A bill in equity against the Secretary of the Interior and the
Commissioner of the General Land Office to restrain them from
exercising further jurisdiction with respect to the disposition of
certain public lands, and from further trespassing upon the
plaintiff's right of quiet possession thereof, and to compel the
Secretary to prepare patents therefor to be issued to the plaintiff
in accordance with law, and to the end that the plaintiff's title
may be quieted and freed from cloud, and for further relief,
abates, as to the Secretary, upon his resignation of his office,
and cannot afterwards be maintained against the Commissioner
alone.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a bill in equity, filed January 15, 1896, in the
Supreme Court for the District of Columbia by a corporation of the
State of Oregon against Hoke Smith, Secretary of the Interior, and
Silas W. Lamoreux, Commissioner of the General Land Office, both
alleged in the bill to be citizens and residents of the District of
Columbia, and to be "sued for acts done and threatened by them in
their official capacity, respectively."
Page 165 U. S. 29
The prayer of the bill was
"that the said Hoke Smith, Secretary of the Interior, and Silas
W. Lamoreux, Commissioner of the General Land Office, their
subordinates, and agents, may be restricted and enjoined from
assuming to exercise further jurisdiction with respect to the
disposition of lands described in Oregon Swamp Land Lists No. 30
and No. 31, and from further trespassing upon your orator's right
of quiet possession thereof, and that said defendant Hoke Smith may
be commanded and enjoined to prepare for issuance unto your orator,
in accordance with law, patents for said lands, and to the end that
your orator's title to said lands may be quieted and freed from
cloud, and that such other and further relief may be administered
unto your orator as the peculiar necessities and circumstances of
the case may require and merit."
By the Act of Congress of September 28, 1850, c. 84, entitled
"An act to enable the State of Arkansas and other states to reclaim
the
swamp lands' within their limits," it was enacted that in
each state, the whole of the
"swamp and overflowed lands, made unfit thereby for cultivation,
which shall remain unsold at the passage of this act shall be, and
the same are hereby, granted to said state,"
and that it should be the duty of the Secretary of the Interior,
as soon as might be practicable, "to make out an accurate list and
plats of the lands described as aforesaid, and transmit the same to
the governor of the state," and, at his request,
"cause a patent to be issued to the state therefor; and, on that
patent, the fee simple to said lands shall vest in said state,
subject to the disposal of the legislature thereof."
9 Stat. 519. And by the Act of March 12, 1860, c. 5, the
provisions of the act of 1850 were extended to the Oregon,
"provided that the grant hereby made shall not include any lands
which the government of the United States may have reserved, sold,
or disposed of (in pursuance of any law heretofore enacted) prior
to the confirmation of title to be made under the authority of said
act."
12 Stat. 3.
The leading facts alleged in the bill were as follows: the lands
in question were sold and conveyed by the State of Oregon in 1883
and 1884, and passed by mesne conveyances
Page 165 U. S. 30
to the plaintiff on January 15, 1892, in consideration of the
payment by it of the sum of $19,000. In 1888, these lands, having
previously been selected by the state as swamp and overflowed lands
under the act of 1860, were certified by the Surveyor General of
the United States for Oregon to the Commissioner of the General
Land Office. The Commissioner, in March and April, 1892, prepared
lists, numbered 30 and 31, of these lands as swamp and overflowed
lands, and submitted them to John W. Noble, then Secretary of the
Interior, for his approval. He approved both lists on April 9 and
December 3, 1892, respectively, "subject to any valid adverse
rights that may exist to the tracts of land therein described," and
his approvals were noted upon the records of the General Land
Office and a certified copy of the first list was forwarded to the
Governor of Oregon, who by letter dated May 12, 1892, requested
that a patent of the lands in that list be issued to the state.
Upon a petition filed December 29, 1892, by settlers upon the lands
claiming that they were not swamp and overflowed lands at the date
of the act of 1860, Secretary Noble, on March 2, 1893,
notwithstanding the plaintiff's protest against his jurisdiction to
do so, made an order revoking and cancelling his approvals of the
lists, and directing the Commissioner to take proper steps to make
the revocation and cancellation formally effective. On December 19,
1893, his successor, the defendant Hoke Smith, decided that these
lands were not swamp and overflowed lands, and that the state had
no claim to them as such, and therefore directed the Commissioner
to
"cause all decisions, recommending or holding for cancellation
entries or declaratory statements upon the ground that the lands in
contest were granted to the Oregon as swamp and overflowed lands by
the Act of March 12, 1860, to be set aside and annulled, and the
cases reinstated, and all contests based upon said ground alone to
be dismissed."
17 Land Decisions 571. On October 10, 1894, a motion of the
plaintiff for a review of that decision was overruled by the
Secretary, and on January 5, 1895, his decision was promulgated by
a letter from the Commissioner to the local land offices in
Oregon.
