The State of Arizona on relation of its Highway Department sued
in the Arizona Supreme Court to prohibit the State Land
Commissioner (who is essentially the trustee of lands granted to
the State for specified public purposes by the United States
pursuant to the New Mexico-Arizona Enabling Act) from enforcing
rules governing the acquisition of rights of way and material sites
in the trust lands. The rules provided that rights of way and
material sites could be granted for an indefinite period after full
payment of the appraised value. The Enabling Act, by such
provisions as those for public notice and public sale, restricts
the manner of disposition of trust lands and provides that no lands
may be sold for less than their appraised value. The Act does not
directly refer to the use by the State itself of trust lands for
purposes not designated in the grant. The State Supreme Court
ordered the Commissioner to grant the material sites and rights of
way without compensation, holding that it may be conclusively
presumed that highways across trust lands always enhance the value
of remaining trust lands in amounts at least equal to the value of
the areas taken.
Held:
1. Consistent with the essential purposes of the Enabling Act
the restrictions on the manner of disposition of trust lands are
not applicable to acquisitions by the State for its highway
program. Pp.
385 U. S.
461-465.
2. The State must compensate the trust in money for the full
appraised value of any material sites or rights of way which it
obtains on or over trust lands, not diminished by the amount of any
enhancement in value of the remaining trust lands. Pp.
385 U. S.
465-470.
99 Ariz. 161,
407 P.2d 747,
reversed and remanded.
Page 385 U. S. 459
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought as an original proceeding in the Supreme
Court of Arizona by the State on the relation of its Highway
Department. The Department seeks to prohibit the application by the
State Land Commissioner of rules governing the acquisition of
rights of way and material sites in federally donated lands held in
trust by the State. [
Footnote
1] The Commissioner's rules provide in pertinent part that
"Rights of Way and Material Sites may be
Page 385 U. S. 460
granted . . . for an indefinite period . . . after full payment
of the appraised value . . . has been made to the State Land
Department. The appraised value . . . shall be determined in
accordance with the principles established in A.R.S. 12-1122."
Rule 12. The Supreme Court of Arizona held that it may be
conclusively presumed that highways constructed across trust lands
always enhance the value of the remaining trust lands in amounts at
least equal to the value of the areas taken. It therefore ordered
the Commissioner to grant without actual compensation material
sites and rights of way upon trust lands. 99 Ariz. 161,
407 P.2d
747.
The lands at issue here are among some 10,790,000 acres granted
by the United States to Arizona in trust for the use and benefit of
designated public activities within the State. [
Footnote 2] The Federal Government, since the
Northwest Ordinance of 1787, has made such grants to States newly
admitted to the Union. [
Footnote
3] Although the terms of these grants differ, at least the most
recent commonly make clear that the United States has a continuing
interest in the administration of both the lands and the funds
which derive from them. The grant involved here thus expressly
requires the Attorney General of the United
Page 385 U. S. 461
States to maintain whatever proceedings may be necessary to
enforce its terms. [
Footnote 4]
We brought this case here because of the importance of the issues
presented both to the United States and to the States which have
received such lands. [
Footnote
5] 384 U.S. 926.
The issues here stem chiefly from ambiguities in the grant
itself. The terms under which the United States provided these
lands were included in the New Mexico-Arizona Enabling Act. 36
Stat. 557. The Act describes with particularity the disposition
Arizona may make of the lands and of the funds derived from them,
but it does not directly refer to the conditions or consequences of
the use by the State itself of the trust lands for purposes not
designated in the grant. Of the issues which may arise from the
Act's silence, we need now reach only two: first, whether Arizona
is permitted to obtain trust lands for such uses without first
satisfying the Act's restrictions on disposition of the land; and
second, what standard of compensation Arizona must employ to
recompense the trust for the land it uses. Both issues require
consideration of the Act's language and history.
I
We turn first to the question of the method by which Arizona may
obtain trust lands for purposes not included in the grant. The
constraints imposed by the Act upon the methods by which trust
lands may be transferred are few and simple. Section 28, which is
reproduced in the
385
U.S. 458app|>Appendix to this opinion, requires, with
exceptions inapplicable here, that lands be sold or
Page 385 U. S. 462
leased only to "the highest and best bidder at a public auction
to be held at the county seat of the county wherein the lands . . .
shall lie. . . ." The section prescribes the terms, form and
frequency of the notice which must be given of the auction. It
requires that no lands be sold for a price less than their
appraised value. The Act imposes two sanctions upon transactions
which fail to satisfy its requirements. First, § 28 provides
broadly that trust lands must be "disposed of in whole or in part
only in manner as herein provided. . . ." It adds that "Disposition
of any of said lands . . . in any manner contrary to the provisions
of this Act, shall be deemed a breach of trust." Finally, it
provides that
"Every sale, lease, conveyance, or contract of or concerning any
of the lands hereby granted or confirmed . . . not made in
substantial conformity with the provisions of this Act shall be
null and void. . . ."
