1. The grant of lands made to the Burlington and Missouri River
Railroad Company by the Act of July 2, 1864, 13 Stat. 356, embraced
ten odd-numbered sections per mile, to be taken on the line of the
road and in equal quantities on each side thereof which had not
been sold, reserved, or otherwise disposed of by the United States,
and to which, at the time of the definite location of such line, a
preemption or a homestead claim had not attached.
2. Lands are, within the meaning of the act, taken on such line
when they are selected along its general direction or course within
lines perpendicular to it at each end.
3. The grant was made to aid in the construction of the entire
road, but the company, on completing each section of twenty miles,
had the privilege to receive a patent for lands opposite
thereto.
4. The grant having no lateral limits, and the Land Department
having for years neglected to withdraw from market lands situate
beyond twenty miles from the road, and the lands opposite to
certain portions of it having been patented to other parties, it
was held that the grant to the company could be satisfied by lands
elsewhere situate on the line of the road.
5. By the Act of July 1, 1862, 12 Stat. 489, and by said act of
1864, which was an amendment thereof, Congress intended to place
the Union Pacific Railroad Company, and all its branch companies,
upon the same footing as to lands, privileges, and duties, except
where special provision was otherwise made, and the grant having
been enlarged as to the sections and the distance from the road
within which they should be selected, by striking out the numbers
in the first act and substituting larger numbers, the first act
must thenceforth be read as against the government and the
parties
Page 98 U. S. 335
claiming under concurrent or subsequent grants, as though the
larger numbers had been originally inserted in it. The Burlington
and Missouri River Railroad Company claiming under the act which
declared that that of 1802, making the grant to the union Pacific
Railroad Company, should be thus read, must take its right to the
lands subject to the claim of the latter company.
6. The Land Department, in executing the act, was not authorized
to enlarge the quantity of lands on either side of the road to make
up a deficiency on the other. But at the suit of the United States,
patents embracing any alleged excess on one side cannot be adjudged
invalid as to any lands which are not identified, so as to be
separated from the remainder; nor can any decree be rendered
against the company for their value.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit in equity, brought by the United States to annul
certain patents issued by them to the Burlington and Missouri River
Railroad Company for lands situated in Nebraska, amounting in the
aggregate to one million two hundred thousand acres. It is founded
upon alleged errors made by the Land Department in the construction
of the statute under which the patents were issued, and presents
several interesting questions for determination. These questions,
however, are so fully considered by the presiding justice of the
circuit court, and the views we entertain are so clearly stated in
his opinion, that we can add but little to what he has said.
By the eighteenth section of the Act of Congress of July 2,
1864, amending the act of 1862,
"to aid in the construction of a railroad and telegraph line
from the Missouri River to the Pacific Ocean, and to secure to the
government the use of the same for postal, military, and other
purposes,"
the Burlington and Missouri River Railroad Company, an existing
corporation under the laws of Iowa, was authorized to extend its
road through the then Territory of Nebraska from the point where it
strikes the Missouri River, south of the mouth of the Platte River,
to some point not further west than the one hundredth meridian of
west longitude, so as to connect by the most
Page 98 U. S. 336
practicable route with the main line of the Union Pacific
Railroad, or with that part of it which runs from Omaha to the said
meridian. By the nineteenth section of the act, there was granted
to the company, for the purpose of aiding in the construction of
this road, every alternate section of public land (excepting
mineral land) designated by odd numbers, to the amount of ten
alternate sections per mile on each side of the road, on the line
thereof, which were not sold, reserved, or otherwise disposed of by
the United States or to which a preemption or homestead claim had
not attached at the time the line of the road was definitely
fixed.
In April, 1869, this railroad company was authorized to assign
and convey to a company to be organized under the laws of Nebraska
all the rights, powers, and privileges granted to it by the act of
1864, subject to the same conditions and requirements. The
defendant company was thereafter organized and incorporated under
the laws of Nebraska, with power to build the railroad mentioned,
and to it the Iowa company made the assignment authorized. The new
company thereupon proceeded to construct the road from Plattsmouth,
on the Missouri River, to Fort Kearney, where it connected with the
road of the Union Pacific, a distance of two hundred miles. The
work was commenced on the 4th of July, 1869, and was completed on
the 2d of September, 1872.
By the twentieth section of the act of 1864, whenever twenty
consecutive miles of the road should be completed in the manner
prescribed, the President of the United States was to appoint three
commissioners to examine and report to him in relation to it, and
if it should appear that the twenty miles were completed as
required, then, upon the certificate of the commissioners to that
effect, patents were to be issued to the company for land on each
side of the road to the amount designated. Such examination,
report, and conveyance were to be made from time to time, until the
entire road should be completed.
In compliance with this provision, as each section of twenty
miles of the road was completed, commissioners were appointed by
the President to examine and report upon it, and upon their reports
patents were issued for land within twenty miles
Page 98 U. S. 337
from the road. But within that distance, on the north and south
side, portions of the land, amounting to one million two hundred
thousand acres, had been sold, reserved, or otherwise disposed of
by the United States, or homestead or preemption claims had
attached to it at the time the line of the road was definitely
fixed. Thereupon the company made application to the Land
Department for land outside of the limit of twenty miles in lieu of
the land thus disposed of, and accordingly, in 1872, five patents
for such land were issued. It is to annul these patents that the
present bill was filed, their validity being called in question on
the ground that the act of Congress limited its grant to land
within twenty miles of the road.
