Kirwan v. Murphy

189 U.S. 35, 23 S. Ct. 599, 47 L. Ed. 698, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1323
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 6, 1903
Docket161
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 189 U.S. 35 (Kirwan v. Murphy) 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
Kirwan v. Murphy, 189 U.S. 35, 23 S. Ct. 599, 47 L. Ed. 698, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1323 (1903).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Fuller,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

The bill prayed for injunction and the establishment of the boundaries of complainants’ lands. The decree granted a perpetual injunction, and, describing the fractional lots, adjudged that they “extend to and are bounded by and upon the actual waters of Cedar Island Lake.” The deflection of the lines required by the decree is indicated on the diagram.

Sections 2395, 2396 and 2397 of the Devised Statutes specify the mánner of making surveys of public lands, and prescribe the rules by which the form and boundaries of the tracts are determined. In this case no survey was in fact made, no meander line was in. fact run, and no body of water in fact *53 existed near the false meander line indicated. The line purporting to delimit the lake was from one mile to a quarter of a mile from the lake, and ran over high agricultural land, covered with ancient trees, which could not have grown in water. The theory of the decree is that the government' is estopped by the pretended survey and plat to deny that these lots were bounded by the lake.

The Land Department must necessarily consider and determine what are public lands, what lands have been surveyed, what are to be surveyed, what have been disposed of, what remain to be disposed of, and what are reserved. The department has held that the land lying between the alleged meander line and the lake, some 1200 acres, is government land, and has ordered it to be surveyed. In re Burns, 20 L. Dec. 28, 295; 23 L. Dec. 430. The execution of that order was restrained by the preliminary injunction herein, and that has been made perpetual by the decree.

We are confronted on the threshold with two objections to the maintenance of this bill, namely, the want of jurisdiction in equity, and the want of jurisdiction thus to interfere with executive administration.

Equity jurisdiction was invoked on the ground of lack of adequate remedy at 'law in that irreparable injury in the destruction of timber and exposure to fire by the'' survey, and multiplicity of suits were threatened.

In our opinion complainants failed to make out a case of liability to irreparable injury. The township was resurveyed by a county surveyor in 1893 ; defendant Croswell has made surveys in the township, locating the actual meanders of the lake ; and he- testified that this survey could be made by him “ without any material injury to the soil or timber; ” and that he would not “ have to cut very much valuable timber.” If complainants as owners of the 859.38 acres contained in their frac-' tional lots became through that ownership owners of the 1202 acres lying between those lots and the lake, the proposed survey would be but a fugitive and temporary trespass, lacking the elements of irreparable mischief, and of such long continuance as to become a nuisance.

*54 And bills, of peace will not lie where the legal remedy is otherwise adequate, and where the persons directly interested are not. made' parties, are not numerous, and assert separate and independent rights. Hale v. Allinson, 188 U. S. 56; Cruickshank v. Bidwell, 176 U. S. 73.

But, in the next place, was the Circuit Court justified in thus arresting the action of the Land- Department in proceeding with a survey under the circumstances ? In other words, can the Land Department be stayed in the discharge of a duty, not' ministerial, but involving the exercise of judgment and discretion, on the ground, that its jurisdiction has been lost by estoppel? We do not think so, and hold that complainants’ contention that they are entitled to. bound upon the lake involves a legal right, which cannot be properly passed on until after the department has acted. ■

Having participated in the proceedings before the department, complainants, after survey was ordered, obtained this injunction' against, further administrative action, on the ground of absolute want of power, and not of error in its exercise.

The administration of .the public lands is vested in the Land Department, and its power in that regard cannot be divested by the. fraudulent action of a subordinate officer, outside of his authority, and in violation of the statute. Whiteside v. United States, 93 U. S. 247; Moffat v. United States, 112 U. S. 24; Hume v. United States, 132 U. S. 406, 414. The courts can neither correct nor make surveys'. The power to-do so is reposed in the political department of the government, and the Land Department, charged with the duty of surveying the public domain, must primarily determine what are public lands' subject tp survey and disposal under the. public land. laws. Possessed of the power, in general, its exercise of jurisdiction cannot be questioned by the courts before it has taken final action. Brown v. Hitchcock, 173 U. S. 473.

In Litchfield v. The Register and Receiver, 9 Wall. 575, Litchfield sought an injunction to restrain the register and receiver of the Hnited States land office at Port Dodge, Iowa, from entertaining and acting upon applications made to them to prove preemptions to certain lands which lay within the *55 land district for -which they were respectively register and receiver. The hill averred that, complainant was the legal owner of the lands; that they, were not public lands, and were in no manner subject to sale or preemption by the government or its-officers. The bill was dismissed for want of jurisdiction in equity, and this court affirmed the decree. Mr. Justice Miller said: “The principle has been so repeatedly decided in this court, that the judiciary cannot interfere either by mandamus or injunction with executive officers such as the respondents here, in the discharge of their official duties, unless those duties are of a character purely ministerial, and involving no exercise of judgment or discretion, that it would seem to be useless to repeat it here.” Gaines v. Thompson, 7 Wall. 347; The Secretary v. McGarrahan, 9 Wall. 298.

It was held that the fact that complainant asserted himself, to be the owner óf the . tract of land, which the officers were treating as public lands, did not take the case out of that rule, where it was the duty of these officers to determine, upon all the facts before them, whether the land was open to. preemption or sale; and further, that if the court could entertain jurisdiction, the persons asserting the right of preemption would be necessary parties to the suit.

Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 U.S. 35, 23 S. Ct. 599, 47 L. Ed. 698, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirwan-v-murphy-scotus-1903.