On the 8th of August, 1846, a grant of land was made to the
Territory 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, in said territory, one equal moiety, in alternate
sections, of the public lands remaining unsold and not otherwise
disposed of, encumbered, or appropriated in a strip five miles in
width on each side of said river, to be selected within said
territory by an agent to be appointed by the governor thereof,
subject to the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury of the
United States.
On the 15th of May, 1856, Congress passed in act granting to the
State of Iowa, for the purpose of aiding in the construction of a
railroad from Dubuque to a point on the Missouri near Sioux City,
every alternate section of land, designated by odd numbers, for six
sections in width on each side of said road.
The State of Iowa regranted the lands to the Dubuque &
Pacific Railroad Company.
The land in question is claimed under these two acts by the
parties respectively. The title held under the act of 1846 must
prevail, provided the grant extended to lands above the Raccoon
Fork.
This Court has jurisdiction to construe this act in the case now
before it, the proceedings before the Executive Department,
extending through more than ten years, not being sufficient either
to conclude the title or to control the construction of the
act.
Those proceedings stated.
The grant was confined to lands between the mouth of Des Moines
River and Raccoon Fork; that was the river to be improved, on each
side of which the strip of land granted was to lie. The historical
circumstances connected with the grant sustain this view.
All grants of this description are strictly construed against
the grantees; nothing passes but what is conveyed in clear and
explicit language, and as the rights here claimed are derived
entirely from the act of Congress, the donation stands on the same
footing of a grant by the public to a private company, the terms of
which must be plainly expressed in the statute, and if not thus
expressed, they cannot be implied.
The claimant, under the act of 1846, cannot be considered as an
innocent purchaser. The act of Congress was a grant to Iowa of an
undivided moiety of the lands below Raccoon Fork, and the officers
of the Executive Department had no further authority than to make
partition of those lands. Having extended their acts to lands lying
outside of the boundaries, their attempts to make partition were
merely nugatory.
The Court is satisfied from evidence before it that this is not
merely a fictitious action.
Page 64 U. S. 67
In order that the reader may the more readily understand the
question involved, he is requested to make a
quasi-map for
himself according to the following directions:
Take a page of paper, upon the eastern and western sides of
which draw two lines from north to south, the former representing
the Mississippi and the latter the Missouri Rivers. Then draw four
parallel lines, equidistant from each other, from east to west,
calling the southern the state line, the next above it the "first
correction line," the third the "second correction line," and the
fourth the "north boundary of Iowa." Then draw a diagonal line from
the northwest to the southeast corner, which may be supposed to
represent the Des Moines River. From the southeast corner, make a
dotted line on each side of, and at a small distance from, the
diagonal line, as far as the intersection with the first
correctional line, at which is the Raccoon Fork. The space included
within these dotted lines is conceded to have been granted by the
act of 1846. Continue these dotted lines to the second correctional
line, and the space thus included will cover lands which have been
conditionally certified by the United States, and which are also
claimed under the construction of the grant of 1846, as contended
for by the counsel of Litchfield, the defendant in error.
Continuing still further the dotted lines to the boundary, they
will include the land which the same construction would give to the
claimants under the act of 1846, who contended for the right of
running up the river from its mouth upon both sides of it.
Now draw two dotted lines from east to west on each side of the
second correctional line, which will include the grant to the
Dubuque & Pacific Railroad Company, and within the space where
these dotted lines clash, was the land in dispute,
viz.,
section one, in township eighty-eight north, range twenty-nine west
of the fifth principal meridian. It was conceded in the argument
that Litchfield, who brought the suit, was entitled to recover if
the grant of 1846 ran up the river above the Raccoon Fork. The
claim of the railroad company was
Page 64 U. S. 68
that the grant did not extend above that point, in which case
their title to the section in controversy was undoubted. There was
an agreed statement of facts in the court below, which covered
upwards of forty pages of the record. The court decided that the
right to the land claimed was in the plaintiff; from which decision
the railroad company brought the case up to this Court.
Page 64 U. S. 83
MR. JUSTICE CATRON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The land in controversy lies within five miles of the Des Moines
River, and within the limits of what was the Iowa Territory when
the act of Congress of 1846 was passed making the grant to improve
the navigation of the Des Moines River from its mouth to the
Raccoon Fork, but the land sued for lies nearly sixty miles above
the mouth of that fork.