The line of the road was definitely located in June, 1865, and
land embracing the odd sections, within the limit of twenty miles,
was withdrawn from sale in July following; but land outside of this
limit, which was subsequently patented to the company, was not
withdrawn until May, 1872. Between the definite location of the
road in 1865 and the withdrawal of the land outside of the
twenty-mile limit in 1872, the greater part of the land opposite
the eastern sections of the road was disposed of by the government;
and therefore most of the land covered by the patents lies opposite
the western sections. This constitutes another ground of the
alleged invalidity of the patents, it being contended that the
grant was to aid in the construction of each section of the twenty
miles, taken separately, and that it must be of land directly
opposite to such section.
By the act of 1862, the Union Pacific Railroad Company was
authorized to construct a railroad from a point on the one
hundredth meridian of longitude west of Greenwich to the western
boundary of Nevada Territory, the initial point of which was to be
fixed by the President. To aid in the construction of this road, a
grant was made to the company of five alternate sections of land,
designated by odd numbers on each side of the road, along its line
within the limit of ten miles. By the same act, the company was
also authorized to construct a road from a point on the western
boundary of the State of Iowa, to be fixed by the President, to the
one hundredth meridian of longitude, upon the same terms and
conditions prescribed
Page 98 U. S. 338
for the construction of the Union Pacific line. By the act of
1864, the grant of five sections was increased to ten sections, and
the limit within which they were to be taken was increased from ten
to twenty miles. This enlargement of the grant was not made by the
terms of a new and additional grant, but by enacting that the
numbers five and ten in the original act should be stricken out,
and the numbers ten and twenty substituted in their places.
In March, 1864, the President fixed the initial point of the new
road near Omaha, and thereupon the company commenced its
construction. This initial point was distant about twenty miles
only from the defendant company's road, and the roads of the two
companies ran west on nearly parallel lines, so close that the
grants to both could not be satisfied. The Union Pacific claimed
the whole of the odd sections between the ten-mile and the
twenty-mile limit, and its claim in this respect was recognized by
the Land Department by the issue of patents or certificates for
patents for them. The defendant thereupon selected land more than
twenty miles distant from the line of its road, in order to make up
the entire number of sections granted to it. It is now contended by
the government that the act of 1864 did not enlarge the grant made
in aid of the Omaha branch by the original act, and that the
defendant was entitled to the odd sections outside of the ten-mile
limit, and could not take land elsewhere in lieu of them; and that
if the act did enlarge the grant, the defendant, having received
its grant by the same act, was entitled to one-half of the land
within the enlarged limit, and could not therefore take land to
that amount elsewhere. Assuming this construction of the act of
1864 to be correct, these objections are also urged against the
validity of the patents.
It also appears by the allegations of the bill that land to the
extent of one hundred and fifty thousand acres, which should have
been taken, if at all, on the south side of the road, was selected
on the north side of the road beyond the twenty-mile limit, and
included in the patents to the defendant; and this fact is made an
objection to the validity of the patents as to the land thus
taken.
Upon the several grounds stated, the United States ask a
Page 98 U. S. 339
decree for the cancellation of the patents, or, if that cannot
be granted, a decree that they be declared void as to a portion of
the land embraced by them.
The position that the grant to the company was only of land
situated within twenty miles of the road, finds no support in the
language of the act of Congress: that simply declares that a grant
is made of land to the amount of ten sections per mile on each side
of the road. The grant is one of quantity, and the selection of the
land is subject only to these limitations: 1st, that the land must
be embraced by the odd sections; 2d, that it must be taken in equal
quantities on each side of the road; 3d, that it must be on the
line of the road; and, 4th, that it must not have been sold,
reserved, or otherwise disposed of by the United States, and a
preemption or homestead claim must not have attached to it at the
time the line of the road was definitely located. There is here no
limitation of distance from the road within which the selection is
to be made, and the court can make none. The objection undoubtedly
has its suggestion from the fact that nearly all, perhaps all,
other grants of land in aid of the construction of railroads
prescribe a lateral limit within which the land is to be selected,
and provide for the selection of land elsewhere to make up any
deficiency arising from the disposition of a portion of it within
such limit between the date of the act and the location of the
road. The reasons for the omission in this case are obvious. The
road was to run through a country already partially settled, and
likely to be more settled before the line of the road would be
definitely located. It was doubtful, therefore, whether any
considerable portion of the amount of land intended for the company
would be found undisposed of within twenty miles of its road.
