted into the Union, it was
upon the condition that every section numbered sixteen in every
township of the public lands, and where such section has been sold
or otherwise disposed of, other lands equivalent thereto, and as
contiguous as may be, shall be granted to the state for the use of
schools.
When the lands are surveyed and marked out, the title of the
state attaches to No. 16, and if there be no legal impediment,
becomes a legal title.
The Act of March 1, 1847, 9 Stat. 146, providing for the sale of
mineral lands, does not include section sixteen, which remains
subject to the compact with Michigan.
Under the operation of that act, and also the Act of September,
1850, 9 Stat. 472, a lease made in 1845, by the Secretary of War of
some mineral lands, including section sixteen, did not confer a
right upon the mining company, who were the assignees of the lease,
to enter their lands and obtain a patent for section sixteen.
It was not necessary for the State of Michigan to obtain the
consent of congress before making a sale of the section.
Whether or not the officers of the State of Michigan pursued the
laws of the state in effecting the sale is a question which the
occupant of the land cannot raise in this suit.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 59 U. S. 175
MR. JUSTICE CAMPBELL delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff sued in ejectment, to recover a portion of section
No. 16, in township No. 50 north, of range 39 west, lying within
the mineral district south of Lake Superior, in Michigan.
His case affirms that this section had been appropriated by
the
Page 59 U. S. 176
United States to the State of Michigan for the use of schools in
their compact by which that state became a member of the Union;
that the Governor of Michigan issued, in November, 1851, to Alfred
Williams, a patent, evincing a sale of that section under the laws
of Michigan, in February, 1851; that he has a conveyance from the
patentee, and that the defendant is a tenant in possession,
withholding the
locus in quo from him. The defendant, to
support his issue, relies upon a license given in 1844 by the
mineral agent of the United States for that district empowering the
donee to examine and dig for lead and other ores for the term of
one year, and within that term to mark out and define a specific
tract of land, not to exceed three miles square, for mining
purposes, and, if he should fulfill this and other conditions, he
was to become entitled to a lease for three years, with a privilege
of one or two renewals, under restrictions. The Secretary of War,
in September, 1845, executed a lease for a tract three miles
square, which the donee of the license had selected, and which
included the
locus in quo, and stipulated to renew it, if
Congress shall not have passed a law "directing the sale, or other
disposition, of these lands" and if the lessee shall have complied
with all the conditions of the present lease and tendered a bond
for the fulfillment of the conditions of the new lease, as
described in the act. This lease came to the Minnesota Mining
Company by assignment, and that company in 1847, and from thence
till 1851, held possession of the land described in the
declaration, erected valuable improvements, and made successful
explorations for copper upon it. In November, 1850, the company
applied to the proper officers of the land office to enter the land
comprised in the lease, and from thence till the date of their
patent in 1852 the right of the company to secure the
locus in
quo by entry was in dispute in the land office of the United
States. In September, 1851, the Secretary of the Interior
determined adversely to the claim of the company and in favor of
the claim of Michigan, and in 1852, upon proofs that the company
had complied with the lease, while he reaffirmed his conclusions in
favor of Michigan, allowed the entry of the company, but with a
reservation of the rights of Michigan. The section No. 16 aforesaid
was surveyed in the summer of 1847, and the portion in controversy,
in the report of the geological survey of the district, was
returned to the land office as containing mines of copper. There
was no application to the department of public lands to renew the
lease held by the company, for the reason it is said that the
system of letting mineral lands of this kind had been abandoned
upon the doubts expressed by the Attorney-General in 1846 of the
legality of such leases. Upon the trial of the cause in the circuit
court, the
Page 59 U. S. 177
plaintiff moved the court for instructions to the jury that upon
the facts he was entitled to a verdict and that the defendant's
patent was invalid. The court refused the prayer and told the
jury
"That by the Act of Congress of 1 March, 1847, all the mining
lands within the district reported were taken out of the operation
of the general law for the disposal of the public lands in
pursuance of an established policy to reserve from the ordinary
mode of disposing of public lands those that contained valuable
salt springs, lead mines &c., that that they might be leased or
disposed of to purchasers having full knowledge of their value, by
reason of the salt springs or mineral ores they contained, at their
full value, for the public benefit. That by the above act, all the
mineral lands reported by the geologist within the district in
pursuance of this settled policy of the government were
appropriated and disposed of without reference to the school
reservation, the appropriation of the land being made before the
surveys were executed and before the locality of section 16 could
be known. And as it appears from the report of the geologist that
the land in controversy contains valuable minerals and was within
the boundaries of the lease under which the Minnesota Company
claim, and that they had made large expenditures thereon for
mining, were entitled to the right of purchase, as provided in the
third section of the above law, and having paid for the same, it
was a disposition of the land which Congress had a right to make,
and was an exercise of power within the grant. That the setting
apart of another section adjacent will satisfy the grant to the
state."
