Cook County v. Calumet & Chicago Canal & Dock Co.

138 U.S. 635, 11 S. Ct. 435, 34 L. Ed. 1110, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2354
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 2, 1891
Docket1406
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 138 U.S. 635 (Cook County v. Calumet & Chicago Canal & Dock Co.) 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
Cook County v. Calumet & Chicago Canal & Dock Co., 138 U.S. 635, 11 S. Ct. 435, 34 L. Ed. 1110, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2354 (1891).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Fuller,

after stating the case as above reported, delivered the opinion of the court.

*651 The rule is settled that to give this court jurisdiction of a writ of error to a state- court it must appear affirmatively, not only that a federal question was presented for decision by the highest court of the State having jurisdiction, but that its decision was necessary to the determination of the cause, and that it was actually decided, or that the judgment ás rendered could not have .been given without deciding it. De Saussure v. Gaillard, 127 U. S. 216; Johnson v. Risk, 137 U. S. 300. Tested by this rule this writ of error, cannot be sustained. .

The Supreme Court of Illinois held that title passed to that State by the act of Congress, and that the plaintiff established a prima facie right to recover, but that as the State, in granting the lands to the counties, had the undoubted power to provide that purchasers who had bought and paid for the lands should be protected in their several purchases, and bad so provided by its act of 1852, and this land had been “ sold by the United States” to Egan after September 28, 1850, within the meaning of that act, no title passed to the county. The judgment of the state court proceeded wholly upon the construction of the terms and conditions of the grant of the State to the county by the act of 1852, and as amended by the act of 1854, and the validity of those enactments was not drawn in question.

Tile effect claimed by counsel as attributable to the act of Congress of 1850, as operating as a grant in prmenti to the State of Illinois, was given to it by the Supreme Court, and the confirmatory act of Congress of March 3, 1857, did not enter into the decision of the case, because under the conclu.sion reached there was no title in plaintiff to be confirmed. There was no decision against a claim or title asserted under the United States, but simply that the county did not obtain title under the grant of the State; that the act of 1852 imposed a positive duty on the cqunty to transfer such title as it ¿cquired to the purchaser from the United States; and that where lands had been bought in good faith from the United States, the title to such lands did not become vested in the county but passed to the purchaser. under his entry. This ■construction by the state court of the laws of the State is *652 controlling in the premises. Gormley v. Clark, 134 U. S. 338, 348, and cases cited.

It is said- that as Cook County was under township organization law in 1852, and hence under the government of a board of supervisors and not of county courts, it had no special legislative authority to dispose of swamp lands until the passage of the act of March 4, 1854, (Sess. Laws, 1854, p. 184,) imparting that power, and that, therefore, the second section of the act of 1852 did not apply to that county. While this .point does not seem to have been presented to the state court, yet, if the | State did not intend to transfer title to the lands that had bben entered from the United States, as was held by the court, the mere want of power to convey, which was at -the next session of the general assembly supplied, would not require a different construction to the contrary of such intention. ...

As the acts of Congress referred to in the first and second errors.assigned did not purport to vest title to swamp lands in ' Cook or any other county, and the court only passed upon the alleged grant by the State, we are unable to perceive that any federal question was, in this regard, necessarily or in fact decided.

It is further assigned for error that the Supreme Court sustained “ the trial court in the admission of improper testimony, to -wit, the register and receiver’s certificate to the land in question, dated October 20, 1853, the same being illegal, and also because the same was cancelled August 10, 1855, the subsequent chain of defendant’s title resting upon said can-celled certificate.” And the argument is that the validity of an authority exercised under the United States, namely, the action of the Land Department, was drawn in question, and that the-decision was against its validity because against the validity of the alleged cancellation.

The trial court was not -requested to hold the entry void because of cancellation, and we think the plaintiff’s objection to the admission of the certificate in'evidence, and its request for a ruling that, the Egan entry tv-as. cancelled, and that such cancellation, “in the absence of any facts or.evidence showing *653 the circumstances which .led to its cancellation, must be presumed to have been based upon sufficient facts to authorize it,” did not draw the validity of the authority of the department in question within § 709. Eev. Stat. upon which section our jurisdiction rests.

The validity of a statute is not drawn in question-every time rights claimed under such statute are controverted, nor is the validity of an authority every time an act done by such authority is disputed.

The validity of the authority here was'not primarily denied, and the denial7 made the subject of direct inquiry. United States v. Lynch, 137 U. S. 280; Baltimore & Potomac Railroad v. Hopkins, 130 U. S. 210.

The court may have concluded that the transaction as shown by the memoranda was a substitution by Egan, with the consent of the officers of, the Land Department, of warrant No. 101,043 for the original warrant No; 2495, which, for some erasure, was suspended ; and that the alleged cancellation was not a cancellation of the purchase and entry, but of the location under the suspended warrant, and that, although the official order of substitution was not made by the commissioner until 1883, yet it was manifest from the endorsements that it had been made, in fact, in 1855. ,At all events, it ruled that the entry by Egan, and the receipt and retention by the United States of the money and warrant delivered by him in payment therefor, was a sale by the United States of the land to Egan.

Certainly the plaintiff did not specially set up or claim any title by reason of the alleged cancellation,/and the court rendered no decision against a title so specially set up or claimed.’ Chappell v. Bradshaw, 128 U. S. 132.

In Neilson v. Lagow, 7 How. 772, 775, the plaintiff claimed land under an authority-exercised by the Secretary of the Treasury in behalf of the''United States, and the decision was against the validity of the authority thus exercised, and such was the case in Lytle v. Arkansas, 22 How. 193.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Marshall v. Desert Properties Co.
103 F.2d 551 (Ninth Circuit, 1939)
New Orleans Land Co. v. Brott
263 U.S. 97 (Supreme Court, 1923)
Everglades Sugar & Land Co. v. Bryan
87 So. 68 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1921)
Shellenbarger v. Fewel
1912 OK 277 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1912)
Zikos v. Oregon R. & Navigation Co.
179 F. 893 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Washington, 1910)
Bohlander v. Heikes
168 F. 886 (Fifth Circuit, 1909)
Scofield v. Scheaffer
116 N.W. 210 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1908)
Indiana Power Co. v. St. Joseph & Elkhart Power Co.
187 U.S. 636 (Supreme Court, 1902)
Gale v. Southern Building & Loan Ass'n
117 F. 732 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Virginia, 1902)
Kennard v. Nebraska
186 U.S. 304 (Supreme Court, 1902)
Sweringen v. St. Louis
185 U.S. 38 (Supreme Court, 1902)
Blackburn v. Portland Gold Mining Co.
175 U.S. 571 (Supreme Court, 1900)
Abbott v. Tacoma Bank of Commerce
175 U.S. 409 (Supreme Court, 1899)
Harrison v. Morton
171 U.S. 38 (Supreme Court, 1898)
Woodbridge & Turner Engineering Co. v. Ritter
70 F. 679 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania, 1895)
Lloyd v. Matthews
155 U.S. 222 (Supreme Court, 1894)
Eustis v. Bolles
150 U.S. 361 (Supreme Court, 1893)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 U.S. 635, 11 S. Ct. 435, 34 L. Ed. 1110, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-county-v-calumet-chicago-canal-dock-co-scotus-1891.