Humbird v. Avery

195 U.S. 480, 25 S. Ct. 123, 49 L. Ed. 286, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 692
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 12, 1904
Docket7
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 195 U.S. 480 (Humbird v. Avery) 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
Humbird v. Avery, 195 U.S. 480, 25 S. Ct. 123, 49 L. Ed. 286, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 692 (1904).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Harlan,

after making the foregoing state''ment, delivered the opinion of the court.

It is appropriate.at the outset to refer to certain allegations of the bill which bring the determination of the case within a very narrow compass and make it unnecessary to. consider some matters referred to by counsel. After setting out in detail the various steps' taken by the railroad company to acquire a right to the lands in dispute, the bill alleges that "but for the vested rights” of the Northern Pacific Railroad Company and its grantees the several tracts of land in question would have been unappropriated public lands open to the several kinds of entries or location made with respect to them, severally; also, that "the several applications and proceedings with respect to -the said several entries were in dué form, and regularly conducted, as required by law, and, in the absence of the vested rights of the said Northern Pacific Railroad Company and its grantees in the said premises, would have been operative and effectual to invest the several entrymen of said lands with complete equitable title thereto, each of such entries arid locations having been finally receipted for, allowed and approved by the proper1 land officers of the United States; the only act *499 remaining for the United States or its officers to perform with respect to such entries being the issuance of the patent in cases where, the patent has not already .issued; ” and that all of the said entries and locations of lands referred to in the exhibit filed with the bill were allowed, and the final certificates (and so far as issued the patents) issued therefor "under a mistake of law founded upon a certain erroneous ruling by the Secretary of the Interior, to the effect that the said Northern Pacific Railroad Company, and their successors in interest, were not entitled to any lands by virtue of said act of Congress, approved July 2, 1864, and said joint resolution approved May 31, 1870, granting lands to said Northern Pacific Railroad Company, east of that point on the line of said Northern Pacific Railroad "where the same crosses the line of the St.Paul and Duluth Railroad, known as Thompson Junction.”

Obviously, the first'.inquiry should be as to the object and scope of the act of 1898. Upon that point we do not think any doubt can be entertained, if the words of the act be interpreted in the light of the situation, as it actually was at the ■ date of -its. passage. Here were vast bodies of land, the right and title to which was in dispute between.a railroad company holding a grant of public lands, and occupants and purchasers —both sides claiming under the United, States. The disputes had arisen out of conflicting orders or rulings of .the Land Department, and it became the duty of the Government to remove the difficulties which had come upon the parties in consequence of such orders. The settlement of those disputes was, therefore, as the Circuit Court said; a' matter of public concern. If the disputes were not accommodated, the litigation in relation to the lands would become vexatious, extending over many years and causing great embarrassment. In the light of that situation Congress passed the act of 1898, which opened up a way for an adjustment upon principles that it deemed just and consistent with the rights of all concerned — the Government, the railroad grantee,- and individual plaimants. The railroad company evinced its approval of this *500 action of the legislative departmént by a prompt acceptance of the act, in its entirety. By such unqualified acceptance the railroad company agreed that, so far as it had any claim to the lands in dispute, whatever the act of Congress required to be done might be done.

Promptly after the passage of that act the Land Department set. about to administer its provisions, and to that end, as we have said, issued regulations for the guidance of all concerned.

During the progress of this work of administration, the railroad company, by conveyances to the present plaintiffs, assumed to pass such interest as it had in the lands here in ■question, with th'e effect — it is now claimed by the plaintiffs —to withdraw or exempt all the lands so sold from the operation of the act. The plaintiffs rest this claim upon that part of the act providing that the railroad grantee or its successor in interest “shall not be bound to relinquish lands sold or contracted by it or lands it. uses or needs for railroad purposes, or lands valuable for stone, iron, or coal.” (See Par. 3, ante, p. 486.)

We have seen that the act (Par. 2, ante, p. 486) made it the duty of the Secretary of the Interior to ascertain from time to time, and cause to be prepared and delivered to the railroad grantee or its successor in interest, a list or lists of the several tracts purchased, settled upon or occupied, and claimed, at the date of the act, by such settlers, purchasers or'occupants, their heirs and assigns, according to the smallest Govérnment subdivision. And the act provided that the railroad grantee or its successor should accept said list or lists “as conclusive, with respect to the particular lands to be relinquished by it.” The contention of the plaintiffs, stated more fully, is, in. effect, that it was competent for the company, notwithstanding its acceptance of the act, to take out of its operation any lands embraced by its terms, by simply selling or contracting to sell them before the delivery to it or to its successor in interest of the lists above mentioned. In other *501 words — for the contention comes to that — the railroad company, so far as the act of 1898 was concerned, could, notwithstanding the acceptance of its provisions and on the day after such acceptance, have sold or contracted to sell its right, title and interest in and to all the lands embraced by those provisions. This would have left no lands whatever to which the act could apply. Such a result would have left unsettled all the disputes relating to any lands which the company chose, in its own interest, to sell while the Land Department was proceeding under the statute. We do not believe that Congress intended that it should be in the power of the' railroad company-in any such mode to defeat the operation of the act. Congress, manifestly, had reference to the situation as it was when the act of 1898 was passed.

If any rights had become vested in the Northern Pacific Railroad Company which could not, against or without its consent, be effected by an enactment like that of 1898, then the objection to legislation, on the ground that it interfered with vested rights, was waived by the acceptance of the act by its successor in interest; for it was entirely competent for the latter company, if it succeeded to all the rights of the railroad grantee, to agree to such a settlement.as that devised by Congress. The rights acquired by the definite location of the road, and any selection of lands based thereon, became, upon the acceptance of the act, and so far as that company was concerned, subject to such settlement as the Land Department might legally make under that act. It could not by any sale or contract, made after the acceptance of the act, interfere with the full execution of its provisions.

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Bluebook (online)
195 U.S. 480, 25 S. Ct. 123, 49 L. Ed. 286, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humbird-v-avery-scotus-1904.