Payne v. Robertson

169 U.S. 323, 18 S. Ct. 337, 42 L. Ed. 764, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1497
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 28, 1898
Docket20
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 169 U.S. 323 (Payne v. Robertson) 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
Payne v. Robertson, 169 U.S. 323, 18 S. Ct. 337, 42 L. Ed. 764, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1497 (1898).

Opinion

Me. Justice White,

after stating the case as above reported, delivered the opinion of the court. ■

*326 In sustaining the demurrer the lower courts passed upon but one of the grounds stated therein, namely, that which asserted that the complaint did not set forth a cause of action. This contention went to the merits of the case and called for a decision of the question whether the Secretary of the Interior, upon the facts found by him, properly held that Payne was disqualified from making his alleged entry. As this is the pivotal point in the case and its decision is free from difficulty, we shall confine ourselves, in this opinion, to its consideration.

The ruling of the Secretary of the Interior that the settlement made by complainant was invalid is averred in the bill to have been based upon the following finding of facts:

“ Ransom Payne made homestead entry for the N. W. £ of section nine (9) on April 23, 1889. Said Ransom Payne was á United States deputy marshal, duly appointed prior to the passage of the act of March 2,1889, .(16 C. L. O. 10, 11,) providing for the opening of. the Territory of Oklahoma to settlement, and prior to the proclamation of the President fixing the day for said opening, and he entered said Territory prior to April 22, and was there at noon of that day in obedience to orders issued by his superior officer, and he was there in the discharge of his official duties. Immediately after 12 o’clock noon of April 22 he went upon the land in question and commenced to dig a hole in the ground for a well, and as soon as practicable appeared at the local office and made his entry. So far as his age, citizenship, etc., are concerned he was a qualified homestead claimant, and he bases his claim upon his prior settlement.”

The statute which it is claimed was misconstrued and misapplied by the Secretary of the Interior in his decision sustaining the cancellation of Payne’s entry, is that portion of section 13 of the Indian appropriation act approved March 2, 1889, 'c. 412," 25 Sfcat. 980, 1004, which, after stipulating for the disposal of lands acquired from the Seminole Indians to actual settlers under the homestead laws only, except as therein otherwise provided, declared that “ until said lands are opened fbr settlement by proclamation of the President, no person *327 shall be permitted to enter upon and occupy the same, and no person violating this provision shall ever be permitted to enter any of said lands or acquire any right thereto.” It was also claimed that the Secretary misconstrued and misapplied the proclamation of the President of date March' 23,1889, 26 Stat. 1544, fixing the time for the opening of the lands for settlement, particularly that portion which reads as follows:

• “Now, therefore, I, Benjamin Harrison, President of the United States, by virtue of the power in me vested by said act of Congress, approved March second, eighteen hundred and eighty-nine, aforesaid, do hereby declare and make known, that so much of the lands, as afohesaid, acquired from or conveyed by the Muscogee (or Creek) Nation of Indians, and from or by the1 Seminole Nation of Indians, respectively, as is contained within the following-described boundaries, viz. : . . .
“ Will, at and after the hour of twelve o’clock, noon, of the twenty-second day of April, next, and not before, be open for settlement, under the terms of, and subject to, all the conditions, limitations and restrictions contained in said act of Congress, approved March second, eighteen ■ hundred and eighty-nine, and the laws of the United States applicable thereto. ...
“ Warning is hereby again expressly given, that no person entering upon and occupying said lands before said hour of twelve o’clock, noon, of the twenty-second day of April, a.d. eighteen hundred and eighty-nine, hereinbefore fixed, will ever be permitted to enter any of said lands or acquire any rights thereto; and that the officers of the United States will be required to strictly enforce the provision of the act of Congress to the above effect.”

The question presented is, therefore, solely this: Was the complainant disqualified by. reason of his entry into the Territory and his presence there at the hour of the opening of the Territory for settlement, under the circumstances stated in the finding of the Secretary, from making a homestead entry immediately upon the lands being opened for settlement ?

This question is governed by the case of Smith v. Townsend, 148 U. S. 490. The point there presented was whether a *328 railroad section hand, residing with his family .on a railroad right of way within the Territory, and who by reason of his employment and residence was present therein at the hour of noon on April 22, 1889, could immediately thereafter legally enter upon public land adjoining said right of way and claim the same as a homestead. A construction was rendered necessary of the second section of the act of March 1, 1889, c. 317, 25 Stat. 757, 759, ratifying and confirming an agreement with the Muscogee (or Creek) Indians, whereby a large body of their lands, subsequently included in the Territory of Oklahoma, had been ceded to the United States. The section referred to declared the ceded land to be part of the public domain and subject to homestead entry. The concluding sentence of the section road as follows:

“ Any person who may enter upon any part of said lands in said agreement mentioned prior to the time that the-same are opened to settlement by act of Congress shall not be permitted to occupy or to make entry of such lands or lay any claim thereto.”

A construction was also required of the substantially similar provision contained in the act of March 2, 1889, heretofore quoted, and of the “ warning ” notice contained in the proclamation of March 23, 1889, which we have also heretofore referred to. To aid in construing these provisions resort was had to the history of the times, in order to ascertain the reason of the statutes as well as their meaning, and the conclusion was deduced (p. 496) that the purpose of the legislative provisions referred to was “to secure equality between all who desired to establish settlements in that Territory. The language is general and comprehensive: ‘ Anv person who may enter upon any part of said lands . . . prior to the time that the same are opened, to settlement . . . shall not be permitted to occupy or to make entry of such lands or lay any claim thereto.’ ‘Until said lands are opened for settlement by proclamation of the President, no person shall •be permitted to enter upon and occupy the same, and no person violating this provision shall ever be permitted to enter any of said lands, or acquire any right thereto.’ No excep *329 tion is made from the general language of these provisions; and it was evidently the expectation of Congress that they would be enforced in the spirit of' equality suggested by the generality of the language.”

And, again, at page 500, the court observed:

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Bluebook (online)
169 U.S. 323, 18 S. Ct. 337, 42 L. Ed. 764, 1898 U.S. LEXIS 1497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/payne-v-robertson-scotus-1898.