Cedar Rapids & Missouri River Railroad v. Herring

110 U.S. 27, 3 S. Ct. 485, 28 L. Ed. 56, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1650
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 7, 1884
Docket142
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 110 U.S. 27 (Cedar Rapids & Missouri River Railroad v. Herring) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cedar Rapids & Missouri River Railroad v. Herring, 110 U.S. 27, 3 S. Ct. 485, 28 L. Ed. 56, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1650 (1884).

Opinion

Me. Justice Millee

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendants are in possession of the land in'controversy in each case under a purchase from the United States with a patent from the government, and the plaintiff, the railroad company, asserts a superior title, either legal or equitable, under certain land grants by act of Congress to aid in building railroads. The first of these acts is that of May 15th, 1856, 11 Stat.. .9, by which Congress granted lands lying within the State of Iowa to that State to aid in building four principal railroads from the Mississippi to the Missouri River. One of these was for a road “from Lyons City, on the Mississippi River, to a point of intersection with the main line of the Iowa Central Air Line Railroad near Maquaketa, thence on ■said main line, running as near as practicable to the 42d parallel across the said State to the Missouri River.” For each of *29 these roads there was given to the State of Iowa, “ as soon as the road is completed, every alternate section of land designated by odd numbers for six sections in width on each side of each of said roads.” And it was provided that if, when the line of a road was definitely located, it was found that the United States had disposed of any of these odd sections, or rights had attached to them by pre-emption or otherwise, an agent appointed by the State might, in lieu of these, select other alternate sections anywhere within fifteen miles of the line of the road.

The State of Iowa, by an act of the general assembly approved July 14th, 1856, accepted the trust reposed in it by the above act of Congress, and granted and conferred upon four corporations all these lands, under the terms and restrictions of the act of Congress. These corporations were to construct the roads across the State according to that act, and the corporation on whom was conferred the grant for a road from Lyons to the Missouri River was the Iowa Central Air Line Railroad Company.

The only result of this particular grant of the State was that the company received the 120 sections of land which this court held, in the case of the Railroad Land Company v. Courtright, 21 Wall. 310, could be secured before any road was built; but having built no road up to March 17th, 1860, the Stat,e, by an act of its legislature of that date, declared the grant forfeited and resumed control of it.

On the 26th of that month, by another act of assembly, the State granted the same lands to the Cedar Rapids and Missouri River Railroad Company — the plaintiff in error — upon Conditions similar in all material respects to the grant to the Air Line Company. ■

The Air Line Company had before this time surveyed and located the line of the road from Lyons to the Missouri River through the town of Cedar Rapids, and the map of this survey and location had been accepted by the State of Iowa and the Land Office of the United States as the true line and as governing the location of the land grant for that road. A road had also been built by another company, the Chicago, Iowa *30 and Nebraska, which had no land grant, from a point on the Mississippi River within three miles of Lyons City to Cedar Rapids. Hence the grant of the State to the Cedar Rapids Company required them to build speedily from Cedar Rapids west along the line thus adopted to the Missouri River.

. Under this arrangement the Cedar Rapids Company pushed its road on the designated line, so that it had completed about a hundred miles west of' the town of that name by the year 1864, when several matters seemed to call for legislation by Congress in regard to it and to the other companies building roads across the State under the grants of the act of 1856.

As regards the . Cedar Rapids Company, it had become clearly unnecessary to build another road from the Mississippi at Lyons to Cedar Rapids, along the line occupied by the Iowa and Nebraska road.

It had also become apparent that a shorter and better line to the Missouri River could be had from the point to which the road had now been constructed, and it was thought that a road from some point on its existing line to some point south of it, on ‘the line of the Mississippi and Missouri River Railroad— óné of the four land-grant roads — would be desirable. It had also been ascertained that the necessary quantity of lands in lieu of the odd sections disposed of within six miles could not be satisfied by alternate sections within the fifteen-mile limit.

' In this condition of the matter Congress passed the statute on which the result of this litigation depends, which was approved June 2, 1864, 13 Stat. 95.

This statute, after granting certain relief to the Mississippi and Missouri Railroad Company, and to the Burlington and Missouri Railroad Company, two other of the land-grant roads ' in Iowa, proceeds in its fourth section to grant relief to1 the present plaintiff company.

The fourth section of that act — the one which we are required to construe — reads as follows:

“Seo. 4. And be it further enacted, That the Cedar Rapids and Missouri River Railroad Company, a corporation established under the laws of the State of Iowa, and to which the said State *31 granted a' portion of tbe land mentioned in tbe title of tbis act, may modify or change the location of the uncompleted portion of its- line, as shown by tlie map thereof, now on file in the General Land Office of the United States, so as to secure a better and more expeditious line to the Missouri .River and to a connection with the Iowa branch of the Union Pacific Railroad; and for the purpose of facilitating the more immediate construction of a line of railroacjs across the State of Iowa, to connect with the Iowa branch of the Union Pacific Railroad Company, aforesaid, the said Cedar Rapids and. Missouri River Railroad Company is hereby authorized to connect its line by a branch with the line of the Mississippi and Missouri Railroad Company; and the said Cedar Rapids and Missouri River Railroad Company sbali be entitled, for such modified line, to the same lands and to the same amount of lands per mile, and for such connecting branch the same amount of land per mile, as originally granted to aid in the construction of its main line, subject to the conditions and forfeitures mentioned in the original grant, and, for the same purpose, right of way through the public lands of the United-States is hereby granted to said company. And it is further provided, That whenever said modified main line shall have been established or such connecting line located, the said Cedar Rapids and Missouri River Railroad Company shall file in the General Land Office ' of the United States a map definitely showing such modified line and such connecting branch aforesaid; .and the Secretary of'the Interior shall reserve and cause to be certified and conveyed to said company, from time tó time, as the work progresses on the main line, out of any public lands now belonging to the. United States, npt sold, reserved, or otherwise disposed of, or to which a pre-emption right or right of homestead settlement' has not attached, and on which a bona fide

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 U.S. 27, 3 S. Ct. 485, 28 L. Ed. 56, 1884 U.S. LEXIS 1650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cedar-rapids-missouri-river-railroad-v-herring-scotus-1884.