Litchfield, the plaintiff below, claims by virtue of a title
derived from the State of Iowa, acting as trustee of the Des Moines
River Fund.
The Dubuque & Pacific Railroad Company is in possession of
the section of land, under a grant from Congress for the purpose of
constructing a railroad from Dubuque, on the Mississippi River, to
a point on the Missouri River near Sioux City. This grant was made
to the State of Iowa in 1856, and is for every alternate section,
designated by odd numbers, for six sections in width on each side
of the road. The road was located, the lands designated by the
United States, and accepted by Iowa, and then they were transferred
to the railroad company by the Legislature of that state. The
section in dispute is one of those vested in the railroad company.
This is the younger and inferior title, if the first grant for
improving
Page 64 U. S. 84
the river extends along its whole length, and the material
question in this case is whether the grant made by the Act of
Congress of August 8, 1846, for the river improvement, is limited
to lands lying next the river, and below the Raccoon Fork. And
although this depends on a true construction of the act, still it
becomes necessary to give a brief historical statement of the
proceedings before the Executive Department respecting this claim,
extending through more than ten years; these proceedings being
relied on either to conclude the title or to control the
construction of the act of Congress.
They are as follows:
By the Act of Congress approved August 8, 1846, a grant of land
was made to the Territory 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 in said territory, one equal moiety, in alternate sections, of
the public lands remaining unsold and not otherwise disposed of,
encumbered, or appropriated in a strip five miles in width on each
side of said river, to be selected within said territory, by an
agent to be appointed by the governor thereof, subject to the
approval of the Secretary of the Treasury of the United
States."
The 4th section of that act provides that the lands shall become
the property of the State of Iowa on her admission into the Union,
which was very soon expected to occur. The Governor of Iowa was
notified by the Commissioner of the General Land Office of this
act, soon after its passage,
viz., October 17, 1846, by
letter, in which it is stated that
"under the grant, the territory is entitled to the vacant lands,
in alternate sections, within five miles on each side of the Des
Moines River, from the northern boundary of Missouri to the Raccoon
Fork."
No objection to this construction was then made by the state
authorities, and the agent of the state proceeded to make the
selections within the limits above stated.
No question as to the extent of this grant arose until nearly
two years after. It appears, however, that a letter dated February
23, 1848, from Commissioner Young, did not adhere
Page 64 U. S. 85
to the restrictions mentioned in the first letter, but its terms
seemed to concede to it a greater extent. And in 1849, this
question was brought to the attention of the Secretary of the
Treasury, by the delegation of the state in Congress, they claiming
that the state was entitled to land along the whole course of the
river to its source. In reply, March 2, 1849, the Secretary, Mr.
Walker, expresses an opinion that the "grant extends on both sides
of the river from its source to its mouth, but not into lands on
the river in the state of Missouri." This opinion conceded that
nine hundred thousand acres above the Raccoon Fork was within the
grant.
In conformity with this view of Mr. Walker, selections of lands
above the fork were reported by the Commissioner of the General
Land Office, for confirmation, to the Secretary of the Interior,
Mr. Ewing, the supervision of the public lands having passed from
the Treasury to the Interior Department. Mr. Ewing, upon the ground
that the opinion of Mr. Walker had not been carried into effect,
held that the same was open for revision, and not concurring
therein, refused to approve the selections. But, as Congress was
then in session, and might "extend the grant," ordered a suspension
of action in the matter.
From this decision of Mr. Ewing an appeal was taken in 1850 to
the President, by whom the matter was referred to the Attorney
General, Mr. Johnson who, in his opinion of July 19, 1850,
construed the grant as extending above the Raccoon Fork.
No action appears to have been taken under this opinion of Mr.