The parties urge, and the state court assumed, that Arizona need
not follow these procedures when it seeks material sites and rights
of way upon trust lands. [
Footnote
6] The Commissioner's rules thus do not require an auction or
other public sale. This view has been taken by other state courts
construing similar grants.
Ross v. Trustees of University of
Wyoming, 30 Wyo. 433,
222 P. 3;
State ex rel. State Highway Commission v. Walker, 61 N.M.
374,
301 P.2d
317. We have concluded, for the reasons which follow, that the
restrictions of the Act are inapplicable to acquisitions by the
State for its highway program.
The Act's silence obliges us to examine its purposes, as
evidenced by its terms and its legislative history, to
determine
Page 385 U. S. 463
whether these restrictions should be imposed here. The grant was
plainly expected to produce a fund, accumulated by sale and use of
the trust lands, with which the State could support the public
institutions designated by the Act. It was not supposed that
Arizona would retain all the lands given it for actual use by the
beneficiaries; the lands were obviously too extensive and too often
inappropriate for the selected purposes. Congress could scarcely
have expected, for example, that many of the 8,000,000 acres of its
grant "for the support of the common schools," all chosen without
regard to topography or school needs, would be employed as building
sites. [
Footnote 7] It intended
instead that Arizona would use the general powers of sale and lease
given it by the Act to accumulate funds with which it could support
its schools.
The central problem which confronted the Act's draftsmen was
therefore to devise constraints which would assure that the trust
received in full fair compensation for trust lands. The method of
transfer and the transferee were material only so far as necessary
to assure that the trust sought and obtained appropriate
compensation. This is confirmed by the legislative history of the
Enabling Act. All the restrictions on the use and disposition of
the trust lands, including those on the powers of sale and lease,
were first inserted by the Senate Committee on the Territories.
[
Footnote 8] Senator Beveridge,
the committee's chairman, made clear on the floor
Page 385 U. S. 464
of the Senate that the committee's determination to require the
restrictions sprang from its fear that the trust would be exploited
for private advantage. He emphasized that the committee was
influenced chiefly by the repeated violations of a similar grant
made to New Mexico in 1898. [
Footnote 9] The violations had there allegedly consisted
of private sales at unreasonably low prices, and the committee
evidently hoped to prevent such depredations here by requiring
public notice and sale. [
Footnote 10] The restrictions were thus intended to
guarantee, by preventing particular abuses through the prohibition
of specific practices, that the trust received appropriate
compensation for trust lands. We see no need to read the Act to
impose these restrictions on transfers in which the abuses they
were intended to prevent are not likely to occur, and in which the
trust may in another and more effective fashion be assured full
compensation.
Further, we should not fail to recognize that, were we to
require Arizona to follow precisely these procedures, we would
sanction an empty formality. There would not often be others to bid
for the material sites and rights of way which the State might
seek. More important, even if such bidders appeared and proved
successful, nothing in the grant would prevent Arizona from
thereafter condemning the land which it had failed to purchase; the
anticipation of condemnation would leave the auction without any
real significance. We cannot see that the trust would materially
benefit from this circuity.
Page 385 U. S. 465
We conclude that it is consonant with the Act's essential
purposes to exclude from the restrictions in question the
transactions at issue here. The trust will be protected, and its
purposes entirely satisfied, if the State is required to provide
full compensation for the land it uses. We hold, therefore, that
Arizona need not offer public notice or conduct a public sale when
it seeks trust lands for its highway program. The State may instead
employ the procedures established by the Commissioner's rules, or
any other procedures reasonably calculated to assure the integrity
of the trust and to prevent misapplication of its lands and
funds.
