Northern Pacific Railroad v. Sanders

166 U.S. 620, 17 S. Ct. 671, 41 L. Ed. 1139, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 2054
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 19, 1897
Docket12
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 166 U.S. 620 (Northern Pacific Railroad v. Sanders) 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
Northern Pacific Railroad v. Sanders, 166 U.S. 620, 17 S. Ct. 671, 41 L. Ed. 1139, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 2054 (1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Harlan

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was' brought by the Northern Pacific Railroad Company to recover from the defendants in error, th.e original defendants, the possession of section twentjvone, township ten north of range three west in the county of Lewis' and Clarke in the State of Montana.

The railroad company claims title under the act of Congress of July 2, 1864, 13 Stat. 365, c. 217, granting lands to aid in the construction of a railroad and telegraph line from Lake Superior to Puget Sound on the Pacific coast, by the northern route’.

The defendants do not assert title in themselves, but resist the claim of the railroad company upon the ground that, at the time of the definite location of the Northern Pacific Railroad and of the filing of the plat thereof in the office of the Commissioner of the General Land Office, such “ claims” were made of record upon the lands in dispute as excluded them from the grant to the Northern Pacific Railroad Company.

Congress granted to the Northern Pacific Railroad Company every'alternate section of public land, “not mineral,” designated by odd numbers, to the amount of twenty alternate, sections per mile on each side of the railroad line, as the company might adopt, through the Territories of the United States, and ten alternate sections per mile on each side of the railroad whenever it passed through any State, “ and whenever on the line thereof, the United States have full title, not reserved, sold, granted or otherwise appropriated, and free from preemption, or other claims or rights at the time the line of said road is definitely fixed, and a plat thereof filed in the office of the Commissioner of the General Land Office; and whenever, prior to said time, any'of said sections or parts of sections’ shall have been granted, sold, reserved, occupied by homestead settlers or preempted or otherwise disposed of, other lands shall be selected by said company in lieu thereof, under *623 the direction of the Secretary of the Interior, in alternate sections and designated by odd numbers, not more than ten miles beyond the limits of said alternate sections. . . . Provided furtker, That all mineral lands be, and the same are hereby, excluded from the operations of this act, and in lieu thereof a like quantity of unoccupied and unappropriated agricultural lands, in odd-numbered sections, nearest to the line of said road may be selected as above provided: And provided further, That the word ‘mineral,’ when it occurs in this act, shall not be held to include iron and coal.” § 3'.

The sixth section directed the lands to be surveyed for forty miles'in width on both sides of the entire line of the road after the general route was fixed and as fast as was required by the construction of the railroad, and provided that “ the odd sections of land, hereby granted shall not be liable to sale, or entry or preemption, before or after they are surveyed, except by said company, as provided in this act; but the provisions of the act of September, eighteen hundred and forty-one, granting preemption rights, and the acts amendatory thereof, and of the act entitled ‘An act to secure homesteads to actual settlers on the public domain,’ approved May twenty, eighteen hundred and sixty-two, shall be, and the same are hereby, extended to all other lands on the line of said road, when surveyed, excepting those hereby granted to said company. And the reserved alternate sections shall not be sold by the government at a price less than two dollars and fifty cents per acre, when offered for sale.” § 6.

The amended complaint alleged that the railroad company duly accepted the terms and conditions of the act of Congress; that the general route of the railroad extending through the State of Montana was duly fixed February 21, 1872; that the land in dispute was on and within forty miles of such general route, and at that date was “ public land to which the United States had full title, not reserved, sold, granted or otherwise appropriated, and free from preemption or other claims or rights ”; that at the date of the passage of the act of 1864, as well as when said general route was fixed, no part of the land in controversy was “ known mineral land,” and *624 “ was not mineral land, nor was any part of said last-described land within any exceptions from said grant” ; that on July 6, 1882, the railroad company definitely fixed the line of its railroad, extending opposite to and past said section 21, township 10 north, range 3 west, and filed a plat thereof in the office of the Commissioner of the General Land Office; that “ said land is on and -within forty miles of said line of railroad so definitely fixed ”; that thereafter the company duly constructed and completed that portion of its railroad and telegraph line extending over and along its line of definite location, whereupon the President of the 'United States appointed three commissioners to examine the same, who reported that that portion of the line had been completed in a good, substantial and workmanlike manner ; that 4he President of the United States duly accepted said line of road and telegraph so constructed and completed.; that at the date of so definitely locating the line of railroad, and at the time of the filing of the plat thereof in the office of the Commissioner of the General Land Office, as above stated, the land in dispute was “ not known” to be mineral land, but was agricultural land to Which “the United States had full title, not reserved, sold, granted or otherwise appropriated, and free from preemption or other claims or rights.

The defendants, in their answer, “ confessing that said premises did not contain gold or other precious metals in pay-, ing quantities or in such quantity as to make the same, or any part thereof, commercially valuable therefor, nevertheless say> as to the northeast quarter of section 21, that heretofore,to wit, on the second day of August, 1880, Theodore H. Kleinschmidt, Edward W. Knight, Henry M. Parchen, Charles K. Wells, George P. Peeves, David H. Cuthbert, Cornelius Hedges and Stephen É. Atkinson, each being then and there a citizen of thq United States, and each having theretofore filed upon a certain separate twenty acres on the northeast quarter of said section according ta the laws of the Territory of Montana, and the mining usages and customs then in force in the unorganized mining district in which said land was situated, and being then in all respects qualified to enter mineral land under *625

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Bluebook (online)
166 U.S. 620, 17 S. Ct. 671, 41 L. Ed. 1139, 1897 U.S. LEXIS 2054, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-pacific-railroad-v-sanders-scotus-1897.