Johnson, and the question remained open at the accession of the
next President, Mr. Fillmore, when it was submitted to the Attorney
General, Mr. Crittenden, who, on the 30th June, 1851, replied that
the letter of Mr. Walker had no binding effect on his successor,
being but an opinion expressed, not an act done; that the opinions
of Attorney Generals are merely advisory; and that the grant, in
his opinion, was limited to the lands below the fork. In this
opinion it appears that Mr. Stuart (then Secretary of the Interior)
concurred, but afterwards, on the 29th October, 1851, he addressed
the Commissioner
Page 64 U. S. 86
of the General Land Office on the subject, and directed the
selections above the Raccoon Fork to be reported for his approval,
for the reasons and upon the conditions therein stated,
viz.,
"that the question involved partakes more of a judicial than of
an executive character, which must ultimately be determined by the
judicial tribunals of the country."
In conformity with this decision, lists of lands above the fork
were submitted by the Commissioner in October, 1851, and March,
1852, and approved by Mr. Stuart in accordance with the views
expressed in his letter of the 29th October, 1851. Acting under
this authority, the Commissioner, in 1853, submitted lists to
Secretary McClelland also, which were approved. The subject was
again brought before the Secretary of the Interior in 1856, and by
him referred to Attorney General Cushing. Mr. Cushing in his reply
of 29th May, 1856, advised that a proposition set forth by him be
submitted to the state for a final adjustment of the matter. This
proposition was not accepted by the state, and in 1858 the subject
was laid before Attorney General Black, whose opinion clearly
restricted the grant to the river below the Raccoon Fork, that
being in accordance with the construction originally given to it at
the General Land Office. On mature consideration, we are of opinion
that the title of neither party has been affected by the
proceedings in the Land Office, or by the opinions of the officers
of the Executive Department, but that the claims of the parties
under the two acts of Congress must be determined by the
construction to be given to those acts. This we are required to do
in deciding this cause.
The caption of the act of 1846 informs us that the donation was
made to aid in the improvement of the navigation "of the Des Moines
River," and the body of it grants to the territory and state
alternate sections, to improve the navigation "of the Des Moines
River, from its mouth to the Raccoon Fork," in a strip five miles
in width on each side of "said river." And we are further told,
section 3d, that
"The said River Des Moines shall forever remain a public highway
for the use of the government of the United States, free from any
toll or other charge whatever for any property of the United
States,
Page 64 U. S. 87
or persons in their service, passing through or along the
same."
What
navigable river was to be improved and was in the
contemplation of Congress in 1846, when the northern portion of
Iowa was a wilderness? Surely not the small streams and brooks
reaching into Minnesota Territory, as is here claimed.
Congress recognized the Des Moines River, over which a free
passage was secured, to be a stream emptying into the Mississippi,
and from its mouth to the Raccoon Fork was the "said river," on
each side of which the strip of land granted was to lie.
As proof of which, we refer to the following facts:
The bill was introduced into the House of Representatives by Mr.
Dodge, the Delegate from Iowa Territory, and was the subject of a
report by the Committee on Public Lands, which report is a document
in the case agreed, and the facts therein stated are admitted.
Among these facts, it appears by a previous report of Captain
Fremont, who had officially explored the Des Moines River that from
its mouth to the Raccoon Fork was two hundred and three miles; that
it presented no obstacles to navigation that could not be overcome,
at a slight expense, by the removal of loose stones at some points,
and the construction of artificial banks at some few others, so as
to destroy the abrupt bends, and that this was all that would be
required to render it navigable; that the variable nature of the
bed and the velocity of the current would keep the channel
constantly clear.
The committee's report states that the country is occupied and
cultivated as high up as the Raccoon Fork, and that a clear and
uninterrupted navigation could be secured at an expenditure not
great when compared with the object; that the land appropriated by
the bill is similar in its character and object to many grants
already made by Congress for other Western territories and states,
and at the same time less in quantity, but it is believed that it
will be sufficient to accomplish the desired improvement, and as
evidence of this, Captain Fremont's statement is relied on. The
committee was, however, of the opinion, that locks and dams might
be required at some of the ripples.
Page 64 U. S. 88
Accompanying this report, and as a part of it, is a letter from
the Commissioner of the General Land Office, obtained by Mr. Dodge,
dated May 5, 1846, in which it is officially stated,
"That the amount of unsold land within five miles on each side
of the Des Moines River, from its mouth to the Raccoon Fork,
proposed to be granted to the Territory of Iowa by House
bill No. 106, is estimated at 261,000 acres."