II
The second issue here is the standard of compensation which
Arizona must employ to recompense the trust for the land it
acquires. The Land Commissioner's rules provide simply that the
State must pay the appraised value, as measured by the State's
condemnation statute, of the right of way or material site. The
Highway Department urges, and the Arizona Supreme Court held, that
nothing need ever be actually paid, since it may be conclusively
presumed that all highways enhance the value of the remaining trust
lands in amounts at least equal to the value of the lands which
were taken. The United States, as
amicus curiae, suggests
that the Highway Department be obliged to pay the land's appraised
value, but that it be permitted to reduce that sum by the amount of
any enhancement shown in the value of the remaining trust lands.
The rule urged by the United States differs from that adopted by
the state court only in that the United States would not permit the
Highway Department to presume enhancement, but would instead
require that it be established by the Department in each instance
with reasonable certainty and precision. Under this rule,
enhancement would have to be individually
Page 385 U. S. 466
proved and computed for small tracts of land checkered over the
entire State.
We are urged by the United States to determine only the validity
of the rule of law stated by the Arizona Supreme Court, and to
defer the broader question of whether enhancement may ever be
permitted to diminish the actual compensation payable to the trust.
The United States emphasizes that the broader issue does not
directly arise under the Commissioner's rules, since the Arizona
condemnation statute incorporated by those rules does not permit
benefits to reduce the compensation payable for the condemned
land's fair market value. [
Footnote 11] We are unable to take so narrow a view. The
rule adopted by the state court clearly stemmed from, and depended
upon, the premise that enhancement may be balanced against the
value of the trust lands taken by the State. If we severed the
conclusion from its premise, we would halt short of a full
adjudication of the validity of the Commissioner's rules, and
unnecessarily prolong the litigation of this important question. We
have therefore reached the broader issue, and have concluded that
the terms and purposes of the grant do not permit Arizona to
diminish the actual compensation, meaning thereby monetary
compensation, payable to the trust by the amount of any enhancement
in the value of the remaining trust lands.
The Enabling Act unequivocally demands both that the trust
receive the full value of any lands transferred from it, and that
any funds received be employed only for the purposes for which the
land was given. First, it requires that before trust lands or other
products are offered for sale they must be "appraised at their true
value,"
Page 385 U. S. 467
and that "no sale or other disposal . . . shall be made for a
consideration less than the value so ascertained. . . ." [
Footnote 12] The Act originally
provided in addition that trust lands should not be sold for a
price less than a statutory minimum. [
Footnote 13] Second, it imposes a series of careful
restrictions upon the use of trust funds. As this Court has noted,
the Act contains "a specific enumeration of the purposes for which
the lands were granted and the enumeration is necessarily exclusive
of any other purpose."
Ervien v. United States,
251 U. S. 41,
251 U. S. 47.
The Act thus specifically forbids the use of "money or thing of
value directly or indirectly derived" [
Footnote 14] from trust lands for any purposes other
than those for which that parcel of land was granted. It requires
the creation of separate trust accounts for each of the designated
beneficiaries, prohibits the transfer of funds among the accounts,
and directs with great precision their administration.
"Words more clearly designed . . . to create definite and
specific trusts and to make them in all respects separate and
independent of each other could hardly have been chosen."
United States v. Ervien, 246 F. 277, 279. All these
restrictions in combination indicate Congress' concern both that
the grants provide the most substantial support possible to the
beneficiaries and that only those beneficiaries profit from the
trust.