Page 165 U. S. 31
The principal contention in support of the bill was that, by the
acts of Congress of 1850 and 1860, the title to all the swamp and
overflowed lands within the State of Oregon not reserved, sold, or
disposed of prior to the confirmation of title under those acts,
passed to and became vested in the state, subject only to the
identification by the Secretary of the Interior of the specific
lands as "swamp and overflowed lands, made unfit thereby for
cultivation," within the meaning of those acts; that, upon such
identification, evidenced by the making out of accurate lists and
plats of such lands, and the transmission thereof to the Governor
of Oregon, the title became absolute in the state by relation as of
March 12, 1860, and could not be divested by any subsequent action
of the Secretary, and that the duty imposed upon him to cause
patents of lands so identified and listed to be issued to the state
upon the request of the governor was but ministerial.
A general demurrer to the bill was sustained, and a decree
rendered thereon for the defendants, by the Supreme Court of the
District of Columbia, and that decree was affirmed by the Court of
Appeals of the District of Columbia on June 11, 1896, upon the
ground that the whole subject remained under the control of the
Secretary of the Interior until the execution of the patent. 24
Washington Law Reporter 392.
The plaintiff took an appeal to this Court, and pending this
appeal the defendant Hoke Smith, on September 1, 1896, resigned the
office of Secretary of the Interior.
That a petition for a writ of mandamus to a public officer of
the United States abates by his resignation of his office has been
determined by a series of uniform decisions of this Court, and has
for years been considered as so well settled that in some of the
cases no opinion has been filed and no official report published.
Secretary v.
McGarrahan, 9 Wall. 298,
76 U. S. 313;
United States v.
Boutwell, 17 Wall 604,
84 U. S. 609;
Commissioners v. Sellew, 99 U. S. 624,
99 U. S. 626;
United States v. Schurz, 102 U. S. 480,
102 U. S. 484;
United States v. Chandler, 122 U.S. 643;
United States
v. Lamont, 155 U. S. 303,
155 U. S. 306;
United States v. Long, 164 U.S. 701.
The reasons for this conclusion, as stated by Mr. Justice
Page 165 U. S. 32
Strong, delivering the unanimous judgment of the Court in the
leading case of
United States v. Boutwell, which was a
petition by the owner of an order upon the Treasury of the United
States for a writ of mandamus to the Secretary of the Treasury to
pay it, were as follows:
"The office of a writ of mandamus is to compel the performance
of a duty resting upon the person to whom it is sent. . . . If he
be an officer, and the duty be an official one, still the writ is
aimed exclusively against him as a person, and he only can be
punished for disobedience. The writ does not reach the office. It
cannot be directed to it. It is therefore in substance a personal
action, and it rests upon the averred and assumed fact that the
defendant has neglected or refused to perform a personal duty to
the performance of which by him the relator has a clear right.
Hence it is an imperative rule that previous to making application
for a writ to command the performance of any particular act, an
express and distinct demand or request to perform it must have been
made by the relator or prosecutor upon the defendant, and it must
appear that he refused to comply with such demand, either in direct
terms or by conduct from which a refusal can be conclusively
inferred. Thus it is the personal default of the defendant that
warrants impetration of the writ, and if a peremptory mandamus be
awarded, the costs must fall upon the defendant. It necessarily
follows from this that, on the death or retirement from office of
the original defendant, the writ must abate in the absence of any
statutory provision to the contrary. When the personal duty exists
only so long as the office is held, the court cannot compel the
defendant to perform it after his power to perform has ceased. And
if a successor in office may be substituted, he may be mulcted in
costs for the default of his predecessor without any delinquency of
his own. Besides, were a demand made upon him, he might discharge
the duty and render the interposition of the court unnecessary. At
all events, he is not in privity with his predecessor, much less is
he his predecessor's personal representative."
17 Wall.
84 U. S.
607-608.
The case of a public officer of the United States differs in
Page 165 U. S. 33
this respect from that of a municipal board, which is a
continuing corporation (although its individual members may be
changed) and to which in its corporate capacity a writ of mandamus
may be directed. As was said in
Commissioners v. Sellew by
Chief Justice Waite:
"One of the objects in creating such corporations, capable of
suing and being sued and having perpetual succession, is that the
very inconvenience which manifested itself if
Boutwell's
Case may be avoided."
99 U.S.
99 U. S. 627.
And in
Thompson v. United States, Mr. Justice Bradley
said:
"The cases in which it has been held by this Court that an
abatement takes place by the expiration of the term of office have
been those of officers of the government whose alleged delinquency
was personal, and did not involve any charge against the government
whose officers they were. A proceeding against the government would
not lie."
103 U.S.
103 U. S.
484-485.
The main object of the present bill was to compel the defendant
Hoke Smith, as Secretary of the Interior, to prepare patents to be
issued to the plaintiff for the lands in question. The mandatory
injunction prayed for was in effect equivalent to a writ of
mandamus to him. The reasons for holding a suit which has this
object to have abated as to him by his resignation are as
applicable to this bill in equity as to a petition for a writ of
mandamus at common law. Consequently, as against the defendant Hoke
Smith, this suit must be held to have abated by his resignation of
the office of Secretary of the Interior.