The bill No. 106, as reported, was passed into the law before
us. When we carry with us the fact that the 261,000 acres of land
were surveyed, and the plats recorded in the General Land Office,
to which surveys the Commissioner's letter referred, it is plain
that the river, from its mouth to the Raccoon Fork, was, in the
view of Congress, as manifestly as if the outlines of the tract or
strip had been given by a plan in connection with the river. Of
this we have no doubt, but if we had doubts from any obscurity of
the act of Congress, a settled rule of construction would determine
the controversy. All grants of this description are strictly
construed against the grantees; nothing passes but what is conveyed
in clear and explicit language; and as the rights here claimed are
derived entirely from the act of Congress, the donation stands on
the same footing of a grant by the public to a private company, the
terms of which must be plainly expressed in the statute; and if not
thus expressed, they cannot be implied.
Charles
River Bridge v. Warren Bridge, 11 Pet. 420.
We concur with the following citation and reasoning of the
plaintiff's counsel, to-wit: Lord Ellenborough, in his judgment in
Gildart v. Gladstone, 1 East. 675, an action for Liverpool
dock dues, says:
"If the words would fairly admit of different meanings, it would
be right to adopt that which is more favorable to the interest of
the public, and against that of the company, because the company,
in bargaining with the public, ought to take care to express
distinctly what payments they are to receive, and because the
public ought not to be charged unless it be clear that it was so
intended."
"The reason of the above rule is obvious -- parties seeking
grants for private purposes usually draw the bills making them. If
they do not make the language sufficiently explicit and
Page 64 U. S. 89
clear to pass everything that is intended to be passed, it is
their own fault, while, on the other hand, such a construction has
a tendency to prevent parties from inserting ambiguous language for
the purpose of taking, by ingenious interpretation and insinuation,
that which cannot be obtained by plain and express terms."
The second ground relied on in support of Litchfield's title is
that he is an innocent purchaser from the State of Iowa of land
conceded to belong to the improvement fund by the officers and
agents of the United States, and having been certified as part of
the grant, and as being one of the odd sections belonging to Iowa,
the principal is bound by the acts of his agents, and that these
binding acts cannot be revoked at the pleasure of the Secretary of
the Interior, as is here assumed to be done.
We have set forth the proceedings on this claim, and have
already expressed the opinion that the courts of justice are not
concluded by them. The principal reason, however, why the
conveyance to Litchfield under the river improvement grant cannot
be upheld is this: the act of Congress was a direct grant to Iowa
in fee of an undivided moiety of the whole tract lying on each side
of the river from the Raccoon Fork to the Missouri line. Congress
had the undoubted power to make the grant and vest the fee.
No authority was conferred on the executive officers
administering the public lands to do more than make partition
between the tenants in common, Iowa and the United States, in the
manner prescribed by the act of Congress.
The premises in dispute lie sixty miles beyond the limits of the
tract granted; it was therefore impossible to make partition, under
this grant, of lands lying outside of its boundaries; and all
attempts to do so were merely nugatory. It follows that the
plaintiff below has no title, and his action must fail.
The Attorney General has intervened, and insists that this
action is a mere fiction, and was intended to draw from this Court
an opinion, affecting the rights of the United States and others,
the parties to this suit having nothing at stake, and that the case
should be dismissed.
Page 64 U. S. 90
To meet this imputation of contrivance, the parties and their
counsel have filed affidavits and statements from which it
satisfactorily appears that the action was brought by a
bona
fide claimant under the grantee of the river improvement fund
against the railroad company, and although the case agreed was made
up in a friendly spirit, nevertheless the object was to try the
title, and this was done at the instance of some of the executive
officers.
If the judgment of the district court were affirmed, the
defendant below would lose the land, and it being reversed, the
plaintiff below loses it. The action was obviously brought to carry
out Secretary Stuart's suggestion, when he said,
"That the question involved partakes more of a judicial than an
executive character, and must ultimately be determined by the
judicial tribunals of the country."
We have therefore felt bound to hear and decide the cause on its
merits; and finding that the plaintiff below has no title, we
direct that the judgment of the district court be
Reversed and the cause remanded, and that court is ordered
to enter judgment for the defendant below.