The proviso in the Act of Congress of May 15, 1856, 11 Stat. at
Large 9, making a grant of lands to the State of Iowa in alternate
sections to aid in the construction of certain railroads in said
state, by which proviso it was provided
"That any and all lands heretofore reserved to the United
States, by any act of Congress or in
any other manner by
competent authority, for the purpose of aiding in any object of
internal improvement or any other object whatsoever be, and
the same are hereby reserved to the United States from the
operation of this act,"
operated, in connection with certain subsequent legislation, to
reserve for the purpose of aid in the improvement in the navigation
of the Des Moines River, an equal moiety, in alternate sections, of
the public lands on, and within five miles of, the said river,
between the "Raccoon Fork," so called, and the northern boundary of
the state.
In August, 1846, Congress granted to the then Territory and now
State of Iowa:
"For the purpose of aiding said territory
to improve the
navigation of the Des Moines River from its mouth to the Raccoon
Fork, so called, in said territory, one equal moiety, in
alternate sections, of the public lands in a strip five miles in
width on each side of said river."
The Des Moines River, to assist the improvement of whose
navigation this grant was made, rises in the very north part of the
state, somewhat to the west of the middle line of the northern
boundary. Flowing to the southeast, it traverses the entire
commonwealth of Iowa, and falls into the Mississippi in the
southeast corner of the state. [See the sketch on p. <|72 U.S.
682|>682.]
Somewhere near the middle of the state, at Des Moines City, it
receives, as a tributary, a stream called the Raccoon Fork. It thus
happens that about one half the river is above the point where this
Fork enters, and one half below. Each half traverses, of course, a
region of great extent and value.
The phraseology of the above-quoted grant of Congress,
Page 72 U. S. 682
as the result proved, contained the germs of a controversy, the
point in issue being whether Congress meant to grant to the state
land on the Des Moines River
above the point where the
Raccoon Fork enters as well as the land
below this point,
or whether it meant to grant only land below. On the one hand, the
grant was for the purpose of improving the navigation of the river
"from its mouth TO the Raccoon Fork." On the other, the
grant was of one equal moiety &c., "on each side of
the
said river."
image:a
In August, 1859, the Des Moines Navigation Company, to which the
state had conveyed the land in May, 1858, conveyed to one Wolcott a
half section of one of the alternate sections, within five miles of
the river &c., above the Fork, and warranted the title.
Soon afterwards this Court decided in another case that on a
true construction of the grant of the 8th of August, 1846, above
mentioned, it did not include land above the point where the
Raccoon Fork entered.
Page 72 U. S. 683
Wolcott now sued the Navigation Company for breach of covenant,
alleging, in his declaration, that the title to the tract sold by
the company to him had failed. This allegation the company denied,
setting up that whatever might be the conclusion on a construction
of the mere act of original grant (8 August, 1844), this case
rested on another basis, to-wit, on the basis of a great variety of
action by different departments of the government having authority
in the matter, and on acts of Congress subsequent to that of the
grant.
This great variety of action and the other acts of Congress will
be found below in the preliminary part of the opinion of this
Court.
The court below thought that the title had not failed, and
whether it had or not was now the question here.
MR. JUSTICE NELSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The defendants conveyed by deed poll to the plaintiff on the 1st
August, 1859, the east half of section 17, township 88, range 27,
situate in Webster County, State of Iowa, containing three hundred
and twenty acres, for the consideration of $3,040, and warranted
the title. It is charged in the declaration that the title has
failed, which is denied on the part of the defendants. This
presents the main issue in the case.
On the 8th August, 1846, Congress passed an act by which they
granted to the Territory of Iowa, for the purpose of aid in the
improvement of the navigation of the Des Moines River, from its
mouth to the Raccoon Fork in said territory, an equal moiety, in
alternate sections, of the public lands in a strip of five miles in
width on each side of said river, to be selected within said
territory by an agent of the governor, subject to the approval of
the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States.
Page 72 U. S. 684
The second section provided that the lands so granted should not
be sold or conveyed by the territory, nor by any state to be formed
out of it, except as the improvements progressed -- that is, sales
might be made so as to produce the sum of thirty thousand dollars
and then cease until the governor or state, as the case might be,
should certify the fact to the President of the United States that
one half of this sum had been expended on said improvements, when
sales again might be made of the remaining lands sufficient to
replace this amount, and the sales were thus to progress as the
proceeds were expended and the expenditure so certified to the
President. Agents were appointed by the governor, who selected the
sections designated by odd numbers, throughout the whole extent of
the grant, which, as claimed, extended from the mouth of the river
to the northern boundary of the state.
