Shaffer v. Scudday, 60 U.S. 16 (1856)

Syllabus

U.S. Supreme Court

Shaffer v. Scudday, 60 U.S. 19 How. 16 16 (1856)

Shaffer v. Scudday

60 U.S. (19 How.) 16

Syllabus

In 1841, Congress granted to the State of Louisiana 500,000 acres of land for the purposes of internal improvement, and in 1849 granted also the whole of the swamp and overflowed lands which may be found unfit for cultivating.

In both cases, patents were to be issued to individuals under state authority.

In a case of conflict between two claimants under patents granted by the State of Louisiana, this Court has no jurisdiction, under the 25th section of the Judiciary Act, to review the judgment of the Supreme Court of Louisiana given in favor of one of the claimants.


Opinions

U.S. Supreme Court

Shaffer v. Scudday, 60 U.S. 19 How. 16 16 (1856) Shaffer v. Scudday

60 U.S. (19 How.) 16

ERROR TO THE SUPREME

COURT OF LOUISIANA

Syllabus

In 1841, Congress granted to the State of Louisiana 500,000 acres of land for the purposes of internal improvement, and in 1849 granted also the whole of the swamp and overflowed lands which may be found unfit for cultivating.

In both cases, patents were to be issued to individuals under state authority.

In a case of conflict between two claimants under patents granted by the State of Louisiana, this Court has no jurisdiction, under the 25th section of the Judiciary Act, to review the judgment of the Supreme Court of Louisiana given in favor of one of the claimants.

The case is fully stated in the opinion of the Court.

Page 60 U. S. 18

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TANEY delivered the opinion of the Court.

It appears that a petitory action was brought by Scudday, the defendant in error, against Shaffer, the plaintiff in error, to recover a quarter section of land described in the pleadings.

The defendant in error derives his title in the following manner:

By the eighth section of An act of Congress of the 4th September, 1841, the government of the United States granted to each of the several states specified in the act, and among them to Louisiana, 500,000 acres of land for the purposes of internal improvement. The act provided that the selections of the land were to be made in such manner as the legislature of the state should direct, the locations to be made on any public lands, except such as were or might be reserved from sale by any law of Congress or proclamation of the President of the United States. The ninth section of the act provided that the net proceeds of the sales of the lands so granted should be applied to objects of internal improvement within the state such as roads, railways, bridges, canals, and improvement of watercourses and draining of swamps. An act of the Legislature of Louisiana of 1844 provided that warrants for the location of the lands should be sold in the same manner as the lands were located, and it was made the duty of the governor to issue patents for the lands located by warrants whenever he should be satisfied that they had been properly located. The defendant in error, being the holder of such a warrant, located it on

Page 60 U. S. 19

the land claimed in the suit. The location having been approved by the Secretary of the Interior, and a certificate to that effect granted by the register, the Governor of Louisiana issued a patent to the plaintiff, bearing date 12 November, 1852.

The opposing title of plaintiff in error is derived under an Act of Congress of March 2, 1849, and certain acts of the legislature of the state passed to carry into effect the act of Congress. The first section of the act of Congress of 1849 declares

"That to aid the State of Louisiana in constructing the necessary levees and drains to reclaim the swamp and overflowed lands therein, the whole of the swamp and overflowed lands which are or may be found unfit for cultivating shall be, and the same are hereby, granted to the state."

The second section provides

"That as soon as the Secretary of the Treasury shall be advised by the Governor of Louisiana that the state has made the necessary preparations to defray the expenses thereof, he shall cause a personal examination to be made under the direction of the surveyor general thereof, by experienced and faithful deputies, of all the swamp lands therein which are subject to overflow and unfit for cultivation, and a list of the same to be made out and certified by the deputies and the Surveyor General to the Secretary of the Treasury, who shall approve the same so far as they are not claimed and held by individuals, and on that approval, the fee simple to said lands shall vest in the State of Louisiana, subject to the disposal of the legislature thereof, provided, however, that the proceeds of said lands shall be applied exclusively, as far as necessary, to the construction of the levees and drains aforesaid."

On the 21st of March, 1850, the Legislature of Louisiana passed an act to enable the governor to have the swamp and overflowed lands selected, and in 1852 they passed an act giving a preference in entering such lands to those in possession of or cultivating them, and the time of entering them was further extended by an act of 1853. The plaintiff in error entered this land on the 18th day of July, 1853, by virtue of a preference right claimed under that act of the legislature. He was permitted to make this entry at the state land office, in consequence of the Secretary of the Interior's having, on the 14th of April, revoked his approval to the state under the act of 1841 of this and other lands which had been located under warrants sold by the state in conformity to the act of the Legislature of 1844.