This is confirmed by the background and legislative history of
the Enabling Act. The restrictions placed upon land grants to the
States became steadily more rigid and specific in the 50 years
prior to this Act, as Congress
Page 385 U. S. 468
sought to require prudent management, and thereby to preserve
the usefulness of the grants for their intended purposes. [
Footnote 15] The Senate Committee on
the Territories, with the assistance of the Department of Justice,
[
Footnote 16] adopted for
the New Mexico-Arizona Act the most satisfactory of the
restrictions contained in the earlier grants. Its premise was that
the grants cannot "be too carefully safeguarded for the purpose for
which they are appropriated." [
Footnote 17] Senator Beveridge described the restrictions
as "quite the most important item" in the Enabling Act, and
emphasized that his committee believed that
"we were giving the lands to the States for specific purposes,
and that restrictions should be thrown about it which would assure
its being used for those purposes. [
Footnote 18]"
Nothing in these restrictions is explicitly addressed to
acquisitions by the State for its other public activities; the
Enabling Act is, as we have noted, entirely silent on these
questions. We must nevertheless conclude that the purposes of
Congress require that the Act's designated beneficiaries "derive
the full benefit" [
Footnote
19] of the grant. The conclusive presumption of enhancement
which the Arizona Supreme Court found does not in our view
adequately assure fulfillment of that purpose, particularly in the
context of lands that are as variegated and far-flung as those
comprised in this grant. And we think that the more particularized
showing of enhancement advocated by the United States, resting as
it largely would upon the forecasts of experts which, by
nature,
Page 385 U. S. 469
are subject to the imponderables and hazards of the future, also
falls short of assuring accomplishment of the basic intendment of
Congress. Acceptance of either of these courses for reimbursing the
trust in these circumstances might well result in diminishing the
benefits conferred by Congress and in effect deflecting a portion
of them to the State's highway program. [
Footnote 20]
We hold therefore that Arizona must actually compensate the
trust in money [
Footnote 21]
for the full appraised value of any material sites or rights of way
which it obtains on or over trust lands. [
Footnote 22] This standard most nearly reproduces the
results of the auction prescribed by the
Page 385 U. S. 470
Act, and most consistently reflects the essential purposes of
the grant.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of Arizona is accordingly
reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings not
inconsistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
This action is in form and substance a controversy between two
agencies of the State of Arizona, both formally represented by the
State's Attorney General. We have nonetheless concluded that this
is a case with which we may properly deal. The Land Commissioner is
apparently a substantially independent state officer, appointed for
a term of years and removable only for cause. He is essentially the
trustee of the trust at issue here, with custody of the trust
lands. In addition, both the Commissioner and the Highway
Department are represented by special counsel appointed by the
Attorney General to advocate the divergent positions of the
parties.
[
Footnote 2]
The grants consisted of four sections in each township for the
support of common schools, plus specified acreages for other
designated purposes. The other acreages were granted for the
support of agricultural and mechanical colleges, a school of mines,
military institutes, the payment of bonds, miners' hospitals,
penitentiaries, and similar purposes. Of the 10,790,000 acres
granted to Arizona for all designated uses, some 9,180,000 acres
were earmarked for various educational purposes, of which some
8,000,000 acres were given for the support of common schools.
[
Footnote 3]
Between 1803 and 1962, the United States granted a total of some
330,000,000 acres to the States for all purposes. Of these, some
78,000,000 acres were given in support of common schools. The
Public Lands, Senate Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs,
88th Cong., 1st Sess., 60 (Comm. Print 1963).
[
Footnote 4]
36 Stat. 575.
[
Footnote 5]
Nine States urged as
amici curiae that we review the
judgment below. One of the nine, New Mexico, received lands in
trust under the very grant in issue here. The Supreme Court of New
Mexico has held in closely similar circumstances that actual
compensation must be paid to the trust.
State ex rel. State
Highway Commission v. Walker, 61 N.M. 374,
301 P.2d
317.
[
Footnote 6]
In addition, the court suggested that the restrictions of the
Enabling Act are inapplicable here because the State obtains less
than a fee interest. This contention is plainly foreclosed by the
language of § 28, by which "Every sale, lease, conveyance, or
contract of or concerning any of the lands" is void unless in
substantial conformity with the Act.
[
Footnote 7]
The school lands were granted according to the rigid
checkerboard pattern of the federal survey. Four sections per
township were granted by number for the support of common schools,
instead of the one section per township ordinarily given in the
earlier grants, because the unappropriated lands in Arizona and New
Mexico were largely of so little value. Orfield, Federal Land
Grants to the States 45.
[
Footnote 8]
S.Rep. No. 454, 61st Cong., 2d Sess., 18.
[
Footnote 9]
Remarks of Senator Beveridge, 45 Cong.Rec. 8227.
[
Footnote 10]
Ibid. These violations culminated in a series of lawsuits
brought by the Department of Justice against those privy to them.
These lawsuits were pending when the Enabling Act was under study
by Congress. The importance of this episode is also indicated in
the committee's report. S.Rep. No. 454, 61st Cong., 2d Sess.,
19-20.
[
Footnote 11]
Ariz.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 12-1122. The statute permits benefits to
reduce any damages caused by severance to the uncondemned portions
of a parcel of land, but not to reduce the compensation paid for
the land which is condemned.
[
Footnote 12]
36 Stat. 574.
[
Footnote 13]
Ibid. The Act fixed a minimum price of $3 per acre in
Arizona. This requirement was removed by the Act of June 5, 1936.