The lot in question is one of the sections thus selected and
approved by the Secretary of the Treasury and duly certified by the
governor of the state to the President, according to the second
section of the act, and was sold and conveyed, among other parcels
of land, by the state to the defendants. The section of land of
which the lot in question is a part was situated above the Raccoon
Fork.
Some year and a half after the passage of this act, a question
arose before the Commissioner of the Land Office whether the grant
of the odd sections within the five miles extended above this Fork.
He determined that it did, and that it extended throughout the
whole line of the river within the limits of Iowa. It appears,
however, that he afterwards changed his opinion, and on the 19th
June, 1848, a proclamation was issued by the President,
countersigned by him, ordering a sale of some of these odd
sections, among other lands lying above the Fork, and which was to
take place in the following October. On the attention of the
Secretary of the Treasury being called to the subject, he, after an
examination of the act, determined that upon a true construction of
it, the grant extended above the Raccoon Fork, and directed that
the odd section should be reserved
Page 72 U. S. 685
from the sale, which was done accordingly, and the State of Iowa
duly notified. This was on the 16th June, 1849. On the 6th April,
1850, the Secretary of the Interior, whose department had in the
meantime been established and to which the supervision and control
of the General Land Office had been assigned, reversed the previous
decision of the Secretary of the Treasury and determined that the
grant did not extend beyond the Raccoon Fork. But he directed that
the lands should be reserved from sale which were embraced within
the state's selections. The question was then brought before the
President, and was referred by him to the Attorney General, who
differed with the Secretary of the Interior and concurred with the
Secretary of the Treasury. But before the promulgation of this
decision, the President (Taylor) died, and a new cabinet coming in
-- and among others, a new Attorney General -- he overruled the
decision of his predecessor and affirmed that of the Secretary of
the Interior. The case was then brought before the new President
and cabinet, and the result is stated by the then Secretary of the
Interior, under date of October 29th, 1851, which was
"That in view of the great conflict of opinion among the
executive officers of the government, and also in view of the
opinions of several eminent jurists which have been presented to me
in favor of the construction contended for by the state, I am
willing to recognize the claim of the state and to approve of the
selections without prejudice to the rights, if any there be, of
other parties."
Under this arrangement, the Secretary of the Interior approved
of the odd sections above the Fork as certified, according to the
act of Congress, till, in December, 1853, the number of acres
amounted to over 271,572. On the 21st March, 1856, the Commissioner
of the Land Office again decided that the grant was limited to the
Raccoon Fork, and the question was again referred to the Attorney
General, who advised the Secretary of the Interior to acquiesce in
the view of his predecessor (a change having taken place as to the
incumbent), and to continue the approval of the lands as certified
to him under the law which was done accordingly. In the meantime,
the
Page 72 U. S. 686
improvement of the Des Moines River had been carried on by the
state and by the Des Moines Navigation and Railroad Company, who,
on the 9th June, 1854, had entered into an engagement with the
state to finish the improvements as contemplated by the act of
Congress and to expend for that purpose some $1,300,000.
The question as to the true construction of this grant of 8
August, 1846, and in respect to which such great diversity of
opinion existed among the executive officers of the government,
came before this Court and was decided at the December Term
1859-1860. The Court held that it was limited to the Raccoon Fork,
and did not extend above it.
*
Whereupon, on the 2d March, 1861, Congress passed a joint
resolution providing that
"All the title which the United States still retain in the
tracts of land along the Des Moines River and above the Raccoon
Fork thereof in the State of Iowa which have been certified to said
state improperly by the Department of the Interior as part of the
grant by Act of Congress approved August 8, 1846, and which is now
held by
bona fide purchasers under the State of Iowa be
and the same is hereby relinquished to the state."
And, on the 12th July, 1862, Congress enacted
"That the grant of lands to the then Territory of Iowa for the
improvement of the Des Moines River by the Act of August 8, 1846,
is hereby extended so as to include the alternate sections
(designated by odd numbers) lying within five miles of said river
between the Raccoon Fork and the northern boundary of said state;
such lands are to be held and applied in accordance with the
provisions of the original grant, except that the consent of
Congress is hereby given to the application of a portion thereof to
aid in the construction of the Keokuk, Fort Des Moines &
Minnesota Railroad in accordance with the provisions of the Act of
the General Assembly of the State of Iowa approved March 22,
1858."