Our first inquiry will be into the nature of the right of the
State of Michigan to section No. 16 in the townships of that state,
and the effect of the discovery of minerals in such a section upon
that right. The practice of setting apart section No. 16 of every
township of public lands for the maintenance of public schools is
traceable to the ordinance of 1785, being the first enactment for
the disposal by sale of the public lands in the western territory.
The appropriation of public lands for that object became a
fundamental principle, by the ordinance of 1787, which settled
terms of compact between the people and states of the Northwestern
Territory and the original states unalterable except by consent.
One of the articles affirmed that "religion, morality, and
knowledge, being necessary for good government and the happiness of
mankind," and ordained that "schools, and the means of education,
should be forever encouraged." This principle was extended first by
Congressional enactment, 1 Stat. 550, § 6, and afterwards, in
1802, by compact between the United States and Georgia to the
southwestern territory. The earliest development of this
Page 59 U. S. 178
article in practical legislation is to be found in the
organization of the State of Ohio and the adjustment of its civil
polity according to the ordinance, preparatory to its admission to
the Union. Proposals were made to the inhabitants of the incipient
state to become a sovereign community and to accept certain
articles as the conditions of union, which, being accepted, were to
become obligatory upon the United States. The first of these
articles is
"That the section No. 16 in every township, and where such
section has been sold, granted, or disposed of, other lands
equivalent thereto and most contiguous to the same shall be granted
to the inhabitants of such township for the use of schools."
A portion of this territory had been encumbered in the articles
of cession by the states, and another portion by Congress for the
fulfillment of public obligations, prior to the ordinance of 1785,
and without reference to the school reservations; therefore,
uniformity in the appropriation of the section No. 16 was partially
defeated. The southwestern territory was similarly burdened in the
compact of cession by Georgia, with the fulfillment of antecedent
obligations, and similar paramount obligations have arisen in
treaties with the Indian tribes who inhabited it. The rights of
private property vested in the inhabitants, ceded with Louisiana
and Florida, and guaranteed to them in the treaties of cession,
created an obstruction to the same policy within them. But the
constancy with which the United States have adhered to the policy
in the various compacts with the people of the newly formed states,
and the care which Congress has manifested to prevent the
accumulation of prior obligations which might interrupt it, fully
display their estimate of its value and importance. There is
obviously a definite purpose declared to consecrate the same
central section of every township of every state which might be
added to the federal system, to the promotion "of good government
and the happiness of mankind," by the spread of "religion,
morality, and knowledge," and thus, by a uniformity of local
association, to plant in the heart of every community the same
sentiments of grateful reverence for the wisdom, forecast, and
magnanimous statesmanship of those who framed the institutions for
these new states, before the constitution for the old had yet been
modeled. Has the discovery of minerals of value upon this section
been deemed a sufficient cause for its withdrawal from the
operation of this policy and the compacts which develop it?