49 Stat. 1477. The Act still requires that land "susceptible of
irrigation" under federal or other projects not be sold for less
than $25 per acre. 36 Stat. 574.
[
Footnote 14]
36 Stat. 574.
[
Footnote 15]
Orfield, Federal Land Grants to the States 48-52.
[
Footnote 16]
S.Rep. No. 454, 61st Cong., 2d Sess., 20.
[
Footnote 17]
Ibid.
[
Footnote 18]
Remarks of Senator Beveridge, 45 Cong.Rec. 8227.
[
Footnote 19]
Letter from former Secretary of the Interior Garfield to the
House Committee on the Territories. H.R.Rep. No. 152, 61st Cong.,
2d Sess., 3.
[
Footnote 20]
Despite widespread use of the value of benefits in computing
condemnation awards, the various rules adopted for that purpose
have created confusion and difficulties.
See Haar &
Hering, The Determination of Benefits in Land Acquisition, 51
Calif.L.Rev. 833. These problems would be aggravated in the context
of this situation, since the benefits would have to be individually
computed for tracts of land scattered over the entire State.
[
Footnote 21]
We do not mean to suggest that deferred payment arrangements
might not be appropriate.
Cf. the provisions of § 28
(
see 385
U.S. 458app|>Appendix):
"no sale or other disposal thereof shall be made for a
consideration less than the value so ascertained, . . . nor upon
credit unless accompanied by ample security, and the legal title
shall not be deemed to have passed until the consideration shall
have been paid."
Nor do we mean that exchanges, in the situations in which they
are permitted by the Act, would not be appropriate.
Cf.
the provisions of § 28 (
see 385
U.S. 458app|>Appendix):
"The State of Arizona is authorized to exchange any lands owned
by it for other lands, public or private, under such regulations as
the legislature thereof may prescribe:
Provided, That such
exchanges involving public lands may be made only as authorized by
Acts of Congress and regulations thereunder."
[
Footnote 22]
We are informed by counsel that, over a period of years, Arizona
has obtained the use of large areas of trust lands on bases that
may not have accorded with those set forth in this opinion. We wish
to make it plain that we do not reach either the validity of any
such transfers or the obligations of the State, if any, with
respect thereto.
|
385
U.S. 458app|
APPENDIX TO OPINION OF THE COURT
"
SECTION 28 OF NEW MEXICO-ARIZONA"
"
ENABLING ACT, AS AMENDED"
"Sec. 28. That it is hereby declared that all lands hereby
granted, including those which, having been heretofore granted to
the said Territory, are hereby expressly transferred and confirmed
to the said State, shall be by the said State held in trust, to be
disposed of in whole or in part only in manner as herein provided
and for the several objects specified in the respective granting
and confirmatory provisions, and that the natural products and
money proceeds of any of said lands shall be subject to the same
trusts as the lands producing the same."
"Disposition of any of said lands, or of any money or thing of
value directly or indirectly derived therefrom, for any object
other than for which such particular lands, or the lands from which
such money or thing of value shall have been derived, were granted
or confirmed, or in any manner contrary to the provisions of this
Act, shall be deemed a breach of trust."
"No mortgage or other encumbrance of the said lands, or any part
thereof, shall be valid in favor of any person or for any purpose
or under any circumstances whatsoever. Said lands shall not be sold
or leased, in whole or in part, except to the highest and best
bidder at a public auction to be held at the county seat of the
county wherein the lands to be affected, or the major portion
thereof, shall lie, notice of which public auction shall first
have
Page 385 U. S. 471
been duly given by advertisement, which shall set forth the
nature, time, and place of the transaction to be had, with a full
description of the lands to be offered, and be published once each
week for not less than ten successive weeks in a newspaper of
general circulation published regularly at the State capital, and
in that newspaper of like circulation which shall then be regularly
published nearest to the location of the lands so offered; nor
shall any sale or contract for the sale of any timber or other
natural product of such lands be made, save at the place, in the
manner, and after the notice by publication provided for sales and
leases of the lands themselves. Nothing herein contained shall
prevent: (1) the leasing of any of the lands referred to in this
section, in such manner as the Legislature of the State of Arizona
may prescribe, for grazing, agricultural, commercial, and homesite
purposes, for a term of ten years or less; (2) the leasing of any
of said lands, in such manner as the Legislature of the State of
Arizona may prescribe, whether or not also leased for grazing and
agricultural purposes, for mineral purposes, other than for the
exploration, development, and production of oil, gas, and other
hydrocarbon substances, for a term of twenty years or less; (3) the
leasing of any said lands, whether or not also leased for other
purposes, for the exploration, development, and production of oil,
gas and other hydrocarbon substances on, in, or under said lands
for an initial term of twenty years or less and as long thereafter
as oil, gas or other hydrocarbon substance may be procured
therefrom in paying quantities, the leases to be made in any
manner, with or without advertisement, bidding, or appraisement,
and under such terms and provisions as the Legislature of the State
of Arizona may prescribe, the terms and provisions to include a
reservation of a royalty to said State of not less than 12 1/2
percentum of production; or (4) the Legislature of the State of
Arizona from providing by proper laws for the
Page 385 U. S. 472
protection of lessees of said lands, whereby such lessees shall
be protected in their rights to their improvements (including water
rights) in such manner that in case of lease or sale of said lands
to other parties the former lessee shall be paid by the succeeding
lessee or purchaser the value of such improvements and rights
placed thereon by such lessee."
