Fremont County v. Burlington & Missouri River Railroad

22 Iowa 91
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 12, 1867
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 22 Iowa 91 (Fremont County v. Burlington & Missouri River Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fremont County v. Burlington & Missouri River Railroad, 22 Iowa 91 (iowa 1867).

Opinion

Lowe, Oh. J.

1. Swamp graSs: ie”fslative history. The lands in controversy have a legislative history, federal and State, to which it would be well to advert in advance of, and as shedding light upon, the question of priority between ^

They both claim the same lands under distinct grants by Congress, to the State. The plaintiffs insist that they are swamp and overflowed lands, and they deduce their right to the same through the State, under an act of Congress, approved September 28, 1850, entitled An act to enable the State of Arkansas and other States to reclaim the ‘ swamp lands ’ within their limits.” The first section [110]*110of this act, without reserve or condition, grants to the States, all the lands of the description therein specified which shall remain unsold at the passage of the same. The second section declares what must be done by the secretary of the interior, and the Governors of States, in order to vest the legal title of these lands in the several States.

The third section lays down a rule to be observed in listing or selecting said lands, namely: that, “ in all legal subdivisions, the greater part of which is wet and unfit for cultivation, shall be included in said list and plats / but when the greater part of a subdivision is not of that character, the whole of it shall be excluded therefromP

This act does not point o'ut the particular mode to be followed by the secretary, in making the required list and plats, nor how he was to obtain the information, in order to comply with the rule above prescribed by Congress. It is manifest, that this information is not supplied by the field-notes of the original survey. A summary of objects and data required to be noted by the surveyor will be found stated on pages 716, 717, of Lester’s Land Laws. Among them, bearing upon the character of the land, are, first, its general topography, whether level, rolling, broken, or hilly; second, the quality of the soil, whether first, second, or third rate; and, third, whether the bottom lands were wet or dry, and if subject to inundation, to. state what depth.

A literal compliance with these directions by the surveyor would fall far short of affording the requisite information .to enable the secretary to determine whether the greater part of a particular forty acre tract of land was swampy or overflowed, in such a sense, under the act, as to render the same unfit for cultivation. If he did so from the field-notes, without more information, it would simply be conjecture. Congress thought best, in its wis[111]*111dom to establish the rule above specified, as a guide to the secretary, not limiting him in the sources of his information to the field-notes of the surveyor, but leaving it to his discretion to make the list and plats of these lands under that rule in the best way he could. It -is proper here to state that some time after the passage of the act (September 28, 1850), granting swamp lands to the States, some additional objects of topography were required-to be observed and stated in the field-notes of the surveyor, in order to define more clearly the quantity and quality of such, land, and to show their distinctive character, whether swampy or otherwise subject to overflow, to an extent that, without artificial means, they would be rendered unfit for cultivation. But this was after the lands in controversy had been surveyed. Lester’s Land Laws, 718.

The manner and basis, therefore, upon which these lists and plats should be made, as contemplated by the act, were left open to the judgment of the secretary of the interior.

In November following the passage of the law, J. Butterfield, the then commissioner of the general land-office, with the sanction, we are to suppose, of the secretary, instructed the surveyor-general of this State to make out lists of all the lands thus granted to the State under said act, remarking to him that the only reliable data in his possession from which such lists could be made were the notes of the surveyor on file in his office, and that, if the authorities of the State were willing to accept them as the basis of those lists, he might so regard them. If not, and those authorities furnished him satisfactory evidence that any lands were of the character embraced by the grant, he should so report them; and he states what would be sufficient evidence in the premises, namely, the affidavits of county surveyors and other respectable per[112]*112sons that understood and had examined the lines, etc. The commissioner then states the general principles which should govern the surveyor-general in making up these lists, both where the field-notes are the basis of his action, and where the State authorities shall conclude to have the surveys made to determine the boundaries of the swamp and overflowed lands, and furnishes a form according to which the lists should be made, directing that one copy of the same should be transmitted to the several land officers and another to the general land-office at Washington. In the same instructions, the commissioner directs that the land selected should be reserved from sale, and, after the selection should be approved by the secretary of the interior, the register should enter all the lands so selected in his tract book, as granted to the State by act of 28th September, 1850, being swamp or overflowed land.

These instructions were continued near ten years with but little change, for the guidance of the surveyor-gen-oral and the States in the selection of the swamp lands. .For the confirmation of this statement, the secretary of the interior, N. McClelland, in a letter addressed to the commissioner of the general land-office, explanatory of the swamp land act, dated November 20, 1855, states that “under it, certain instructions were issued for carrying it into effect, embracing substantially these propositions : that when the field-notes of surveyors indicated the swampy character of the land, they were to be regarded as conclusive of such character; and that when the land is claimed by the State, as such, it shall be by selections made by duly authorized agents of the State, and accompanied by their affidavits that they have examined the said laud, aud, being acquainted with the mode of surveying the public laud, that the greater part of each forty acre tract included in such selection, is swampy, etc.” Lester’s Laud Laws, 521.

[113]*113Again, on the 12th of January, 1858, the secretary of the interior, J. Thompson, addressed a letter to the commissioner, ITon. A. Hendricks, inquiring whether, in his, the commissioner’s, opinion, in bringing to a close the grant of September 28, 1850, in cases of selections reported to his office since the 3d of March, 1857, and in cases where’ the selections yet remained to be made, the general instructions of November, 1850, were sufficient and should be adhered to, or whether new and additional' regulations should be adopted.

In reply to this inquiry, the commissioner first restates • the substance of those instructions as follows: “In all cases where the plats and field-notes represent the land as swampy or subject to such overflow as to render them unfit for cultivation, they belong to the State, and will be so certified.

“ When lands are claimed by the State under this act, which are not so represented on the plat and field-notes, you will require the production of satisfactory evidence that the greater part of each forty acre subdivision ,of the land is of the character specified in the act.”

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Bluebook (online)
22 Iowa 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fremont-county-v-burlington-missouri-river-railroad-iowa-1867.