The Ordinance of 1785 dedicated the section No. 16 for the
maintenance of public schools, and in each sale of the public lands
there was by the same ordinance a reservation of one-third part of
all gold, silver, lead, and copper mines within the township
Page 59 U. S. 179
or lot sold. No reservations were afterwards made of gold,
silver, or copper mines until the acts of March, 1847. By the Act
of March 26, 1804, and the Act of March, 1807, every
"grant of a salt spring or a lead mine thereafter to be made,
which had been discovered previously to the purchase from the
United States, was to be considered as null and void."
2 Stat. 279, § 6; 449, § 6. These statutes indicate a
policy to withdraw from sale lands containing these minerals. But
the compacts have been made without such a reservation, nor has the
usage of the land office interpolated such an exception to the
general grant of the section No. 16 for the use of schools.
The grant of the section No. 16 for the use of schools can be
executed without violating the spirit of the legislation upon salt
springs or lead mines, and, as we have seen, no statute prior to
the admission of Michigan to the Union contains an appropriation or
reservation of other mineral lands. The State of Michigan was
admitted to the Union with the unalterable condition
"That every section No. 16, in every township of the public
lands, and where such section has been sold or otherwise disposed
of, other lands equivalent thereto, and as contiguous as may be,
shall be granted to the state for the use of schools."
We agree that until the survey of the township and the
designation of the specific section, the right of the state rests
in compact -- binding, it is true, the public faith, and dependent
for execution upon the political authorities. Courts of justice
have no authority to mark out and define the land which shall be
subject to the grant. But when the political authorities have
performed this duty, the compact has an object, upon which it can
attach, and if there is no legal impediment, the title of the state
becomes a legal title. The
jus ad rem by the performance
of that executive act becomes a
jus in re, judicial in its
nature and under the cognizance and protection of the judicial in
its nature, and as well as the others.
Gaines v.
Nicholson, 9 How. 356.
The question now arises whether the Act of March 1, 1847,
created a legal impediment to the operation of this principle,
either by the reservation of the land for public uses or by its
appropriation to superior claims. In March, 1847, Congress
established a land district in this region for the disposal of the
public lands. It directed a geological survey for the ascertainment
of those containing valuable ores, whether of lead or copper, and a
report to the land office. It provided for the advertisement and
sale of such lands, departing in a measure from that usual mode, as
to the length of the notice and the amount of price, and in
reference to the remainder of the lands, it applied the usual
regulations. To the section containing these directions, 9 Stat.
146, § 2, there is added an
Page 59 U. S. 180
exception from such sales, section No. 16, "for the use of
schools, and such reservations as the President shall deem
necessary for public uses." It has been argued that this exception
is only applicable to the lands not contained in the geological
report, and that the mineral lands "were appropriated and disposed
of without reference to the school reservation by this section of
the act." But it does no violence to the language to embrace within
the exception all the sales for which the section provides, and we
cannot suppose that Congress could be tempted, with the hope of a
small additional price which is imposed upon the purchasers of the
mineral lands, to raise a question upon its compact with Michigan
or to disturb its ancient and honored policy. We think the
interpretation which claims this as an exception in favor of
Michigan is to be preferred to that which excludes her from the
mineral lands under this compact. And this conclusion is
strengthened by the fact that the power of the President to make
useful public reservations is connected in the exception with the
school reservations. There could be no reason for limiting the
power of the President to a single class of the public lands and to
exclude him from another in the same district. We conclude that
this act does not withdraw the mineral lands from the compact with
Michigan.