"All lands, leaseholds, timber, and other products of land,
before being offered, shall be appraised at their true value, and
no sale or other disposal thereof shall be made for a consideration
less than the value so ascertained, nor upon credit unless
accompanied by ample security, and the legal title shall not be
deemed to have passed until the consideration shall have been
paid."
"No lands shall be sold for less than their appraised value, and
no lands which are or shall be susceptible of irrigation under any
projects now or hereafter completed or adopted by the United States
under legislation for the reclamation of lands, or under any other
project for the reclamation of lands, shall be sold at less than
twenty-five dollars per acre:
Provided, That said State,
at the request of the Secretary of the Interior, shall from time to
time relinquish such of its lands to the United States as at any
time are needed for irrigation works in connection with any such
government project. And other lands in lieu thereof are hereby
granted to said State, to be selected from lands of the character
named and in the manner prescribed in section twenty-four of this
Act."
"The State of Arizona is authorized to exchange any lands owned
by it for other lands, public or private, under such regulations as
the legislature thereof may prescribe:
Provided, That such
exchanges involving public lands may be made only as authorized by
Acts of Congress and regulations thereunder."
"There is hereby reserved to the United States and excepted from
the operation of any and all grants made or
Page 385 U. S. 473
confirmed by this Act to said proposed State all land actually
or prospectively valuable for the development of water power or
power for hydroelectric use or transmission and which shall be
ascertained and designated by the Secretary of the Interior within
five years after the proclamation of the President declaring the
admission of the State; and no lands so reserved and excepted shall
be subject to any disposition whatsoever by said State, and any
conveyance or transfer of such land by said State or any officer
thereof shall be absolutely null and void within the period above
named; and in lieu of the land so reserved to the United States and
excepted from the operation of any of said grants there be, and is
hereby, granted to the proposed State an equal quantity of land to
be selected from land of the character named and in the manner
prescribed in section twenty-four of this Act."
"A separate fund shall be established for each of the several
objects for which the said grants are hereby made or confirmed, and
whenever any moneys shall be in any manner derived from any of said
land the same shall be deposited by the state treasurer in the fund
corresponding to the grant under which the particular land
producing such moneys was by this Act conveyed or confirmed. No
moneys shall ever be taken from one fund for deposit in any other,
or for any object other than that for which the land producing the
same was granted or confirmed. The state treasurer shall keep all
such moneys invested in safe, interest-bearing securities, which
securities shall be approved by the governor and secretary of state
of said proposed State, and shall at all times be under a good and
sufficient bond or bonds conditioned for the faithful performance
of his duties in regard thereto, as defined by this Act and the
laws of the State not in conflict herewith. "
Page 385 U. S. 474
"Every sale, lease, conveyance, or contract of or concerning any
of the lands hereby granted or confirmed, or the use thereof or the
natural products thereof, not made in substantial conformity with
the provisions of this Act shall be null and void, any provision of
the constitution or laws of the said State to the contrary
notwithstanding."
"It shall be the duty of the Attorney General of the United
States to prosecute, in the name of the United States and in its
courts, such proceedings at law or in equity as may from time to
time be necessary and appropriate to enforce the provisions hereof
relative to the application and disposition of the said lands and
the products thereof and the funds derived therefrom."
"Nothing herein contained shall be taken as in limitation of the
power of the State or of any citizen thereof to enforce the
provisions of this Act."