It appears to us to be equally clear that the suit cannot be
maintained against the Commissioner of the General Land Office
alone.
By the Revised Statutes of the United States, the Secretary of
the Interior "is charged with the supervision of public business
relating to" among other things, "the public lands, including
mines." The Commissioner of the General Land Office is to
"perform, under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior,
all executive duties appertaining to the surveying and sale of the
public lands of the United States or in any wise respecting such
public lands, and also such as relate
Page 165 U. S. 34
to private claims of land and the issuing of patents for all
grants of land under the authority of the government,"
and likewise, "under the direction of the Secretary of the
Interior, is authorized to enforce and carry into execution, by
appropriate regulations," every part of the provisions of Title 32
of the Revised Statutes relating to public lands not otherwise
specially provided for. Rev.Stat. ยงยง 441, 453, 2478. The phrase
"under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior," thus used
in these statutes, as was said by Mr. Justice Lamar, speaking for
this Court,
"is not meaningless, but was intended as an expression in
general terms of the power of the Secretary to supervise and
control the extensive operations of the Land Department, of which
he is the head. It means that in the important matters relating to
the sale and disposition of the public domain, the surveying of
private land claims, and the issuing of patents thereon, and the
administration of the trusts devolving upon the government, by
reason of the laws of Congress or under treaty stipulations,
respecting the public domain, the Secretary of the Interior is the
supervising agent of the government to do justice to all claimants
and preserve the rights of the people of the United States."
Knight v. United States Land Association, 142 U.
S. 161,
142 U. S.
177-178;
Orchard v. Alexander, 157 U.
S. 372.
The present suit was avowedly brought against Smith as Secretary
and Lamoreux as Commissioner for acts done and threatened by them
in their official character, respectively. The prayer of the bill
was for an injunction against both of them from assuming to
exercise further jurisdiction with respect to the disposition of
the lands in question, and from further trespassing upon the
plaintiff's right of quiet possession thereof, and that the
defendant Smith be commanded to prepare patents therefor to be
issued to the plaintiff in accordance with law and to the end that
the plaintiff's title might be quieted and freed from cloud, and
for further relief.
The purpose of the bill was to control the action of the
Secretary of the Interior; the principal relief sought was against
him, and the relief asked against the Commissioner of the General
land Office was only incidental, and by way
Page 165 U. S. 35
of restraining him from executing the orders of his official
head. To maintain such a bill against the subordinate officer
alone, without joining his superior, whose acts are alleged to have
been unlawful, would be contrary to settle rules of equity
pleading. Calvert on Parties (2 ed.) bk. 3, c. 13.
This is well exemplified by a decision of Lord Chancellor
Hardwicke. Under acts of Parliament, appointing commissioners to
build fifty new churches, appropriating money to support the
ministers, and providing that the moneys appropriated should be
paid to a treasurer, not one of the commissioners, but appointed by
the Crown, and should be by him disbursed and applied according to
orders of the commissioners, Lord Hardwicke held that a bill by a
minister of one of the churches to recover his stipend and to have
a fund in the treasurer's hands invested as required by the acts
could not be maintained against the treasurer alone, without
joining any of the commissioners, and said:
"This is one of the most extraordinary bills I ever remember,
and there is no foundation for relief, either in law or equity. It
is brought against Mr. Blackerby, who is nothing but an officer
under the commissioners for building the fifty new churches. It
would be absurd if a bill should lie against a person who is only
an officer and subordinate to others, and has no directory power. .
. . I should think the commissioners only, and not the treasurer,
ought to have been parties, for it is absurd to make a person who
acts ministerially the sole party."
Vernon v. Blackerby, 2 Atk. 144, 146;
S.C.,
Barnardiston Ch. 377.
This bill cannot be amended by making the present Secretary of
the Interior a defendant, because he was not in office before the
bill was filed, and had no part in the doings complained of.
As against the Commissioner of the General Land Office, the bill
does not strictly abate, as upon the disappearance by death or
resignation of the sole defendant in an action the cause of which
does not survive against representatives or successors. But the
bill cannot be maintained against the Commissioner, because it
shows no ground for relief against him alone, and the Secretary of
the Interior is not and cannot now be made a party.
Page 165 U. S. 36
The objection that the bill cannot be maintained against the
Commissioner alone being decisive of the case, it would be
inappropriate to express an opinion upon any of the graver
questions, fully argued at the bar, touching the jurisdiction of
the court and the merits of the bill, or to leave the record in
such a shape as to appear to foreclose any of those questions. It
is therefore
Ordered that the decree be reversed, and the case remanded,
with directions to dismiss the bill, with costs, for want of proper
parties.
Mr. JUSTICE BREWER and MR. JUSTICE BROWN concurred in the
result.