Grosvold v. Whelpley

5 Alaska 529
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedAugust 12, 1916
DocketNo. 804
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Alaska 529 (Grosvold v. Whelpley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grosvold v. Whelpley, 5 Alaska 529 (D. Alaska 1916).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge.

Defendant denies the validity of the lease from the United States to the plaintiff, contending that there is no authority of law for making said lease.

Executive order of February 2, 1904, is as follows:

“It is hereby ordered, that the authority of the Secretary of the Treasury to lease certain islands in Alaska for the propagation of foxes, and all duties and powers pertaining thereto, shall be transferred to and vested in the Secretary of Commerce and Labor.” .

Executive order of March 25, 1910, is as follows:

“It is hereby ordered, that the authority transferred to and vested in the Secretary of Commerce and Labor by the executive order of •the President dated February 2, 1904, to lease certain islands in Alaska for the propagation of foxes, and all duties and powers pertaining thereto, shall be extended to include the authority to lease the islands for the propagation of other fur:bearing animals in addition to foxes; this order to take effect March 25, 1910.”

[531]*531The authority of the Secretary of Commerce to lease certain islands in-Alaska for the propagation of foxes has been sustained and upheld by the Attorney General in an opinion given to the Secretary of Commerce and Labor of date June 24, 1905, and is found in volume 25 of Opinions of Attorneys General at page 497. In said opinion the Attorney General among other things says:

“It appears that, beginning in 1882, and since that time, the Secretary of the Treasury assumed and exercised authority to lease various other islands in the waters of Alaska for the propagation of foxes. Such action seems to have been originally without statutory sanction, but in the act of May 14, 1898 (30 Stat. 409, 413), extending the homestead laws to Alaska, Congress incorporated the following provision: ‘Provided, that the Annette, Pribilof Islands, and the islands leased or occupied for the propagation of foxes be excepted from the operation of this act.’
“It is not suggested that the authority of the Secretary of the Treasury in the premises was ever questioned, and such an uninterrupted and long-continued practice, supported by the above-quoted statutory evidence of legislative acquiescence, seems to clearly establish the authority of the Secretary of the Treasury to continue to lease for this purpose such islands in Alaska as had been so leased by him prior to the act of May 14, 1898.
“February 2, 1904, the President issued an executive order in the following language: ‘Upon the recommendation of the Secretary ot the Treasury and the Secretary of Commerce and Labor, it is hereby ordered that the authority of the Secretary of the Treasury to lease certain islands in Alaska for the propagation of foxes, and all duties and powers pertaining thereto, shall be transferred to and vested in the Secretary of Commerce and Labor.’
“The authority of the President to make this order, especially in the absence of any inconsistent statutory provision, seems to be beyond question. 7 Ops. Atty. Gen. 453, 462, 469 ; 9 Ops. Atty. Gen. 462; 25 Ops. Atty. Gen. 11; Loekington v. Smith, Pet. C. C. 466 [Fed. Cas. No. 8,448]. '
“You are therefore advised that, in my opinion, you are now authorized to lease, for the propagation of foxes, such islands in the waters of Alaska as had been so leased by the Secretary of the Treasury prior to May 14, 1898.”

The defendant argues that the Attorney General is mistaken, and that the government of the United States has no authority to lease these islands, including the said Little Koniuji Island.

In an opinion given by the Solicitor of the Department of Commerce to the Secretary of Commerce October 23, 1913, “In re Authority of the Secretary of Commerce to Lease Lit-[532]*532tie Naked Island for Purposes of Fox Propagation,” the Solicitor says:

“The term ‘reservation,’ as used in relation to the public lands,' means a withdrawal of a specified portion of titfe public domain from the administration of the Land Office, and from disposal under the land laws, and the appropriation thereof, for the time being, for some particular use or purpose of the general government. 32 Cyc. 858. In United States v. Payne [D. C.] 8 Fed. 888, Mr. Justice Parker says: ‘A reservation may be made, either by treaty, executive order, or by act of Congress, and all of these methods are expressly recognized by the homestead and preemption laws. No set form of words or phrases is necessary to set aside a reservation. The sovereign is not parting with the title, but only setting it apart to be used for a specific purpose. It is enough, if there are sufficient words to indicate the purpose of the power that can act, to show that in the given case it intended to act.’ And in Wilcox v. McOonnel, 13 Pet. 496, 512 [10 L. Ed. 264], an appropriation is defined ‘as nothing more nor less than setting apart the thing for some particular purpose.’
“The act of May 14, 1S98, entitled ‘An act extending the homestead laws and providing for right of way for railroads in the District of Alaska, and for other purposes’ (30 Stat. 409 [U. S. Comp. St. 1916, § 5091]), contains the following proviso: (Certain islands reserved.) ‘Provided, that the, Annette, Pribilof Islands, and the islands leased or occupied for the propagation of foxes be excepted from the operation of this act.’
“As Little Naked Island, at the time of the passage of this act, was under lease by the Secretary of the Treasury for the purpose of propagating foxes, it was clearly included in this proviso and excepted from entry and sale, and thereby severed from the mass of public lands, for the manifest purpose that it might be continued to be leased as theretofore. No distinction can be made between it and the other islands included in the proviso and theretofore leased for the purpose of fox propagation. Although it may be true that prior to 1898 the Secretary of the Treasury, who had assumed authority to lease islands for the propagation of foxes, had no statutory authority to do so, nevertheless there is no question that subsequently to that time he had statutory authority to make such leases,. as the above proviso, by excepting such islands from entry and sale, withdrew them from the public domain and set them apart for that purpose.”

Furthermore, it does not appear that the defendant is in position to question this right or authority. Whatever rights he or his principal may have had were those of a trespasser only, and he or his principal were fully advised of the intention to lease the island, and submitted a bid therefor.

As to the question of the just and practical working of such a system of leasing, that is not a matter for the court to deter[533]*533mine. The government has the right, through its various departments, to adopt such system in the matter of sale or leasing of its public lands as it deems best. There is little doubt but what, in all fairness, one who has in good faith, whether by lease or mere occupation, raised foxes upon one of these islands, should be given a reasonable time to remove them after the government has leased to some one else.

There is considerable dispute in the testimony as to what followed after plaintiff, Grosvold, secured his lease July 1, 1914.

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Related

MEREDITH v. United States
38 U.S. 486 (Supreme Court, 1839)
Wilcox v. Jackson
38 U.S. 498 (Supreme Court, 1839)
United States v. Payne
8 F. 883 (W.D. Arkansas, 1881)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Alaska 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grosvold-v-whelpley-akd-1916.