The reason assigned by the Secretary of the Interior was that these locations had been made subsequent to the passage of the act of Congress of 1849 granting to the state all the swamp and overflowed lands. He states in his opinion that he considered the words used in the first section of that act as

Page 60 U. S. 20

importing a grant in present and as confirming a right to the land, though other proceedings were necessary to perfect the title, and that when the title was perfected, it had relation back to the date of the grant. His approval to the state of the location of the land in controversy under the internal improvement law of 1841 was revoked, but the land was at the same time approved to the state as having a vested title to it under the act of 1849, and taking effect from the date of the passage of the act.

The controversy between the parties arises upon these two patents, both granted by the State of Louisiana -- the one to Scudday, under the grant made by the act of Congress of 1841 for the purposes of internal improvement, the other to Shaffer, under the grant made by the act of 1849 for the purpose of draining the swamp lands.

The case came regularly before the supreme court of the state, and that court, after stating that it was unnecessary to decide whether the construction placed upon the act of 1849 by the Secretary of the Interior, under which he revoked his approval of Scudday's location, was erroneous or not, proceeded to express their opinion as follows:

"It is certain (said the court) that the legislature could not have disposed of the land as belonging to the state under the provisions of that act [the act of 1849] until she had complied with the conditions imposed on her by the act of Congress and until the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury; but if she had not chosen to avail herself of the right given to her to appropriate these lands as swamp lands by defraying the expenses of locating them, she had still the right of locating them under the internal improvement law of 1841, which was unconditional. The construction of the act of 1849 by the Secretary of the Interior may be strictly correct, and yet it does not follow that the location of a warrant, under the internal improvement law of 1841, which had been approved by the proper department of the government and for which a patent had been subsequently issued by the state, could be revoked so as to destroy the title conferred by the patent. The question would have been different if, after the passage by Congress of the act of 1849, the United States had granted the land away from the State of Louisiana. Such was not the case, and as both the acts of 1841 and of 1849 were grants of land to the state, we cannot go behind the patent which the state has granted. The patent can only be attacked on the ground of error or fraud. It is true that a patent issued against law is void, but in the present case the patent and all the proceedings on which it was based were in conformity to

Page 60 U. S. 21

the laws. As between the government of the United States and the State of Louisiana, a question will arise whether the state is not entitled to an additional quantity of land, to be located under the act of Congress of 1841, in consequence of the swamp lands' having been appropriated for locations of warrants issued under the internal improvement act; but we are of opinion that the title which the state has granted to the plaintiff, and for which she has been paid, is unaffected by the acts of the officers of the United States government and of the state government done since the patent was issued."

Upon these grounds the supreme court of the state gave judgment in favor of Scudday, and this writ of error is brought to revise that decision.

It does not appear from the opinion of the court, as above stated, that any question was decided that would give this Court jurisdiction over its judgment. The land in dispute undoubtedly belonged to the state under the grants made by Congress, and both parties claim title under grants from the state. The construction placed by the Secretary upon the act of 1849, and the revocation of his order approving the location of Scudday, did not and was not intended to revest the land in the United States. On the contrary, it affirmed the title of the state, and its only object was to secure to Louisiana the full benefit of both of the grants made by Congress, and leaving it to the state to dispose of the lands to such persons and in such manner as it should by law direct. It certainly gave no right to the plaintiff in error. He admits the title of the state, and claims under a patent granted by the state. Now whether this patent conveyed to him a title or not depended altogether upon the laws of Louisiana, and not upon the acts of Congress or the acts of any of the officers or authorities of the general government. It was a question, therefore, for the state courts. And the supreme court of the state has decided that this patent could convey no right to the land in question, because the state had parted from its title by a patent previously granted to Scudday, the defendant in error. The right claimed by the plaintiff in error, which was denied to him by the state court, did not, therefore, depend upon any act of Congress or the validity of any authority exercised under the United States, but exclusively upon the laws of Louisiana. And the supreme court of the state has decided that, according to these laws, he had no title, and that the land in question belonged to the grantee of the elder patent.

We have no authority to revise that judgment by writ of error and this writ must therefore be

Dismissed for want of jurisdiction.