Moreover, the road of the Union Pacific was to be constructed
within a short distance, and its grant would necessarily preclude a
selection of land by the defendant if the latter's grant were
confined within a similar lateral limit. Congress gave no
government bonds to the company; its aid consisted merely in the
grant of land, and that this might not fail, it allowed the land to
be taken along the line of the road wherever it could be found. And
the land was taken along such line in the sense of the statute,
when taken along the
Page 98 U. S. 340
general direction or course of the road within lines
perpendicular to it at each end. The same terms are used in the
grant to the Union Pacific company, in which the lateral limit is
twenty miles; and if a section at that distance from the road can
be said to be along its line, it is difficult to give any other
meaning than this to the language. They certainly do not require
the land to be contiguous to the road, and if not contiguous, it is
not easy to say at what distance the land to be selected would
cease to be along its line.
The position that the grant was in aid of the construction of
each section of twenty miles taken separately, and must be limited
to land directly opposite to the section, is equally untenable. The
grant was to aid in the construction of the entire road, and not
merely a portion of it, though the company was not to receive
patents for any land except as each twenty miles were completed.
The provision allowing it to obtain a patent, then was intended for
its aid. It was not required to take it; it was optional to apply
for it then or to wait until the completion of other sections or of
the entire road. The grant was of a quantity of land on each side
of the road, the amount being designated at so many sections per
mile, with a privilege to receive a patent for land opposite that
portion constructed as often as each section of twenty miles was
completed. If this privilege were not claimed, the land could be
selected along the whole line of the road without reference to any
particular section of twenty miles. When lateral limits are
assigned to a grant, the land within them must, of course, be
exhausted before land for any deficiency can be taken elsewhere.
And when no lateral limits are assigned, the Land Department of the
government, in supervising the execution of the act of Congress,
should undoubtedly, as a general rule, require the land to be taken
opposite to each section; but in some instances, good reasons may
exist why a selection elsewhere ought to be permitted. If, as in
the present case, by its neglect for years to withdraw from sale
land beyond twenty miles from the road, the land opposite to any
section of the road has been taken up by others and patented to
them, there can be no just objection to allowing the grant to the
company to be satisfied by land situated elsewhere along the
general line of the road.
Page 98 U. S. 341
That the amendment of the act of 1864 enlarging the grant of
1862 to the Union Pacific company was intended to apply to the
grants made to all the branch companies there can be no doubt. All
the reasons which led to the enlargement of the original grant led
to its enlargement to the branches. It was the intention of
Congress both in the original and in the amendatory act to place
the Union Pacific company and all its branch companies upon the
same footing as to land, privileges, and duties to the extent of
their respective roads, except when it was otherwise specially
stated. Such has been the uniform construction given to the acts by
all departments of the government. Patents have been issued, bonds
given, mortgages executed, and legislation had upon this
construction. This uniform action is as potential and as conclusive
of the soundness of the construction as if it had been declared by
judicial decision. It cannot at this day be called in question.
Now the enlargement of the grant by the act of 1864 is not made,
as already stated, by words of a new and additional grant, but
simply by altering the number of sections granted and the distance
from the road within which they are to be taken. The numbers in the
first act, says the amendment, shall be stricken out and larger
numbers substituted, so that the act of 1862 must thenceforth be
read, at least as against the government and parties claiming under
concurrent or subsequent grants, as though the larger numbers had
been originally inserted in it. The Burlington and Missouri
Railroad Company received its grant from the same act which
declared that the act of 1862 in its grant to the Union Pacific
should be thus read; it must therefore take its rights to the land
subject to the claim of that company.
"This view," as the presiding justice of the circuit court
justly observes,
"would commend itself to Congress by its intrinsic equity, for
by it each road gets the largest quantity of land which the statute
permits, while the other construction allows the Burlington and
Missouri company to get all it could under any circumstances, the
other road losing what the latter took within the lap. This comes
out of the fact that the Burlington and Missouri company was not
confined within
Page 98 U. S. 342
any lateral limits, while the Union Pacific could not go without
its twenty-mile limit to make up deficiencies."
"Besides," he adds,
"both of these roads have acquiesced in the construction given
and acted on by the United States, the officers of the government
having prescribed it as the one which should govern all their
rights; the patents have been issued under it for the full amount
of all the land which could be so claimed under both grants, and
innocent purchasers have no doubt become owners of much of the land
patented to the Union Pacific company, and it is certainly all
mortgaged, so that an incalculable amount of injustice would be
done by holding all this void and setting aside the patents."
It only remains to notice the further objection to the patents
that land to the amount of one hundred and fifty thousand acres on
the north side of the road is included in them in lieu of land
deficient on the south side. It is true the act of Congress
contemplates that one-half of the land granted should be taken on
each side of the road, and the department could not enlarge the
quantity on one side to make up a deficiency on the other. But the
answer to the objection as presented by the bill, either in its
original form or as amended, is that it is not shown what this land
was, and the patents cannot be adjudged invalid as to any land not
identified, so as to be capable of being separated; nor can any
decision go against the company for its value without such
identification. It is possible that the land to which the company
was entitled is not so described in the patents that it can be
separated from that which should not have been patented. If such be
the fact, the government may be without remedy; it certainly could
not insist upon a cancellation of the patents so as to affect
innocent purchasers under the patentees. It is sufficient, however,
that it makes no case for relief by the present bill.
Decree affirmed.