Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. United States

227 U.S. 355, 33 S. Ct. 368, 57 L. Ed. 544, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2306
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 24, 1913
Docket500
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 227 U.S. 355 (Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. United States) 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 Railway Co. v. United States, 227 U.S. 355, 33 S. Ct. 368, 57 L. Ed. 544, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2306 (1913).

Opinion

Mb. Justice McKenna

delivered the opinion of the court.

Bill in equity by the United States to annul patents issued May 10, 1895, and January 6, 1896, to the Northern Pacific Railroad Company, and March 5, 1901, and January 4, 1904, to its successor, the Northern Pacific Railway Company, for certain described lands. The .foundation of the bill is that the patents were issued by mistake as public lands granted to the railroad company under the act of Congress dated July 2, 1864 (13 Stat. 365, c. 217), the lands actually being, it is alleged by the Government, part of the - Yakima Indian Reservation under ax treaty with the Yakimas of] June 9, 1855 (12 Stat. 951) , ratified March 8,1859, and proclaimed by the President April 18, 1859. . .

There is no question made of the title of the railroad and railway companies or of their respective vendees other -than as the lands fall within or without the reservation. If they .were within the boundaries of the reservation they ■ were lands of the Indians; otherwise, public lands of the United Spates and passed to the companies, respectively, uhdér the áct of Congress and the patents issued in pursuance thereof. '

The question'then is, What were the boundaries of the reservation, or — -to use the present tense as the more convenient — what are the boundaries of the reservation?

By article 1 of the treaty the Indians ceded, relinquished and conveyed to the United States a tract of land which was explicitly, described, reserving by article 2, from the tract the land included -within the following'boundaries:

*357 - “Commencing on the Yakima River, at the mouth of the Attah-nam River; thence westerly along said Attah-nam River to the forks; thence along the southern tributary to the Cascade Mountains; thence southerly along the main ridge of said mountains, passing south and east of Mount Adams, to the spur whence flows the waters of the Klickitat and Pisco rivers; thence down said spur to the divide between the waters of said rivers; thence along said divide to the divide separating the waters of the Satass River from those flowing into the Columbia River; thence along said divide to the' main Yakama, eight miles below the mouth of the Satass River; and thence up the Yakama River to the place of beginning.”

All of this tract, it is provided, “shall be set apart, and, so far as necessary, surveyed and marked out, for the exclusive use and benefit” of the Indians, as an Indian reservation.

It will be observed that the calls in the description of the tract reserved are very confident and seem to assure certainty by prominent and unmistakable natural monuments. Controversies, however, almost immediately arose, the Indians contending for one location of the calls and enterprising settlers contending for another. The Interior Department ordered a survey, which was made and which is known in this record as the Schwartz survey. Upon this the title of appellants depends. The discontent of the Indians continued and another survey was ordered by the Interior Department to be made by E. C. Barnard. This survey is the foundation of the bill and of the contention of the Government. It was made and reported to the Interior Department with a map delineating the exterior boundaries of the reservation. This report was transmitted to the Speaker pf the House of Representatives with a draft of a bill granting authority for the detail by the Secretary of the Interior of an Indian inspector to negotiate an agreement with the Indians for the adjust *358 ment of their claim for the lands embraced in the tract claimed by them, containing 293,837 acres, as shown by the Barnard report, that is, for lands without the Schwartz but within the Barnard survey.

In pursuance of the recommendation of the Secretary of the Interior, Congress, on December 21, 1904, enacted the statute quoted in the margin. 1 (33 Stat. 595, c. 22.)

After the passage of the act the Government demanded a reconveyance of the lands, which was refused. ' This suit was then brought.

The controversy in the case, therefore, turns upon which of the surveys, Schwartz’ or Barnard’s, correctly marks the boundaries of the reservation. The difference in the surveys amounts to 293,837 acres. The Circuit Court accepted the Barnard- survey and entered a decree can-celling the patents. The decree was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals. 191 Fed. Rep. 947.

*359 The special controversy in the case is the location of the western boundary of the reservation. But as partly determinative of that the western point of the northern boundary must be considered. . The northern boundary of the reservation commences at the junction of the Yakima and Attahnam rivers and proceeds t.o the forks of the latter and along its southern tributary to the “Cascade Mountains.” What constitutes the Cascade Mountains is the first serious dispute in the case. The appellants contend that the. mountains are given location by the termination of the southern tributary of the Attahnam River. In other words, the headwaters of that tributary mark ¡the Cascade Mountains. But the next call is to be considered. By that call the line is to run “southerly along the main ridge of said mountains,” and as said by the Circuit Court, the line must reach the main ridge to run .southerly along it. The court erred, appellants contend, by assuming that the treaty makers meant to designate the main ridge of the mountains instead of a ridge of the mountains. We cannot, of course,'reproduce all of the argument of counsel. - It is, in effect, that the treaty makers meant what they said; that their knowledge was not imperfect, that they knew where the waters of the Attahnam River terminated and they turned south from there along “that ridge of those mountains” in which they found themselves. Assuming this, it is said, “every difficulty in following the calls of the treaty at once disappears.” But the difficulties do not disappear; they multiply, and mountains. and rivers appear to conflict in their testimony. The next call must' be changed to be accommodated to counsels’ view. That call, ip full, is this: “Thence southerly along the main ridge of said mountains [Cascade Mountains], passing south and east of Mount Adams, to'tho spur whence flows the waters- of the Klickitat and Pisco Rivers.” ' Counsel would strike out the comma after the word “mountains” and the *360 comma after the word “Adams,” asserting then the main ridge to be that which passes (passing) south and east of Mount Adams to the spur whence flows the waters of the Klickitat and Pisco rivers. In other words, the call primarily locates and defines the ridge and not the boundary line. And so change the call, it is further said, and there is intelligible continuity between it and the next call, which reads, “thence down said spur (whence flow the waters of the Klickitat and Pisco rivers) to the divide between the waters of said rivers.” Punctuation, it may be admitted, is a fallible standard of the meaning of a statute (Ewing v. Burnet, 11 Pet. 41, 54; Hammock v. Loan & Trust Co.,

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Bluebook (online)
227 U.S. 355, 33 S. Ct. 368, 57 L. Ed. 544, 1913 U.S. LEXIS 2306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-pacific-railway-co-v-united-states-scotus-1913.