Did the execution of the lease by the Secretary of War, in 1845,
before the survey of the lands, dispose of these lands so as to
defeat the claim of the state? The Minnesota Mining Company, at the
date of the Act of March 1, 1847, held the unexpired lease by
assignment, and continued to perform its conditions until their
patent was issued. The 3d section of that act authorized the
persons in possession under such a lease, who had fulfilled it
conditions, to enter in one tract all the lands included in it, at
a diminished price, "during the continuance of the lease." The 4th
section directed the sale of the mineral lands contained in the
report, but with a proviso, that none of the lands contained in any
outstanding lease, whose conditions had been fulfilled, should be
sold till the expiration of the lease, either "by efflux of time,
voluntary surrender, or other legal extinguishment." The Act of
Congress of September, 1850, 9 Stat. 472, abrogated such of the
clauses of the act of 1847, which distinguished the mineral from
other public lands and placed them alike, under the ordinary system
for the disposal of the public domain, but reserved to lessees and
occupants the privileges conferred by the act of 1847. From that
time, therefore, the argument "that the mining lands within the
district were taken out of the general law for the disposal of the
public lands by the act of March, 1847," lost all its cogency, and
the rights of the Minnesota Company depended entirely
Page 59 U. S. 181
upon the validity of the lease and the protection accorded to
the lessee. The lease expired by "efflux of time," in September,
1848. There was no renewal of the lease, for the double reason that
its original validity was doubted by the highest executive
authority, and those doubts were submitted to by the lessee, and
because Congress had passed the law for the disposal of the mineral
lands, which determined the covenant for renewal, by the terms of
the lease itself.
Hence, had there been a legal impediment to the execution of the
compact with Michigan, erected either by the second section of the
act of 1847, which separated for some purposes the mineral from
other public lands, or by the privileges granted to lessees or
their assigns, in the 3d section of that act, it was removed by the
repealing clause of the act of 1850, and the noncompliance with the
conditions on which the privileges depended. The section No. 16
was, at that date, disencumbered, and subject to the operation of
the compact, whatever might have been its pre existing state.
That compact had not been fulfilled by an assignment to the
state "of equivalent lands, contiguous as may be," under the Act of
May 20, 1826. 4 Stat. 179. Shortly after the passage of the act of
1850, we find Michigan asserting her claim to this section,
advertising it for sale, and selling it to the vendor of the
plaintiff. We also find the officers of the land office of the
United States denying the right of the Minnesota Mining Company to
enter the land, and admitting the superior title of the State of
Michigan, and finally reserving those rights in the patent issued
to the company. We entirely concur with these officers in their
decision on the subject of contest for the reasons we have given.
We think that the jury should have been instructed that the section
No. 16 was vested in the State of Michigan at the date of the entry
by the Minnesota Mining Company, and that the company did not
acquire title by its patent.
The defendant insists that the title of the plaintiff is invalid
for the reason that the State of Michigan was not empowered by
Congress to sell the school reservations. Where such grants have
been made to the state or to the inhabitants of the township for
the use of schools, it has been usual for Congress to authorize the
sale of the lands if the state should desire it. 4 Stat. 138, 237,
298; 5
id. 600. But this consent was not, perhaps,
necessary, and the application for it is but evidence of the strong
desire of the state authorities to act in good faith and to keep
within the pale of the law. 4 Ala. 622.
The trusts created by these compacts relate to a subject
certainly
Page 59 U. S. 182
of universal interest, but of municipal concern, over which the
power of the state is plenary and exclusive. In the present
instance, the grant is to the state directly, without limitation of
its power, though there is a sacred obligation imposed on its
public faith. We think it was competent to Michigan to sell the
school reservations without the consent of Congress.
The defendant further objects that the officers of the state
violated the statutes of Michigan in selling these lands after they
were known or might have been known to contain minerals. Without a
nice inquiry into these statutes to ascertain whether they reserve
such lands from sale or into the disputed fact whether they were
known or might have been known to contain minerals, we are of the
opinion that the defendant is not in a condition to raise the
question on this issue. The officers of the State of Michigan,
embracing the chief magistrate of the state, and who have the
charge and superintendence of this property, certify this sale to
have been made pursuant to law, and have clothed the purchaser with
the most solemn evidence of title. The defendant does not claim in
privity with Michigan, but holds an adverse right, and is a
trespasser upon the land, to which her title is attached.
Michigan has not complained of the sale, and retains, so far as
the case shows, the price paid for it. Under these circumstances,
we must regard the patent as conclusive of the fact of a valid and
regular sale on this issue.
Upon the whole record, we think the jury should have been
instructed that if they found the facts thus given in evidence to
be true, the plaintiff was entitled to recover the premises in
question.
Judgment reversed; cause remanded -- a venire to
issue.