Cooper v. Roberts

59 U.S. 173, 15 L. Ed. 338, 18 How. 173, 1855 U.S. LEXIS 682
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 29, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by106 cases

This text of 59 U.S. 173 (Cooper v. Roberts) 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
Cooper v. Roberts, 59 U.S. 173, 15 L. Ed. 338, 18 How. 173, 1855 U.S. LEXIS 682 (1856).

Opinion

Mr. Justice CAMPBELL

delivered the opiniori of the', court.

.The plaintiff sued in ejéctmerit, to recover a portion of section No? 16, in township- No. 50 north, of range 39 west,-lying .within the fdineral district, south of Lake. Superior,' in Michigan.

His case affums’that this section had beeri appropriated by the *176 United States to the State of Michigan for the use of schools, in their compact, by which that State became a member,of the Union; that the governor of Michigan issued, in November, 1851, to Alfred Williams, a piatent, evincing a sale of that section under the laws of Michigan, in February, 1851; that he has a conveyance from the patentee, and that the defendant is ,a tenant in possession, withholding the locus in quo from him. The defendant, to support his issue, relies upon , a license, given in 1844, by the mineral agent of- the United States for that district, empowering the donee to examine and dig for lead, and ofher ores, for the term of one year, and within that term to ■mark out and define a specific tract of land, not to excefed three miles square, for mining purposes ; and, if he should fulfil this and other conditions, he was to become entitled to a lease, for three years, with a privilege of one or two renewals, under restrictions. • The secretary of war, in September, 1845, executed a lease for. a tract three miles square, which the donee of the license had selected, and which included the locus in quo, and stipulated to renew it, if congress shall- not have passed á law' “ directing the sale, or other disposition, pf these lands,” and if the lessee shall have complied with all the conditions of the present lease, and tendered a bond for the fulfilment of ¿he conditions of the new lease, as described in the act. This lease came to the Minnesota Mining Company by .assignment, and that c'ompany'in 1847, and from thence till 1851, held possession of the land, describfed in the declaration, erected valuable improvements, and, iriade successful explorations for copper upon it. In November, 1850, the company applied to the proper officers of the land-office to enter the land comprised in the lease,' and from thence, till the dáte of them patent in 1852, the right of the company to secure the locus in quo by entry whs in dispute in the land-office of the United States. In September, 1851, the secretary of the interior determined adversely to the claim, of the. company, and in favor of the claim of Michigan; and in 1852, upon proofs that the company had complied with the lease, while fie reaffirmed his conclusions in favor of Michigan, allowed, the entry of the company, but with a reservation, of the rights of Michigan. The section No. 16, aforesaid, was survfeyed in the . summer of 1847, and the portion in controversy, in the report of ' the geological survey of the district, was returned to the land-office as containing mines-of copper. There was no application to the department of public lands to renew the lease held by the company,, for the reason (it is said) that the system of letting ■mineral lands of this kind had been-abandoned, upon the doubts expressed by the attorney-general, in 1846, of the legality of such, leases. Upon .the trial- of the cause in the circuit court, the *177 plaintiff moved the court for instructions to the jury, that, upon the facts, he was entitled to a verdict, and that the defendant’s patent was invalid. The court refused the prayer, and told the jury, “ that by the act of congress of 1st March, 1847, all the mining lands within the district, reported, were taken out of the operation, of the general law for the disposal of the public lands, in pursuance of an established policy to reserve from the ordinary mode of disposing of public lands those that contained valuable salt springs, lead mines, &c., that they might be leased or disposed of to purchasers having full knowledge of their value, by reason of the salt springs or mineral ores they .contained, at their full value, for the public benefit. That, by the above act, all the mineral lands reported by the geologist within the district, in pursuance of this settled policy of the government, were appropriated and disposed of without reference to the school reservation, the appropriation of the land beiiig made before the surveys were executed, and before the locality of section 16 could be known. And as it appears from the report of the geologist that the land in controversy contains valuable minerals* and was within the boundaries of the lease under which the Minnesota Company claim, and that they had made large expenditures thereon for mining, were entitled to the right" of purchase, as provided in the third section of the above law; and having paid for the same, it was a disposition of the land which congress had a right to make, and was an exercise of power within the grant. That the setting, apart of another section adjacent will satisfy the grant to the State.”

Our first inquiry will- be into the nature of the right of. the State of Michigan to section No. 16 in the townships of that State, and the effect of the discovery of minerals in such a section upon that right. The practice Of setting apart section No;' 16 of every township of public lands, for the maintenance of public schools, is traceable to the ordinance of 1785, being the first enactment for the disposal by sale of the public land's in the western territory.. The appropriation of public lands for that object became a fundamental principle, by the ordinance of 1787, which settled terms of compact between the people and States of the northwestern territory, and the original States, unalterable except by consent. One of the articles affirmed that “religion, morality, ’and knowledge, being necessary for good government and the' happiness of mankind; ” and ordained that “ schools, and the means of education, should be forever encouraged.” This principle was extended, first, by congressional enactment, (1 S.tats. at Large, 550, § 6,)' and afterwards, in 1802, by compact between the United States and Georgia to the southwestern territory. The earliest1 development of this *178 article, in practical legislation, is to be found in the organization of the State of Ohio, and the adjustment of its civil polity, .according to the ordinance, preparatory to its- admission to the Union. Proposals were made to the inhabitants of the incipient State to become a -sovereign community, and to accept certain articles as the conditions of union, which, being accepted, were to become obligatory upon the United States. The first of these articles is, “ that the section No. 16 in every township, and where such section has been sold, granted, or disposed of, other lands equivalent thereto and most contiguous.to the same, shall be granted to the inhabitants of such township, for the use of schools.”

A portion of this territory had been encumbered-:in the articles of Cession by the States, and another portion by congress for the fulfilment of public obligations, prior to the ordinance of 1785, and without reference to the school reservations; therefore, uniformity in the appropriation of the section No. 16 was partially defeated.' The southwestern‘territory was similarly burdened in- the compact of cession by .Georgia, with the fulfilment of antecedent obligations, and similar paramount obligations have arisen in treaties with the Indian tribes who inhabited it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 U.S. 173, 15 L. Ed. 338, 18 How. 173, 1855 U.S. LEXIS 682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-roberts-scotus-1856.