If the case stopped here, it would be very clear that the
Page 72 U. S. 687
plaintiff could not recover, for although the state possessed no
title to the lot in dispute at the time of the conveyance to the
Des Moines Navigation & Railroad Company, yet, having an
after-acquired title by the act of Congress, it would enure to the
benefit of the grantees, and so in respect to their conveyance to
the plaintiff. This is in accordance with the laws of the State of
Iowa.
But another act of Congress is relied on by the plaintiff,
passed May 15, 1856, as showing that the United States had already
parted with the lands, of which the lot in question is a part
previous to this Act of 12 July, 1862. It becomes necessary,
therefore, to examine this act. It grants to the State of Iowa, for
the purpose of aiding in the construction of certain railroads
specified, every alternate section of land (designated by odd
numbers) for six sections in width on each side of said roads, with
the following proviso:
"That any and all lands heretofore reserved to the United States
by any act of Congress or
in any other manner by competent
authority for the purpose of aiding in any objects of internal
improvements or for any purpose whatsoever be, and the same is
hereby reserved from the operation of this act except so far as it
may be found necessary to locate the routes of the said railroads
through such reserved lands, in which case the right of way shall
be granted, subject to the approval of the President."
This grant to the state for the benefit of the railroads, it is
admitted, covers the tract within which the lot in question is
situate unless excluded by this proviso. The question turns upon
the construction of the proviso. And in reading it in connection
with the act of 1846, granting lands to the State of Iowa for the
improvement of the Des Moines River, and in connection with the
serious and prolonged conflict of opinion that arose among the
executive officers of the government, extending over a period of
some eight years, and which related to the title above the Raccoon
Fork, in respect to which this act of 1856 was dealing in the grant
for the benefit of the railroads, we think it difficult to resist
the conclusion that Congress, in the passage of the proviso, had
specially in their minds this previous
Page 72 U. S. 688
grant and conflict of opinion concerning it, and intended to
reserve the lands for future disposition if the title under the
first grant should turn out to be defective. The decision of this
Court had not then taken place, though the litigation was probably
pending in the court below in the District of Iowa. The words of
the proviso point almost directly to this grant and to the dispute
arising out of it among the public authorities: "All lands
heretofore reserved," &c., "by any act of Congress, or in any
other manner by competent authority, for the purpose of aiding in
any objects of internal improvements," &c. These improvements
of the Des Moines River were then in progress. Now if it had turned
out that the true construction of the act carried the grant above
the Raccoon Fork, then the lands would have been reserved by act of
Congress, and no further legislation necessary. But, not satisfied
with this, as if to provide for any result in respect to the title
to them, if reserved in any other manner by competent authority,
for the object of internal improvements, then the enacting clause
should not operate to carry them under the new grant.
It has been argued that these lands had not been reserved by
competent authority, and hence that the reservation was nugatory.
As we have seen, they were reserved from sale for the special
purpose of aiding in the improvement of the Des Moines River --
first, by the Secretary of the Treasury, when the Land Department
was under his supervision and control, and again by the Secretary
of the Interior, after the establishment of this department, to
which the duties were assigned, and afterwards continued by this
department under instructions from the President and cabinet.
Besides, if this power was not competent, which we think it was
ever since the establishment of the Land Department, and which has
been exercised down to the present time, the grant of 8 August,
1846, carried along with it by necessary implication not only the
power but the duty of the Land Office to reserve from sale the
lands embraced in the grant. Otherwise its object might be utterly
defeated. Hence, immediately upon a grant's being made by Congress
for any of
Page 72 U. S. 689
these public purposes to a state, notice is given by the
Commissioner of the Land Office to the registers and receivers to
stop all sales, either public or by private entry. Such notice was
given the same day the grant was made, in 1856, for the benefit of
these railroads. That there was a dispute existing as to the extent
of the grant of 1846 in no way affects the question. The serious
conflict of opinion among the public authorities on the subject
made it the duty of the land officers to withhold the sales and
reserve them to the United States till it was ultimately disposed
of.
It should be stated also, in connection with this proviso, that
the improvements of this river were in progress at the time of the
passage of the act of 1856, and had been for years, but were
suspended soon after on account of the refusal of the Land
Department to certify any more sections under the act of 1846, and,
as appears from the certificate of the Governor of Iowa, the sum of
$332,634.04 had already been expended by these defendants under
their contract.
Judgment affirmed.
"
NOTE"
At the same time with the preceding case was adjudged
Des
Moines Navigation & Railroad Company v. Burr, which
NELSON, J., delivering the judgment of the Court, said, "involved
the same questions" decided in it. He referred to the opinion there
given as decisive of them. The judgment was reversed with a
venire de novo.
*
Dubuque & Pacific Railroad
Company v. Litchfield, 23 How. 66.